0.16.1 • Published 2 months ago

@rushstack/eslint-plugin v0.16.1

Weekly downloads
9,124
License
MIT
Repository
github
Last release
2 months ago

@rushstack/eslint-plugin

This plugin implements supplementary rules for use with the @rushstack/eslint-config package, which provides a TypeScript ESLint ruleset tailored for large teams and projects. Please see that project's documentation for details. To learn about Rush Stack, please visit: https://rushstack.io/

@rushstack/hoist-jest-mock

Require Jest module mocking APIs to be called before any other statements in their code block.

Rule Details

Jest module mocking APIs such as "jest.mock()" must be called before the associated module is imported, otherwise they will have no effect. Transpilers such as ts-jest and babel-jest automatically "hoist" these calls, however this can produce counterintuitive behavior. Instead, the hoist-jest-mocks lint rule simply requires developers to write the statements in the correct order.

The following APIs are affected: 'jest.mock()', 'jest.unmock()', 'jest.enableAutomock()', 'jest.disableAutomock()', 'jest.deepUnmock()'.

For technical background, please read the Jest documentation here: https://jestjs.io/docs/en/es6-class-mocks

Examples

The following patterns are considered problems when @rushstack/hoist-jest-mock is enabled:

import * as file from './file'; // import statement
jest.mock('./file'); // error

test("example", () => {
  jest.mock('./file2'); // error
});
require('./file'); // import statement
jest.mock('./file'); // error

The following patterns are NOT considered problems:

jest.mock('./file'); // okay, because mock() precedes the import below
import * as file from './file'; // import statement
// These statements are not real "imports" because they import compile-time types
// without any runtime effects
import type { X } from './file';
let y: typeof import('./file');

jest.mock('./file'); // okay

@rushstack/no-new-null

Prevent usage of the JavaScript null value, while allowing code to access existing APIs that may require null.

Rule Details

Most programming languages have a "null" or "nil" value that serves several purposes:

  1. the initial value for an uninitialized variable
  2. the value of x.y or x["y"] when x has no such key, and
  3. a special token that developers can assign to indicate an unknown or empty state.

In JavaScript, the undefined value fulfills all three roles. JavaScript's null value is a redundant secondary token that only fulfills (3), even though its name confusingly implies otherwise. The null value was arguably a mistake in the original JavaScript language design, but it cannot be banned entirely because it is returned by some entrenched system APIs such as JSON.parse(), and also some popular NPM packages. Thus, this rule aims to tolerate preexisting null values while preventing new ones from being introduced.

The @rushstack/no-new-null rule flags type definitions with null that can be exported or used by others. The rule ignores declarations that are local variables, private members, or types that are not exported.

If you are designing a new JSON file format, it's a good idea to avoid null entirely. In most cases there are better representations that convey more information about an item that is unknown, omitted, or disabled. If you do need to declare types for JSON structures containing null, rather than suppressing the lint rule, you can use a specialized JsonNull type as provided by @rushstack/node-core-library.

Examples

The following patterns are considered problems when @rushstack/no-new-null is enabled:

// interface declaration with null field
interface IHello { hello: null; } // error

// type declaration with null field
type Hello = { hello: null; } // error

// type function alias
type T = (args: string | null) => void; // error

// type alias
type N = null; // error

// type constructor
type C = {new (args: string | null)} // error

// function declaration with null args
function hello(world: string | null): void {}; // error
function legacy(callback: (err: Error| null) => void): void { }; // error

// function with null return type
function hello(): (err: Error | null) => void {}; // error

// const with null type
const nullType: 'hello' | null = 'hello'; // error

// classes with publicly visible properties and methods
class PublicNulls {
  property: string | null; // error
  propertyFunc: (val: string | null) => void; // error
  legacyImplicitPublic(hello: string | null): void {} // error
  public legacyExplicitPublic(hello: string | null): void {} // error
}

The following patterns are NOT considered problems:

// wrapping an null-API
export function ok(hello: string): void {
  const innerCallback: (err: Error | null) => void = (e) => {}; // passes
  return innerCallback(null);
}

// classes where null APIs are used, but are private-only
class PrivateNulls {
  private pField: string | null; // passes
  private pFunc: (val: string | null) => void; // passes
  private legacyPrivate(hello: string | null): void { // passes
    this.pField = hello;
    this.pFunc(this.pField)
    this.pFunc('hello')
  }
}

@rushstack/no-null

(Deprecated) Prevent usage of JavaScript's null keyword.

Rule Details

This rule has been superseded by @rushstack/no-new-null, and is maintained to support code that has not migrated to the new rule yet. The @rushstack/no-null rule prohibits null as a literal value, but allows it in type annotations. Comparisons with null are also allowed.

Examples

The following patterns are considered problems when @rushstack/no-null is enabled:

let x = null;  // error

f(null); // error

function g() {
    return null; // error
}

The following patterns are NOT considered problems:

let x: number | null = f(); // declaring types as possibly "null" is okay

if (x === null) {  // comparisons are okay
    x = 0;
}

@rushstack/no-untyped-underscore (Opt-in)

Prevent TypeScript code from accessing legacy JavaScript members whose name has an underscore prefix.

Rule Details

JavaScript does not provide a straightforward way to restrict access to object members, so API names commonly indicate a private member by using an underscore prefix (e.g. exampleObject._privateMember). For inexperienced developers who may be unfamiliar with this convention, in TypeScript we can mark the APIs as private or omit them from the typings. However, when migrating a large code base to TypeScript, it may be difficult to declare types for every legacy API. In this situation, the @rushstack/no-untyped-underscore rule can help.

This rule detects expressions that access a member with an underscore prefix, EXCEPT in cases where:

  • The object is typed: specifically, exampleObject has a TypeScript type that declares _privateMember; OR
  • The object expression uses: the this or super keywords; OR
  • The object expression is a variable named that. (In older ES5 code, that was commonly used as an alias for this in unbound contexts.)

Examples

The following patterns are considered problems when @rushstack/no-untyped-underscore is enabled:

let x: any;
x._privateMember = 123;  // error, because x is untyped

let x: { [key: string]: number };
x._privateMember = 123;  // error, because _privateMember is not a declared member of x's type

The following patterns are NOT considered problems:

let x: { _privateMember: any };
x._privateMember = 123;  // okay, because _privateMember is declared by x's type

let x = { _privateMember: 0 };
x._privateMember = 123;  // okay, because _privateMember is part of the inferred type

enum E {
    _PrivateMember
}
let e: E._PrivateMember = E._PrivateMember; // okay, because _PrivateMember is declared by E

Links

@rushstack/eslint-plugin is part of the Rush Stack family of projects.

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