@prettier/plugin-xml
is a prettier plugin for XML. prettier
is an opinionated code formatter that supports multiple languages and integrates with most editors. The idea is to eliminate discussions of style in code review and allow developers to get back to thinking about code design instead.
To run prettier
with the XML plugin, you're going to need node
.
If you're using the npm
CLI, then add the plugin by:
npm install --save-dev prettier @prettier/plugin-xml
Or if you're using yarn
, then add the plugin by:
yarn add --dev prettier @prettier/plugin-xml
The prettier
executable is now installed and ready for use:
./node_modules/.bin/prettier --write '**/*.xml'
Below are the options (from src/plugin.js
) that @prettier/plugin-xml
currently supports:
API Option | CLI Option | Default | Description |
---|---|---|---|
bracketSameLine |
--bracket-same-line |
true |
Same as in Prettier (see prettier docs) |
printWidth |
--print-width |
80 |
Same as in Prettier (see prettier docs). |
tabWidth |
--tab-width |
2 |
Same as in Prettier (see prettier docs). |
xmlWhitespaceSensitivity |
--xml-whitespace-sensitivity |
"strict" |
Options are "strict" and "ignore" . You may want "ignore" , see below. |
Any of these can be added to your existing prettier configuration file. For example:
{
"tabWidth": 4
}
Or, they can be passed to prettier
as arguments:
prettier --tab-width 4 --write '**/*.xml'
In XML, by default, all whitespace inside elements has semantic meaning. For prettier to maintain its contract of not changing the semantic meaning of your program, this means the default for xmlWhitespaceSensitivity
is "strict"
. When running in this mode, prettier's ability to rearrange your markup is somewhat limited, as it has to maintain the exact amount of whitespace that you input within elements.
If you're sure that the XML files that you're formatting do not require whitespace sensitivity, you can use the "ignore"
option, as this will produce a standardized amount of whitespace. This will fix any indentation issues, and collapse excess blank lines (max of 1 blank line). For most folks most of the time, this is probably the option that you want.
You can use two special comments to get prettier to ignore formatting a specific piece of the document, as in the following example:
<foo>
<!-- prettier-ignore-start -->
<this-content-will-not-be-formatted />
<!-- prettier-ignore-end -->
</foo>
Bug reports and pull requests are welcome on GitHub at https://github.com/prettier/plugin-xml.
The package is available as open source under the terms of the MIT License.