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Mock EditorConfig Generator

Used by developers, writers, and creators worldwide.

A mock EditorConfig generator produces an example .editorconfig file to keep coding styles consistent across a team. EditorConfig is a simple, widely supported standard that lets a project define basic style rules — indentation, line endings, charset, whitespace — that every editor enforces automatically. This tool emits a valid .editorconfig with sensible defaults. Choose an indent style and copy the file. It is ideal for starting a project, standardising team style, and documentation. The file follows the real format, including the root flag, a wildcard section for all files, and an override for Markdown. Dropping an .editorconfig in a repository means everyone's editor uses the same indentation and line endings, which quietly eliminates a whole category of noisy, style-only diffs. Adapt the rules to your team's conventions. It works alongside formatters and linters, handling the basics that should be consistent no matter which editor a developer prefers.

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How to use

  1. Choose your options above
  2. Click Generate
  3. Copy your result

Detailed instructions

  1. Choose an indent style.
  2. Click Generate to produce an .editorconfig.
  3. Copy it into your repository root.
  4. Adapt the rules to your conventions.

Use Cases

  • Standardising team coding style
  • Starting a new repository
  • Eliminating style-only diffs
  • Documenting style conventions
  • Learning the EditorConfig format

Tips

  • root = true stops the search going up.
  • It eliminates style-only diffs.
  • It complements linters and formatters.
  • Adapt the rules to your team.

FAQ

what is EditorConfig

EditorConfig is a widely supported standard for defining basic coding style rules — indentation, line endings, charset, and whitespace — in a .editorconfig file. Editors read it and apply the rules automatically, keeping style consistent across a team regardless of editor.

how does it help a team

It eliminates a whole category of noisy, style-only diffs by ensuring everyone uses the same indentation and line endings. Inconsistent whitespace between editors causes meaningless changes; a shared .editorconfig quietly prevents them.

does it replace a linter or formatter

No — it complements them. EditorConfig handles the basics that should be consistent in any editor, while linters and formatters enforce deeper code-style rules. Many teams use both, with EditorConfig covering whitespace and encoding fundamentals.