valid-typeof
Enforce comparing typeof
expressions against valid strings
The "extends": "eslint:recommended"
property in a configuration file enables this rule
Some problems reported by this rule are manually fixable by editor suggestions
For a vast majority of use cases, the result of the typeof
operator is one of the following string literals: "undefined"
, "object"
, "boolean"
, "number"
, "string"
, "function"
, "symbol"
, and "bigint"
. It is usually a typing mistake to compare the result of a typeof
operator to other string literals.
Rule Details
This rule enforces comparing typeof
expressions to valid string literals.
Options
This rule has an object option:
"requireStringLiterals": true
requirestypeof
expressions to only be compared to string literals or othertypeof
expressions, and disallows comparisons to any other value.
Examples of incorrect code for this rule:
/*eslint valid-typeof: "error"*/
typeof foo === "strnig"
typeof foo == "undefimed"
typeof bar != "nunber"
typeof bar !== "fucntion"
Examples of correct code for this rule:
/*eslint valid-typeof: "error"*/
typeof foo === "string"
typeof bar == "undefined"
typeof foo === baz
typeof bar === typeof qux
Examples of incorrect code with the { "requireStringLiterals": true }
option:
/*eslint valid-typeof: ["error", { "requireStringLiterals": true }]*/
typeof foo === undefined
typeof bar == Object
typeof baz === "strnig"
typeof qux === "some invalid type"
typeof baz === anotherVariable
typeof foo == 5
Examples of correct code with the { "requireStringLiterals": true }
option:
/*eslint valid-typeof: ["error", { "requireStringLiterals": true }]*/
typeof foo === "undefined"
typeof bar == "object"
typeof baz === "string"
typeof bar === typeof qux
When Not To Use It
You may want to turn this rule off if you will be using the typeof
operator on host objects.
Version
This rule was introduced in ESLint v0.5.0.