" should be ' Open
export const Basic = () => <Button label="Click me" />;
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Rule: quotemark
Enforces quote character for string literals.
Notes
- Has Fix
Config
Five arguments may be optionally provided:
-
"single"
enforces single quotes. -
"double"
enforces double quotes. -
"backtick"
enforces backticks. -
"jsx-single"
enforces single quotes for JSX attributes. -
"jsx-double"
enforces double quotes for JSX attributes. -
"avoid-template"
forbids single-line untagged template strings that do not contain string interpolations. Note that backticks may still be used if"avoid-escape"
is enabled and both single and double quotes are present in the string (the latter option takes precedence). -
"avoid-escape"
allows you to use the "other" quotemark in cases where escaping would normally be required. For example,[true, "double", "avoid-escape"]
would not report a failure on the string literal'Hello "World"'
.
Examples
"quotemark": true,single,avoid-escape,avoid-template
"quotemark": true,single,jsx-double
Schema
{
"type": "array",
"items": {
"type": "string",
"enum": [
"single",
"double",
"backtick",
"jsx-single",
"jsx-double",
"avoid-escape",
"avoid-template"
]
},
"minLength": 0,
"maxLength": 5
}
For more information see this page.
Type assertion on object literals is forbidden, use a type annotation instead. Open
export default {
component: Button,
title: 'Examples / Button',
argTypes: { onClick: { action: 'click ' } },
// render: () => <>hohoho</>,
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- Exclude checks
Rule: no-object-literal-type-assertion
Forbids an object literal to appear in a type assertion expression.
Casting to any
or to unknown
is still allowed.
Rationale
Always prefer const x: T = { ... };
to const x = { ... } as T;
.
The type assertion in the latter case is either unnecessary or hides an error.
The compiler will warn for excess properties with this syntax, but not missing required fields.
For example: const x: { foo: number } = {}
will fail to compile, but
const x = {} as { foo: number }
will succeed.
Additionally, the const assertion const x = { foo: 1 } as const
,
introduced in TypeScript 3.4, is considered beneficial and is ignored by this rule.
Notes
- TypeScript Only
Config
One option may be configured:
-
allow-arguments
allows type assertions to be used on object literals inside call expressions.
Examples
"no-object-literal-type-assertion": true
"no-object-literal-type-assertion": true,[object Object]
Schema
{
"type": "object",
"properties": {
"allow-arguments": {
"type": "boolean"
}
},
"additionalProperties": false
}
For more information see this page.