Showing 1,278 of 1,394 total issues
Identifier 'shift' is never reassigned; use 'const' instead of 'let'. Open
let shift = ensureTokenAndEthShift(jurorAddress, disputeID, roundIndex, feeTokenAddress);
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Rule: prefer-const
Requires that variable declarations use const
instead of let
and var
if possible.
If a variable is only assigned to once when it is declared, it should be declared using 'const'
Notes
- Has Fix
Config
An optional object containing the property "destructuring" with two possible values:
- "any" (default) - If any variable in destructuring can be const, this rule warns for those variables.
- "all" - Only warns if all variables in destructuring can be const.
Examples
"prefer-const": true
"prefer-const": true,[object Object]
Schema
{
"type": "object",
"properties": {
"destructuring": {
"type": "string",
"enum": [
"all",
"any"
]
}
}
}
For more information see this page.
Forbidden 'var' keyword, use 'let' or 'const' instead Open
var info = await core.getRoundInfo(disputeID, 0);
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Rule: no-var-keyword
Disallows usage of the var
keyword.
Use let
or const
instead.
Rationale
Declaring variables using var
has several edge case behaviors that make var
unsuitable for modern code.
Variables declared by var
have their parent function block as their scope, ignoring other control flow statements.
var
s have declaration "hoisting" (similar to function
s) and can appear to be used before declaration.
Variables declared by const
and let
instead have as their scope the block in which they are defined,
and are not allowed to used before declaration or be re-declared with another const
or let
.
Notes
- Has Fix
Config
Not configurable.
Examples
"no-var-keyword": true
For more information see this page.
Unnecessary semicolon Open
};
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Rule: semicolon
Enforces consistent semicolon usage at the end of every statement.
Notes
- Has Fix
Config
One of the following arguments must be provided:
-
"always"
enforces semicolons at the end of every statement. -
"never"
disallows semicolons at the end of every statement except for when they are necessary.
The following arguments may be optionally provided:
-
"ignore-interfaces"
skips checking semicolons at the end of interface members. -
"ignore-bound-class-methods"
skips checking semicolons at the end of bound class methods. -
"strict-bound-class-methods"
disables any special handling of bound class methods and treats them as any other assignment. This option overrides"ignore-bound-class-methods"
.
Examples
"semicolon": true,always
"semicolon": true,never
"semicolon": true,always,ignore-interfaces
"semicolon": true,always,ignore-bound-class-methods
Schema
{
"type": "array",
"items": [
{
"type": "string",
"enum": [
"always",
"never"
]
},
{
"type": "string",
"enum": [
"ignore-interfaces"
]
}
],
"additionalItems": false
}
For more information see this page.
Missing semicolon Open
import type { Metadata } from "next";
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Rule: semicolon
Enforces consistent semicolon usage at the end of every statement.
Notes
- Has Fix
Config
One of the following arguments must be provided:
-
"always"
enforces semicolons at the end of every statement. -
"never"
disallows semicolons at the end of every statement except for when they are necessary.
The following arguments may be optionally provided:
-
"ignore-interfaces"
skips checking semicolons at the end of interface members. -
"ignore-bound-class-methods"
skips checking semicolons at the end of bound class methods. -
"strict-bound-class-methods"
disables any special handling of bound class methods and treats them as any other assignment. This option overrides"ignore-bound-class-methods"
.
Examples
"semicolon": true,always
"semicolon": true,never
"semicolon": true,always,ignore-interfaces
"semicolon": true,always,ignore-bound-class-methods
Schema
{
"type": "array",
"items": [
{
"type": "string",
"enum": [
"always",
"never"
]
},
{
"type": "string",
"enum": [
"ignore-interfaces"
]
}
],
"additionalItems": false
}
For more information see this page.
Missing semicolon Open
export const getDisputeRequestParamsFromTxn = async (hash: `0x${string}`, chainId: number) => {
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Rule: semicolon
Enforces consistent semicolon usage at the end of every statement.
Notes
- Has Fix
Config
One of the following arguments must be provided:
-
"always"
enforces semicolons at the end of every statement. -
"never"
disallows semicolons at the end of every statement except for when they are necessary.
The following arguments may be optionally provided:
-
"ignore-interfaces"
skips checking semicolons at the end of interface members. -
"ignore-bound-class-methods"
skips checking semicolons at the end of bound class methods. -
"strict-bound-class-methods"
disables any special handling of bound class methods and treats them as any other assignment. This option overrides"ignore-bound-class-methods"
.
Examples
"semicolon": true,always
"semicolon": true,never
"semicolon": true,always,ignore-interfaces
"semicolon": true,always,ignore-bound-class-methods
Schema
{
"type": "array",
"items": [
{
"type": "string",
"enum": [
"always",
"never"
]
},
{
"type": "string",
"enum": [
"ignore-interfaces"
]
}
],
"additionalItems": false
}
For more information see this page.
unused expression, expected an assignment or function call Open
contractWrite: () => Promise<`0x${string}`>,
publicClient: PublicClient
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Rule: no-unused-expression
Disallows unused expression statements.
Unused expressions are expression statements which are not assignments or function calls (and thus usually no-ops).
Rationale
Detects potential errors where an assignment or function call was intended.
Config
Three arguments may be optionally provided:
-
allow-fast-null-checks
allows to use logical operators to perform fast null checks and perform method or function calls for side effects (e.g.e && e.preventDefault()
). -
allow-new
allows 'new' expressions for side effects (e.g.new ModifyGlobalState();
. -
allow-tagged-template
allows tagged templates for side effects (e.g.this.add\
foo`;`.
Examples
"no-unused-expression": true
"no-unused-expression": true,allow-fast-null-checks
Schema
{
"type": "array",
"items": {
"type": "string",
"enum": [
"allow-fast-null-checks",
"allow-new",
"allow-tagged-template"
]
},
"minLength": 0,
"maxLength": 3
}
For more information see this page.
statements are not aligned Open
): Promise<WrapWithToastReturnType> {
toast.info("Transaction initiated", OPTIONS);
return await contractWrite()
.then(
async (hash) =>
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Rule: align
Enforces vertical alignment.
Rationale
Helps maintain a readable, consistent style in your codebase.
Consistent alignment for code statements helps keep code readable and clear. Statements misaligned from the standard can be harder to read and understand.
Notes
- Has Fix
Config
Five arguments may be optionally provided:
-
"parameters"
checks alignment of function parameters. -
"arguments"
checks alignment of function call arguments. -
"statements"
checks alignment of statements. -
"members"
checks alignment of members of classes, interfaces, type literal, object literals and object destructuring. -
"elements"
checks alignment of elements of array literals, array destructuring and tuple types.
Examples
"align": true,parameters,statements
Schema
{
"type": "array",
"items": {
"type": "string",
"enum": [
"arguments",
"elements",
"members",
"parameters",
"statements"
]
},
"minLength": 1,
"maxLength": 5
}
For more information see this page.
missing whitespace Open
): Promise<WrapWithToastReturnType> {
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Rule: whitespace
Enforces whitespace style conventions.
Rationale
Helps maintain a readable, consistent style in your codebase.
Notes
- Has Fix
Config
Several arguments may be optionally provided:
-
"check-branch"
checks branching statements (if
/else
/for
/while
) are followed by whitespace. -
"check-decl"
checks that variable declarations have whitespace around the equals token. -
"check-operator"
checks for whitespace around operator tokens. -
"check-module"
checks for whitespace in import & export statements. -
"check-separator"
checks for whitespace after separator tokens (,
/;
). -
"check-rest-spread"
checks that there is no whitespace after rest/spread operator (...
). -
"check-type"
checks for whitespace before a variable type specification. -
"check-typecast"
checks for whitespace between a typecast and its target. -
"check-type-operator"
checks for whitespace between type operators|
and&
. -
"check-preblock"
checks for whitespace before the opening brace of a block. -
"check-postbrace"
checks for whitespace after an opening brace.
Examples
"whitespace": true,check-branch,check-operator,check-typecast
Schema
{
"type": "array",
"items": {
"type": "string",
"enum": [
"check-branch",
"check-decl",
"check-operator",
"check-module",
"check-separator",
"check-rest-spread",
"check-type",
"check-typecast",
"check-type-operator",
"check-preblock",
"check-postbrace"
]
},
"minLength": 0,
"maxLength": 11
}
For more information see this page.
unused expression, expected an assignment or function call Open
import IArbitrableV2 from "@kleros/kleros-v2-contracts/artifacts/src/arbitration/interfaces/IArbitrableV2.sol/IArbitrableV2.json" assert { type: "json" };
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Rule: no-unused-expression
Disallows unused expression statements.
Unused expressions are expression statements which are not assignments or function calls (and thus usually no-ops).
Rationale
Detects potential errors where an assignment or function call was intended.
Config
Three arguments may be optionally provided:
-
allow-fast-null-checks
allows to use logical operators to perform fast null checks and perform method or function calls for side effects (e.g.e && e.preventDefault()
). -
allow-new
allows 'new' expressions for side effects (e.g.new ModifyGlobalState();
. -
allow-tagged-template
allows tagged templates for side effects (e.g.this.add\
foo`;`.
Examples
"no-unused-expression": true
"no-unused-expression": true,allow-fast-null-checks
Schema
{
"type": "array",
"items": {
"type": "string",
"enum": [
"allow-fast-null-checks",
"allow-new",
"allow-tagged-template"
]
},
"minLength": 0,
"maxLength": 3
}
For more information see this page.
Missing semicolon Open
import IArbitrableV2 from "@kleros/kleros-v2-contracts/artifacts/src/arbitration/interfaces/IArbitrableV2.sol/IArbitrableV2.json" assert { type: "json" };
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Rule: semicolon
Enforces consistent semicolon usage at the end of every statement.
Notes
- Has Fix
Config
One of the following arguments must be provided:
-
"always"
enforces semicolons at the end of every statement. -
"never"
disallows semicolons at the end of every statement except for when they are necessary.
The following arguments may be optionally provided:
-
"ignore-interfaces"
skips checking semicolons at the end of interface members. -
"ignore-bound-class-methods"
skips checking semicolons at the end of bound class methods. -
"strict-bound-class-methods"
disables any special handling of bound class methods and treats them as any other assignment. This option overrides"ignore-bound-class-methods"
.
Examples
"semicolon": true,always
"semicolon": true,never
"semicolon": true,always,ignore-interfaces
"semicolon": true,always,ignore-bound-class-methods
Schema
{
"type": "array",
"items": [
{
"type": "string",
"enum": [
"always",
"never"
]
},
{
"type": "string",
"enum": [
"ignore-interfaces"
]
}
],
"additionalItems": false
}
For more information see this page.
Missing semicolon Open
import IHomeGateway from "@kleros/kleros-v2-contracts/artifacts/src/gateway/interfaces/IHomeGateway.sol/IHomeGateway.json" assert { type: "json" };
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Rule: semicolon
Enforces consistent semicolon usage at the end of every statement.
Notes
- Has Fix
Config
One of the following arguments must be provided:
-
"always"
enforces semicolons at the end of every statement. -
"never"
disallows semicolons at the end of every statement except for when they are necessary.
The following arguments may be optionally provided:
-
"ignore-interfaces"
skips checking semicolons at the end of interface members. -
"ignore-bound-class-methods"
skips checking semicolons at the end of bound class methods. -
"strict-bound-class-methods"
disables any special handling of bound class methods and treats them as any other assignment. This option overrides"ignore-bound-class-methods"
.
Examples
"semicolon": true,always
"semicolon": true,never
"semicolon": true,always,ignore-interfaces
"semicolon": true,always,ignore-bound-class-methods
Schema
{
"type": "array",
"items": [
{
"type": "string",
"enum": [
"always",
"never"
]
},
{
"type": "string",
"enum": [
"ignore-interfaces"
]
}
],
"additionalItems": false
}
For more information see this page.
comment must start with a space Open
//stake is updated instantly so no delayed amount, set delay amount to zero
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Rule: comment-format
Enforces formatting rules for single-line comments.
Rationale
Helps maintain a consistent, readable style in your codebase.
Notes
- Has Fix
Config
Four arguments may be optionally provided:
-
"check-space"
requires that all single-line comments must begin with a space, as in// comment
- note that for comments starting with multiple slashes, e.g.
///
, leading slashes are ignored - TypeScript reference comments are ignored completely
- note that for comments starting with multiple slashes, e.g.
-
"check-lowercase"
requires that the first non-whitespace character of a comment must be lowercase, if applicable. -
"check-uppercase"
requires that the first non-whitespace character of a comment must be uppercase, if applicable. -
"allow-trailing-lowercase"
allows that only the first comment of a series of comments needs to be uppercase.- requires
"check-uppercase"
- comments must start at the same position
- requires
Exceptions to "check-lowercase"
or "check-uppercase"
can be managed with object that may be passed as last
argument.
One of two options can be provided in this object:
-
"ignore-words"
- array of strings - words that will be ignored at the beginning of the comment. -
"ignore-pattern"
- string - RegExp pattern that will be ignored at the beginning of the comment.
Examples
"comment-format": true,check-space,check-uppercase,allow-trailing-lowercase
"comment-format": true,check-lowercase,[object Object]
"comment-format": true,check-lowercase,[object Object]
Schema
{
"type": "array",
"items": {
"anyOf": [
{
"type": "string",
"enum": [
"check-space",
"check-lowercase",
"check-uppercase",
"allow-trailing-lowercase"
]
},
{
"type": "object",
"properties": {
"ignore-words": {
"type": "array",
"items": {
"type": "string"
}
},
"ignore-pattern": {
"type": "string"
}
},
"minProperties": 1,
"maxProperties": 1
}
]
},
"minLength": 1,
"maxLength": 5
}
For more information see this page.
Identifier 'courtId' is never reassigned; use 'const' instead of 'let'. Open
let courtId = BigInt.fromI32(1);
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Rule: prefer-const
Requires that variable declarations use const
instead of let
and var
if possible.
If a variable is only assigned to once when it is declared, it should be declared using 'const'
Notes
- Has Fix
Config
An optional object containing the property "destructuring" with two possible values:
- "any" (default) - If any variable in destructuring can be const, this rule warns for those variables.
- "all" - Only warns if all variables in destructuring can be const.
Examples
"prefer-const": true
"prefer-const": true,[object Object]
Schema
{
"type": "object",
"properties": {
"destructuring": {
"type": "string",
"enum": [
"all",
"any"
]
}
}
}
For more information see this page.
== should be === Open
return value.toBool() == true ? "true" : "false";
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Rule: triple-equals
Requires ===
and !==
in place of ==
and !=
.
Config
Two arguments may be optionally provided:
-
"allow-null-check"
allows==
and!=
when comparing tonull
. -
"allow-undefined-check"
allows==
and!=
when comparing toundefined
.
Examples
"triple-equals": true
"triple-equals": true,allow-null-check
"triple-equals": true,allow-undefined-check
Schema
{
"type": "array",
"items": {
"type": "string",
"enum": [
"allow-null-check",
"allow-undefined-check"
]
},
"minLength": 0,
"maxLength": 2
}
For more information see this page.
Identifier 'tx' is never reassigned; use 'const' instead of 'let'. Open
let tx = await (await arbitrable.changeDisputeTemplate(template, "disputeTemplateMapping: TODO")).wait();
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Rule: prefer-const
Requires that variable declarations use const
instead of let
and var
if possible.
If a variable is only assigned to once when it is declared, it should be declared using 'const'
Notes
- Has Fix
Config
An optional object containing the property "destructuring" with two possible values:
- "any" (default) - If any variable in destructuring can be const, this rule warns for those variables.
- "all" - Only warns if all variables in destructuring can be const.
Examples
"prefer-const": true
"prefer-const": true,[object Object]
Schema
{
"type": "object",
"properties": {
"destructuring": {
"type": "string",
"enum": [
"all",
"any"
]
}
}
}
For more information see this page.
Forbidden 'var' keyword, use 'let' or 'const' instead Open
var logs = await gateway.queryFilter(filter, tx.blockNumber, tx.blockNumber);
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Rule: no-var-keyword
Disallows usage of the var
keyword.
Use let
or const
instead.
Rationale
Declaring variables using var
has several edge case behaviors that make var
unsuitable for modern code.
Variables declared by var
have their parent function block as their scope, ignoring other control flow statements.
var
s have declaration "hoisting" (similar to function
s) and can appear to be used before declaration.
Variables declared by const
and let
instead have as their scope the block in which they are defined,
and are not allowed to used before declaration or be re-declared with another const
or let
.
Notes
- Has Fix
Config
Not configurable.
Examples
"no-var-keyword": true
For more information see this page.
Shadowed name: 'dispute' Open
logger.info(`Disputes needing more jurors: ${disputesWithoutJurors.map((dispute) => dispute.id)}`);
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Rule: no-shadowed-variable
Disallows shadowing variable declarations.
Rationale
When a variable in a local scope and a variable in the containing scope have the same name, shadowing occurs. Shadowing makes it impossible to access the variable in the containing scope and obscures to what value an identifier actually refers. Compare the following snippets:
const a = 'no shadow';
function print() {
console.log(a);
}
print(); // logs 'no shadow'.
const a = 'no shadow';
function print() {
const a = 'shadow'; // TSLint will complain here.
console.log(a);
}
print(); // logs 'shadow'.
ESLint has an equivalent rule. For more background information, refer to this MDN closure doc.
Config
You can optionally pass an object to disable checking for certain kinds of declarations.
Possible keys are "class"
, "enum"
, "function"
, "import"
, "interface"
, "namespace"
, "typeAlias"
and "typeParameter"
. You can also pass "underscore
" to ignore variable names that begin with _
.
Just set the value to false
for the check you want to disable.
All checks default to true
, i.e. are enabled by default.
Note that you cannot disable variables and parameters.
The option "temporalDeadZone"
defaults to true
which shows errors when shadowing block scoped declarations in their
temporal dead zone. When set to false
parameters, classes, enums and variables declared
with let
or const
are not considered shadowed if the shadowing occurs within their
temporal dead zone.
The following example shows how the "temporalDeadZone"
option changes the linting result:
function fn(value) {
if (value) {
const tmp = value; // no error on this line if "temporalDeadZone" is false
return tmp;
}
let tmp = undefined;
if (!value) {
const tmp = value; // this line always contains an error
return tmp;
}
}
Examples
"no-shadowed-variable": true
"no-shadowed-variable": true,[object Object]
Schema
{
"type": "object",
"properties": {
"class": {
"type": "boolean"
},
"enum": {
"type": "boolean"
},
"function": {
"type": "boolean"
},
"import": {
"type": "boolean"
},
"interface": {
"type": "boolean"
},
"namespace": {
"type": "boolean"
},
"typeAlias": {
"type": "boolean"
},
"typeParameter": {
"type": "boolean"
},
"temporalDeadZone": {
"type": "boolean"
},
"underscore": {
"type": "boolean"
}
}
}
For more information see this page.
Duplicate variable: 'dispute' Open
for (var dispute of disputes) {
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Rule: no-duplicate-variable
Disallows duplicate variable declarations in the same block scope.
This rule is only useful when using the var
keyword -
the compiler will detect redeclarations of let
and const
variables.
Rationale
A variable can be reassigned if necessary - there's no good reason to have a duplicate variable declaration.
Config
You can specify "check-parameters"
to check for variables with the same name as a parameter.
Examples
"no-duplicate-variable": true
"no-duplicate-variable": true,check-parameters
Schema
{
"type": "string",
"enum": [
"check-parameters"
]
}
For more information see this page.
statements are not aligned Open
const handleFormUpdate = (event: React.ChangeEvent<HTMLInputElement>) => {
const value = ["_arbitrator", "_arbitrable", "_templateUri"].includes(event.target.name)
? event.target.value
: BigInt(event.target.value);
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Rule: align
Enforces vertical alignment.
Rationale
Helps maintain a readable, consistent style in your codebase.
Consistent alignment for code statements helps keep code readable and clear. Statements misaligned from the standard can be harder to read and understand.
Notes
- Has Fix
Config
Five arguments may be optionally provided:
-
"parameters"
checks alignment of function parameters. -
"arguments"
checks alignment of function call arguments. -
"statements"
checks alignment of statements. -
"members"
checks alignment of members of classes, interfaces, type literal, object literals and object destructuring. -
"elements"
checks alignment of elements of array literals, array destructuring and tuple types.
Examples
"align": true,parameters,statements
Schema
{
"type": "array",
"items": {
"type": "string",
"enum": [
"arguments",
"elements",
"members",
"parameters",
"statements"
]
},
"minLength": 1,
"maxLength": 5
}
For more information see this page.
Unnecessary 'await'. Open
wrapWithToast(async () => await changeToAutomaticPreset(automaticPresetConfig.request), publicClient).finally(
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Rule: no-return-await
Disallows unnecessary return await
.
Rationale
An async function always wraps the return value in a Promise.
Using return await
just adds extra time before the overreaching promise is resolved without changing the semantics.
Notes
- Has Fix
Config
Not configurable.
Examples
"no-return-await": true
For more information see this page.