Hi Julian,

"global-strict" is a different rule than "strict" (the former is
deprecated, the latter is the recommended one). Note in the line that you
pasted, "global-strict" is explicitly mentioned on the far-right. You
should always use that value as a guide to determine which rule the warning
is coming from.

So if you set global-strict to 0, you won't get that error anymore.

-N

On Mon, Mar 23, 2015 at 6:27 PM, Julian <[email protected]> wrote:

> I have a .eslintrc file in my home directory that eslint picks up most of
> the cases, e.g. when I change "no-underscore-dangle" from 0 to 2 I can see
> errors in my editor where I use underscores for my private variables.
>
> However, when I set "strict": [0, "global"], I still get errors for my
> 'use sctrict' expression at the top of my file. When running eslint in cli,
> I get:
>
>   1:0  error  Use the function form of "use strict"  global-strict
>
> It seems to me that some of my rules settings get overridden somewhere,
> but I can't find out where that is happening. How can I find what rules are
> applied and where they are defined?
>
> Best regards,
> Julian
>
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-- 

______________________________
Nicholas C. Zakas
@slicknet

Author, Professional JavaScript for Web Developers
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