eol-last

The --fix option on the command line can automatically fix some of the problems reported by this rule.

Requires or disallows newline at the end of files.

Trailing newlines in non-empty files are a common UNIX idiom. Benefits of trailing newlines include the ability to concatenate or append to files as well as output files to the terminal without interfering with shell prompts.

Rule Details

This rule enforces at least one newline (or absence thereof) at the end of non-empty files.

Prior to v0.16.0 this rule also enforced that there was only a single line at the end of the file. If you still want this behavior, consider enabling no-multiple-empty-lines with maxEOF and/or no-trailing-spaces.

Examples of incorrect code for this rule:

/*eslint eol-last: ["error", "always"]*/

function doSomething() {
  var foo = 2;
}

Examples of correct code for this rule:

/*eslint eol-last: ["error", "always"]*/

function doSomething() {
  var foo = 2;
}\n

Options

This rule has a string option:

Deprecated: The options "unix" and "windows" are deprecated. If you need to enforce a specific linebreak style, use this rule in conjunction with linebreak-style.

Version

This rule was introduced in ESLint 0.7.1.

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