Do you tend to follow the rules that suppliers made?

carnoxen1 pts0 comments

Recently, I surfed the internet and found some strange codes in here(https://docs.antora.org/antora/latest/install-and-run-quickstart/#install-antora).```sh node -e fs.writeFileSync( package.json , {} ) npm i -D -E antora ```It was weird to me. NPM introduce `npm init`(https://docs.npmjs.com/creating-a-package-json-file), not `node -e` things. So I committed(https://gitlab.com/antora/antora/-/merge_requests/1136) and wait for responses. But the maintainer rejected my commit and said: I m aware of npm init and we don t recommend it for a good reason. It populates the package.json file with a lot of erroneous keys. It s much cleaner to create the file directly. Just because npm offers init doesn t make it official . [fix `node -e` to `npm init` because it is official](https://gitlab.com/antora/antora/-/merge_requests/1136#note_3453027473)I didn t understand his speech because the other NPM libraries follow the `npm init` rules(https://eslint.org/docs/latest/integrate/integration-tutorial) or create their own `init`s(https://www.prisma.io/docs).So I m wondering:1. Do you tend to follow the rules that suppliers made?2. If the answer is no , why?

antora https init docs quot follow

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