Ultracite enforces strict type safety, accessibility standards, and consistent code quality for JavaScript/TypeScript projects using Biome's lightning-fast formatter and linter.
- Zero configuration required
- Subsecond performance
- Maximum type safety
- AI-friendly code generation
- Analyze existing patterns in the codebase
- Consider edge cases and error scenarios
- Follow the rules below strictly
- Validate accessibility requirements
- Don't use
accessKey
attribute on any HTML element. - Don't set
aria-hidden="true"
on focusable elements. - Don't add ARIA roles, states, and properties to elements that don't support them.
- Don't use distracting elements like
<marquee>
or<blink>
. - Only use the
scope
prop on<th>
elements. - Don't assign non-interactive ARIA roles to interactive HTML elements.
- Make sure label elements have text content and are associated with an input.
- Don't assign interactive ARIA roles to non-interactive HTML elements.
- Don't assign
tabIndex
to non-interactive HTML elements. - Don't use positive integers for
tabIndex
property. - Don't include "image", "picture", or "photo" in img alt prop.
- Don't use explicit role property that's the same as the implicit/default role.
- Make static elements with click handlers use a valid role attribute.
- Always include a
title
element for SVG elements. - Give all elements requiring alt text meaningful information for screen readers.
- Make sure anchors have content that's accessible to screen readers.
- Assign
tabIndex
to non-interactive HTML elements witharia-activedescendant
. - Include all required ARIA attributes for elements with ARIA roles.
- Make sure ARIA properties are valid for the element's supported roles.
- Always include a
type
attribute for button elements. - Make elements with interactive roles and handlers focusable.
- Give heading elements content that's accessible to screen readers (not hidden with
aria-hidden
). - Always include a
lang
attribute on the html element. - Always include a
title
attribute for iframe elements. - Accompany
onClick
with at least one of:onKeyUp
,onKeyDown
, oronKeyPress
. - Accompany
onMouseOver
/onMouseOut
withonFocus
/onBlur
. - Include caption tracks for audio and video elements.
- Use semantic elements instead of role attributes in JSX.
- Make sure all anchors are valid and navigable.
- Ensure all ARIA properties (
aria-*
) are valid. - Use valid, non-abstract ARIA roles for elements with ARIA roles.
- Use valid ARIA state and property values.
- Use valid values for the
autocomplete
attribute on input elements. - Use correct ISO language/country codes for the
lang
attribute.
- Don't use consecutive spaces in regular expression literals.
- Don't use the
arguments
object. - Don't use primitive type aliases or misleading types.
- Don't use the comma operator.
- Don't use empty type parameters in type aliases and interfaces.
- Don't write functions that exceed a given Cognitive Complexity score.
- Don't nest describe() blocks too deeply in test files.
- Don't use unnecessary boolean casts.
- Don't use unnecessary callbacks with flatMap.
- Use for...of statements instead of Array.forEach.
- Don't create classes that only have static members (like a static namespace).
- Don't use this and super in static contexts.
- Don't use unnecessary catch clauses.
- Don't use unnecessary constructors.
- Don't use unnecessary continue statements.
- Don't export empty modules that don't change anything.
- Don't use unnecessary escape sequences in regular expression literals.
- Don't use unnecessary fragments.
- Don't use unnecessary labels.
- Don't use unnecessary nested block statements.
- Don't rename imports, exports, and destructured assignments to the same name.
- Don't use unnecessary string or template literal concatenation.
- Don't use String.raw in template literals when there are no escape sequences.
- Don't use useless case statements in switch statements.
- Don't use ternary operators when simpler alternatives exist.
- Don't use useless
this
aliasing. - Don't use any or unknown as type constraints.
- Don't initialize variables to undefined.
- Don't use the void operators (they're not familiar).
- Use arrow functions instead of function expressions.
- Use Date.now() to get milliseconds since the Unix Epoch.
- Use .flatMap() instead of map().flat() when possible.
- Use literal property access instead of computed property access.
- Don't use parseInt() or Number.parseInt() when binary, octal, or hexadecimal literals work.
- Use concise optional chaining instead of chained logical expressions.
- Use regular expression literals instead of the RegExp constructor when possible.
- Don't use number literal object member names that aren't base 10 or use underscore separators.
- Remove redundant terms from logical expressions.
- Use while loops instead of for loops when you don't need initializer and update expressions.
- Don't pass children as props.
- Don't reassign const variables.
- Don't use constant expressions in conditions.
- Don't use
Math.min
andMath.max
to clamp values when the result is constant. - Don't return a value from a constructor.
- Don't use empty character classes in regular expression literals.
- Don't use empty destructuring patterns.
- Don't call global object properties as functions.
- Don't declare functions and vars that are accessible outside their block.
- Make sure builtins are correctly instantiated.
- Don't use super() incorrectly inside classes. Also check that super() is called in classes that extend other constructors.
- Don't use variables and function parameters before they're declared.
- Don't use 8 and 9 escape sequences in string literals.
- Don't use literal numbers that lose precision.
- Don't use the return value of React.render.
- Make sure all dependencies are correctly specified in React hooks.
- Make sure all React hooks are called from the top level of component functions.
- Don't forget key props in iterators and collection literals.
- Don't destructure props inside JSX components in Solid projects.
- Don't define React components inside other components.
- Don't use event handlers on non-interactive elements.
- Don't assign to React component props.
- Don't use both
children
anddangerouslySetInnerHTML
props on the same element. - Don't use dangerous JSX props.
- Don't use Array index in keys.
- Don't insert comments as text nodes.
- Don't assign JSX properties multiple times.
- Don't add extra closing tags for components without children.
- Use
<>...</>
instead of<Fragment>...</Fragment>
. - Watch out for possible "wrong" semicolons inside JSX elements.
- Don't assign a value to itself.
- Don't return a value from a setter.
- Don't compare expressions that modify string case with non-compliant values.
- Don't use lexical declarations in switch clauses.
- Don't use variables that haven't been declared in the document.
- Don't write unreachable code.
- Make sure super() is called exactly once on every code path in a class constructor before this is accessed if the class has a superclass.
- Don't use control flow statements in finally blocks.
- Don't use optional chaining where undefined values aren't allowed.
- Don't have unused function parameters.
- Don't have unused imports.
- Don't have unused labels.
- Don't have unused private class members.
- Don't have unused variables.
- Make sure void (self-closing) elements don't have children.
- Don't return a value from a function with the return type 'void'
- Use isNaN() when checking for NaN.
- Make sure "for" loop update clauses move the counter in the right direction.
- Make sure typeof expressions are compared to valid values.
- Make sure generator functions contain yield.
- Don't use await inside loops.
- Don't use bitwise operators.
- Don't use expressions where the operation doesn't change the value.
- Make sure Promise-like statements are handled appropriately.
- Don't use __dirname and __filename in the global scope.
- Prevent import cycles.
- Don't use configured elements.
- Don't hardcode sensitive data like API keys and tokens.
- Don't let variable declarations shadow variables from outer scopes.
- Don't use the TypeScript directive @ts-ignore.
- Prevent duplicate polyfills from Polyfill.io.
- Don't use useless backreferences in regular expressions that always match empty strings.
- Don't use unnecessary escapes in string literals.
- Don't use useless undefined.
- Make sure getters and setters for the same property are next to each other in class and object definitions.
- Make sure object literals are declared consistently (defaults to explicit definitions).
- Use static Response methods instead of new Response() constructor when possible.
- Make sure switch-case statements are exhaustive.
- Make sure the
preconnect
attribute is used when using Google Fonts. - Use
Array#{indexOf,lastIndexOf}()
instead ofArray#{findIndex,findLastIndex}()
when looking for the index of an item. - Make sure iterable callbacks return consistent values.
- Use
with { type: "json" }
for JSON module imports. - Use numeric separators in numeric literals.
- Use object spread instead of
Object.assign()
when constructing new objects. - Always use the radix argument when using
parseInt()
. - Make sure JSDoc comment lines start with a single asterisk, except for the first one.
- Include a description parameter for
Symbol()
. - Don't use spread (
...
) syntax on accumulators. - Don't use the
delete
operator. - Don't access namespace imports dynamically.
- Don't use namespace imports.
- Declare regex literals at the top level.
- Don't use
target="_blank"
withoutrel="noopener"
.
- Don't use TypeScript enums.
- Don't export imported variables.
- Don't add type annotations to variables, parameters, and class properties that are initialized with literal expressions.
- Don't use TypeScript namespaces.
- Don't use non-null assertions with the
!
postfix operator. - Don't use parameter properties in class constructors.
- Don't use user-defined types.
- Use
as const
instead of literal types and type annotations. - Use either
T[]
orArray<T>
consistently. - Initialize each enum member value explicitly.
- Use
export type
for types. - Use
import type
for types. - Make sure all enum members are literal values.
- Don't use TypeScript const enum.
- Don't declare empty interfaces.
- Don't let variables evolve into any type through reassignments.
- Don't use the any type.
- Don't misuse the non-null assertion operator (!) in TypeScript files.
- Don't use implicit any type on variable declarations.
- Don't merge interfaces and classes unsafely.
- Don't use overload signatures that aren't next to each other.
- Use the namespace keyword instead of the module keyword to declare TypeScript namespaces.
- Don't use global
eval()
. - Don't use callbacks in asynchronous tests and hooks.
- Don't use negation in
if
statements that haveelse
clauses. - Don't use nested ternary expressions.
- Don't reassign function parameters.
- This rule lets you specify global variable names you don't want to use in your application.
- Don't use specified modules when loaded by import or require.
- Don't use constants whose value is the upper-case version of their name.
- Use
String.slice()
instead ofString.substr()
andString.substring()
. - Don't use template literals if you don't need interpolation or special-character handling.
- Don't use
else
blocks when theif
block breaks early. - Don't use yoda expressions.
- Don't use Array constructors.
- Use
at()
instead of integer index access. - Follow curly brace conventions.
- Use
else if
instead of nestedif
statements inelse
clauses. - Use single
if
statements instead of nestedif
clauses. - Use
new
for all builtins exceptString
,Number
, andBoolean
. - Use consistent accessibility modifiers on class properties and methods.
- Use
const
declarations for variables that are only assigned once. - Put default function parameters and optional function parameters last.
- Include a
default
clause in switch statements. - Use the
**
operator instead ofMath.pow
. - Use
for-of
loops when you need the index to extract an item from the iterated array. - Use
node:assert/strict
overnode:assert
. - Use the
node:
protocol for Node.js builtin modules. - Use Number properties instead of global ones.
- Use assignment operator shorthand where possible.
- Use function types instead of object types with call signatures.
- Use template literals over string concatenation.
- Use
new
when throwing an error. - Don't throw non-Error values.
- Use
String.trimStart()
andString.trimEnd()
overString.trimLeft()
andString.trimRight()
. - Use standard constants instead of approximated literals.
- Don't assign values in expressions.
- Don't use async functions as Promise executors.
- Don't reassign exceptions in catch clauses.
- Don't reassign class members.
- Don't compare against -0.
- Don't use labeled statements that aren't loops.
- Don't use void type outside of generic or return types.
- Don't use console.
- Don't use control characters and escape sequences that match control characters in regular expression literals.
- Don't use debugger.
- Don't assign directly to document.cookie.
- Use
===
and!==
. - Don't use duplicate case labels.
- Don't use duplicate class members.
- Don't use duplicate conditions in if-else-if chains.
- Don't use two keys with the same name inside objects.
- Don't use duplicate function parameter names.
- Don't have duplicate hooks in describe blocks.
- Don't use empty block statements and static blocks.
- Don't let switch clauses fall through.
- Don't reassign function declarations.
- Don't allow assignments to native objects and read-only global variables.
- Use Number.isFinite instead of global isFinite.
- Use Number.isNaN instead of global isNaN.
- Don't assign to imported bindings.
- Don't use irregular whitespace characters.
- Don't use labels that share a name with a variable.
- Don't use characters made with multiple code points in character class syntax.
- Make sure to use new and constructor properly.
- Don't use shorthand assign when the variable appears on both sides.
- Don't use octal escape sequences in string literals.
- Don't use Object.prototype builtins directly.
- Don't redeclare variables, functions, classes, and types in the same scope.
- Don't have redundant "use strict".
- Don't compare things where both sides are exactly the same.
- Don't let identifiers shadow restricted names.
- Don't use sparse arrays (arrays with holes).
- Don't use template literal placeholder syntax in regular strings.
- Don't use the then property.
- Don't use unsafe negation.
- Don't use var.
- Don't use with statements in non-strict contexts.
- Make sure async functions actually use await.
- Make sure default clauses in switch statements come last.
- Make sure to pass a message value when creating a built-in error.
- Make sure get methods always return a value.
- Use a recommended display strategy with Google Fonts.
- Make sure for-in loops include an if statement.
- Use Array.isArray() instead of instanceof Array.
- Make sure to use the digits argument with Number#toFixed().
- Make sure to use the "use strict" directive in script files.
- Don't use export or module.exports in test files.
- Don't use focused tests.
- Make sure the assertion function, like expect, is placed inside an it() function call.
- Don't use disabled tests.
npx ultracite init
- Initialize Ultracite in your projectnpx ultracite format
- Format and fix code automaticallynpx ultracite lint
- Check for issues without fixing