Template literals are literals delimited with backtick (`) characters, allowing for multi-line strings, string interpolation with embedded expressions, and special constructs called tagged templates. Template literals are sometimes informally called template strings, because they are used most commonly for string interpolation (to create strings by doing substitution of placeholders
(c) MDN
🐊Putout plugin adds ability to apply template literals
. Check out in 🐊Putout Editor.
npm i @putout/plugin-apply-template-literals
{
"rules": {
"apply-template-literals": "on"
}
}
const line = '("' + name + '")';
const line = `("${name}")`;
Linter | Rule | Fix |
---|---|---|
🐊 Putout | apply-template-literals |
✅ |
⏣ ESLint | prefer-template |
✅ |
MIT