WebStorm 2021.2 Help

JavaScript

With WebStorm, you can develop modern web, mobile, and desktop applications with JavaScript and Node.js.

WebStorm also supports React, Angular, Vue.js, and other frameworks and provides tight integration with various tools for web development.

JavaScript-aware coding assistance includes completion for keywords, labels, variables, parameters, and functions, error and syntax highlighting, formatting, numerous code inspections and quick-fixes, as well as common and JavaScript-specific refactoring. WebStorm also integrates with JavaScript linters and the Flow type checker.

With WebStorm built-in debugger, you can debug both your client-side and server-side code and even run JavaScript code snippets in the interactive debugger console. Note that WebStorm supports debugging JavaScript only in Chrome or any other browser of the Chrome family. Learn more from Debug JavaScript in Chrome.

WebStorm integrates with Jest, Karma, Protractor, Cucumber, and Mocha testing frameworks. WebStorm supports running and debugging tests as well as navigation between tests and subjects or between a failed test and the fragment of code that caused the problem.

On this page you will find a short Getting Started Guide that will walk you step by step from creating a web application to debugging and testing it.

Create a new application

  1. Click Create New Project on the Welcome screen or select File | New | Project from the main menu. The Create New Project Dialog opens.

  2. In the left-hand pane, choose Empty Project.

  3. In the right-hand pane, specify the path to the folder where the project-related files will be stored. Click Create.

Start with an existing JavaScript application

If you are going to continue developing an existing JavaScript application, open it in WebStorm, choose the JavaScript version to use, and configure the libraries in it. Optionally download the required npm dependencies.

Open the application sources that are already on your machine

  • Click Open on the Welcome screen or select File | Open from the main menu. In the dialog that opens, select the folder where your sources are stored.

Check out the application sources from your version control

  1. Click Get from VCS on the Welcome screen. Alternatively, select File | Project from Version Control or <Your_VCS> | Get from Version Control from the main menu.

    <Your_VCS> stands for the Version Control System with which your currently opened project is associated.

  2. In the dialog that opens, select your version control system from the list and specify the repository to check out the application sources from. See Check out a project (clone) for details.

Choose the JavaScript language version

To get reliable and efficient coding assistance, you need to specify the language version that will be used in all JavaScript files of your project by default.

  1. In the Settings/Preferences dialog Ctrl+Alt+S, go to Languages and Frameworks | JavaScript. The JavaScript page opens.

  2. From the list, choose one of the supported JavaScript language versions:

    • ECMAScript 5.1

    • ECMAScript 6+: This version adds support for the features introduced in ECMAScript 2015-2020 and for JSX syntax as well as some current proposals to the standard.

    • Flow: This version adds support for the Flow syntax.

Using multiple JavaScript versions

If you are working on an application that uses both ECMAScript 5.1 and a newer version of ECMAScript, the easiest way is to choose the highest language version for the whole project from the list on the JavaScript page.

  1. On the JavaScript page, click the Browse button next to the JavaScript language version list. The JavaScript Language Versions dialog opens.

  2. Click Add and in the dialog that opens select the folder where you need a custom language version. WebStorm brings you back to the JavaScript Language Versions dialog where the selected folder is shown in the Path field.

  3. From the Language list, choose the language version for the files in the selected folder. In all the other JavaScript files in the project WebStorm will use the version chosen on the JavaScript page.

    Choose language versions for separate folders

JSX syntax in JavaScript code

If you are using JSX syntax in your JavaScript code, enable ECMAScript 6+.

  • In the Settings/Preferences dialog Ctrl+Alt+S, go to Languages and Frameworks | JavaScript, and select ECMAScript 6+ from the JavaScript language version list.

  • To be warned when JSX syntax is used by mistake, open the Settings/Preferences dialog Ctrl+Alt+S, go to Editor | Inspections, and enable the React JSX syntax inspection under JavaScript and TypeScript | General node. Use the search field to locate the inspection.

    Enable the React JSX syntax inspection

    Optionally, configure the inspection severity and scope. Learn more from Code inspections.

Download project dependencies

If your application uses some tools, libraries, or frameworks, download the required packages. To manage your project dependencies, you can use npm, Yarn 1, or Yarn 2, see npm and Yarn for details.

Install a package in an empty project

  • In the embedded Terminal (Alt+F12) , type:

    npm install <package name>.

If you already have a package.json file in your project

  • Right-click the package.json file in the editor or in the Project tool window and choose Run 'npm install' from the context menu.

  • Alternatively, run npm install in the Terminal Alt+F12.

Configure code completion for project dependencies

To provide code completion for project dependencies, WebStorm automatically creates a node_modules library. In WebStorm, a library is a file or a set of files whose functions and methods are added to WebStorm's internal knowledge in addition to the functions and methods that WebStorm retrieves from the project code that you edit. See Configure JavaScript libraries, Code completion, and Configuring code completion in JavaScript for details and examples.

View inlay hints

Inlay hints appear in the editor and provide you with additional information about your code to make it easier to read.

Enable inlay hints

  1. Open the Settings/Preferences dialog Ctrl+Alt+S, go to Editor | Inlay Hints, and select the checkbox next to JavaScript.

  2. On the JavaScript page below, specify what hints and in what context you want WebStorm to display.

Parameter hints

Parameter hints show the names of parameters in methods and functions to make your code easier to read. By default, parameter hints are shown only for values that are literals or function expressions but not for named objects.

Parameter hints in JavaScript

Configure parameter hints

  1. Open the Settings/Preferences dialog Ctrl+Alt+S and go to Editor | Inlay Hints | JavaScript.

  2. Select Parameter hints from the list, make sure the Show parameter hints checkbox is selected, and then specify the context where you want parameter hints shown.

    The preview below shows how the changes you make in the settings affect the code appearance.

  3. For some methods and functions, WebStorm does not show parameter hints in any context. Click Exclude list... to view these methods and functions, possibly enable parameter hints for them, or add new items to the list.

Return type hints

Return type hints for chained methods are inferred from a JSDoc comment or based on the static analysis of your code. Return type hints are by default shown for chained methods that are split between multiple lines and return at least 2 different types.

Return types for chained methods

Configure method return type hints

  1. Open the Settings/Preferences dialog Ctrl+Alt+S and go to Editor | Inlay Hints | JavaScript.

  2. Select Method return types in call chains from the list, make sure the Show hints checkbox is selected, and then specify the minimum number of different types in a call chain for which you want return type hints show.

    The preview below shows how the changes you make in the settings affect the code appearance.

Type annotations

Type annotations show a variable type or a function return type next to their definition. Type annotations are inferred from JSDoc comments or static analysis of your code.

Type annotations in JavaScript

Configure type annotations

  1. Open the Settings/Preferences dialog Ctrl+Alt+S and go to Editor | Inlay Hints | JavaScript.

  2. Select Type annotations from the list, make sure the Show type hints for checkbox is selected, and then specify the context where you want type hints shown.

    The preview below shows how the changes you make in the settings affect the code appearance.

Auto-import in JavaScript

WebStorm can generate import statements for modules, classes, components, and any other symbols that are exported. WebStorm can add missing import statements on the fly, when you complete ES6 symbols or CommonJS modules. WebStorm either decides on the style of the import statement itself or displays a popup where you can choose the style you need.

Add ES6 import statements

If you are importing a symbol from your project into a file that is a ES6 module or that already contains ES import statements, WebStorm automatically inserts an ES6 import on symbol completion.

Add ES6 imports on code completion

For earlier JavaScript versions or when auto-import on completion is disabled, WebStorm marks the symbol as unresolved and shows a tooltip with the suggested quick-fix:

Auto import with quick-fix: information tooltip

Alternatively, press Alt+Enter:

Auto import with quick-fix: suggestion list

If there's more than one possible source of import, WebStorm shows a list of suggestions:

Auto import with quick-fix: multiple choices

Learn more from Choosing the JavaScript language version.

WebStorm can also generate import statements for symbols defined in the project’s dependencies. Auto-import works for symbols from packages that contain TypeScript definition files (like in moment or redux) or sources written as ES modules.

If the current file already contains a ES6 import statement, WebStorm inserts a new one also in the ES6 style.

Auto import from project dependencies

Add CommonJS (require) import statements

If you are importing a symbol from your project into a file that already is a CommonJS module (with a require statement or module.export), WebStorm automatically inserts a CommonJS import on symbol completion.

Auto import with CommonJS import statement

Alternatively, position the caret at the symbol to import, press Alt+Enter, and select a quick-fix with the CommonJS (require) import style.

Quick fix: select import style

Configure auto import

  1. To automatically add ES6 import statements on code completion, open the Settings/Preferences dialog Ctrl+Alt+S, go to Editor | General | Auto Import, and select the Add ES6 imports on code completion checkbox in the TypeScript/JavaScript area.

  2. To configure the appearance of import statements, open the Settings/Preferences dialog Ctrl+Alt+S, go to Editor | Code Style | JavaScript, and use the controls in the Imports tab, see Imports tab for details.

Configure syntax highlighting

You can configure JavaScript-aware syntax highlighting according to your preferences and habits.

  1. In the Settings/Preferences dialog Ctrl+Alt+S, go to Editor | Color Scheme | JavaScript.

  2. Select the color scheme, accept the highlighting settings inherited from the defaults or customize them as described in Colors and fonts.

Run JavaScript in browser

  1. In the editor, open the HTML file with the JavaScript reference. This HTML file does not necessarily have to be the one that implements the starting page of the application.

  2. Do one of the following:

    • Choose View | Open in Browser from the main menu or press Alt+F2. Then select the desired browser from the list.

    • Hover your mouse pointer over the code to show the browser icons bar: the WebStorm icon Chrome Firefox Safari Opera Internet Explorer Edge. Click the icon that indicates the desired browser.

Debug JavaScript

WebStorm provides a built-in debugger for your client-side JavaScript code that works with Chrome or any other browser of the Chrome family. With WebStorm, you can debug JavaScript applications running on the built-in server, on an external server, or on a remote server. For details, see Debug JavaScript in Chrome.

Last modified: 13 August 2021