restrict-template-expressions
Enforce template literal expressions to be of
string
type.
Extending "plugin:@typescript-eslint/recommended-type-checked"
in an ESLint configuration enables this rule.
This rule requires type information to run.
JavaScript automatically converts an object to a string in a string context, such as when concatenating it with a string using +
or embedding it in a template literal using ${}
.
The default toString()
method of objects returns "[object Object]"
, which is often not what was intended.
This rule reports on values used in a template literal string that aren't strings, optionally allowing other data types that provide useful stringification results.
The default settings of this rule intentionally do not allow objects with a custom toString()
method to be used in template literals, because the stringification result may not be user-friendly.
For example, arrays have a custom toString()
method, which only calls join()
internally, which joins the array elements with commas. This means that (1) array elements are not necessarily stringified to useful results (2) the commas don't have spaces after them, making the result not user-friendly. The best way to format arrays is to use Intl.ListFormat
, which even supports adding the "and" conjunction where necessary.
You must explicitly call object.toString()
if you want to use this object in a template literal, or turn on the allowArray
option to specifically allow arrays.
The no-base-to-string
rule can be used to guard this case against producing "[object Object]"
by accident.
module.exports = {
"rules": {
"@typescript-eslint/restrict-template-expressions": "error"
}
};
Try this rule in the playground ↗
Examples
- ❌ Incorrect
- ✅ Correct
const arg1 = [1, 2];
const msg1 = `arg1 = ${arg1}`;
const arg2 = { name: 'Foo' };
const msg2 = `arg2 = ${arg2 || null}`;
Open in Playgroundconst arg = 'foo';
const msg1 = `arg = ${arg}`;
const msg2 = `arg = ${arg || 'default'}`;
const stringWithKindProp: string & { _kind?: 'MyString' } = 'foo';
const msg3 = `stringWithKindProp = ${stringWithKindProp}`;
Open in PlaygroundOptions
This rule accepts the following options, and has more strict settings in the strict
and strict-type-checked
configs.
type Options = [
{
/** Whether to allow `any` typed values in template expressions. */
allowAny?: boolean;
/** Whether to allow `array` typed values in template expressions. */
allowArray?: boolean;
/** Whether to allow `boolean` typed values in template expressions. */
allowBoolean?: boolean;
/** Whether to allow `never` typed values in template expressions. */
allowNever?: boolean;
/** Whether to allow `nullish` typed values in template expressions. */
allowNullish?: boolean;
/** Whether to allow `number` typed values in template expressions. */
allowNumber?: boolean;
/** Whether to allow `regexp` typed values in template expressions. */
allowRegExp?: boolean;
},
];
const defaultOptionsRecommended: Options = [
{
allowAny: true,
allowBoolean: true,
allowNullish: true,
allowNumber: true,
allowRegExp: true,
},
];
// These options are merged on top of the recommended defaults
const defaultOptionsStrict: Options = [
{
allowAny: false,
allowBoolean: false,
allowNullish: false,
allowNumber: false,
allowRegExp: false,
allowNever: false,
},
];
allowNumber
Examples of additional correct code for this rule with { allowNumber: true }
:
const arg = 123;
const msg1 = `arg = ${arg}`;
const msg2 = `arg = ${arg || 'zero'}`;
Open in PlaygroundThis option controls both numbers and BigInts.
allowBoolean
Examples of additional correct code for this rule with { allowBoolean: true }
:
const arg = true;
const msg1 = `arg = ${arg}`;
const msg2 = `arg = ${arg || 'not truthy'}`;
Open in PlaygroundallowAny
Examples of additional correct code for this rule with { allowAny: true }
:
const user = JSON.parse('{ "name": "foo" }');
const msg1 = `arg = ${user.name}`;
const msg2 = `arg = ${user.name || 'the user with no name'}`;
Open in PlaygroundallowNullish
Examples of additional correct code for this rule with { allowNullish: true }
:
const arg = condition ? 'ok' : null;
const msg1 = `arg = ${arg}`;
Open in PlaygroundallowRegExp
Examples of additional correct code for this rule with { allowRegExp: true }
:
const arg = new RegExp('foo');
const msg1 = `arg = ${arg}`;
Open in Playgroundconst arg = /foo/;
const msg1 = `arg = ${arg}`;
Open in PlaygroundallowNever
Examples of additional correct code for this rule with { allowNever: true }
:
const arg = 'something';
const msg1 = typeof arg === 'string' ? arg : `arg = ${arg}`;
Open in PlaygroundallowArray
Examples of additional correct code for this rule with { allowArray: true }
:
const arg = ['foo', 'bar'];
const msg1 = `arg = ${arg}`;
Open in PlaygroundWhen Not To Use It
If you're not worried about incorrectly stringifying non-string values in template literals, then you likely don't need this rule.
Related To
Type checked lint rules are more powerful than traditional lint rules, but also require configuring type checked linting. See Performance Troubleshooting if you experience performance degredations after enabling type checked rules.