const
(prefer-const)The --fix
option on the command line can automatically fix some of the problems reported by this rule.
If a variable is never reassigned, using the const
declaration is better.
const
declaration tells readers, “this variable is never reassigned,” reducing cognitive load and improving maintainability.
This rule is aimed at flagging variables that are declared using let
keyword, but never reassigned after the initial assignment.
Examples of incorrect code for this rule:
/*eslint prefer-const: "error"*/ /*eslint-env es6*/ // it's initialized and never reassigned. let a = 3; console.log(a); let a; a = 0; console.log(a); // `i` is redefined (not reassigned) on each loop step. for (let i in [1, 2, 3]) { console.log(i); } // `a` is redefined (not reassigned) on each loop step. for (let a of [1, 2, 3]) { console.log(a); }
Examples of correct code for this rule:
/*eslint prefer-const: "error"*/ /*eslint-env es6*/ // using const. const a = 0; // it's never initialized. let a; console.log(a); // it's reassigned after initialized. let a; a = 0; a = 1; console.log(a); // it's initialized in a different block from the declaration. let a; if (true) { a = 0; } console.log(a); // it's initialized at a place that we cannot write a variable declaration. let a; if (true) a = 0; console.log(a); // `i` gets a new binding each iteration for (const i in [1, 2, 3]) { console.log(i); } // `a` gets a new binding each iteration for (const a of [1, 2, 3]) { console.log(a); } // `end` is never reassigned, but we cannot separate the declarations without modifying the scope. for (let i = 0, end = 10; i < end; ++i) { console.log(a); } // `predicate` is only assigned once but cannot be separately declared as `const` let predicate; [object.type, predicate] = foo(); // `a` is only assigned once but cannot be separately declared as `const` let a; const b = {}; ({ a, c: b.c } = func()); // suggest to use `no-var` rule. var b = 3; console.log(b);
{ "prefer-const": ["error", { "destructuring": "any", "ignoreReadBeforeAssign": false }] }
The kind of the way to address variables in destructuring. There are 2 values:
"any"
(default) - If any variables in destructuring should be const
, this rule warns for those variables."all"
- If all variables in destructuring should be const
, this rule warns the variables. Otherwise, ignores them.Examples of incorrect code for the default {"destructuring": "any"}
option:
/*eslint prefer-const: "error"*/ /*eslint-env es6*/ let {a, b} = obj; /*error 'b' is never reassigned, use 'const' instead.*/ a = a + 1;
Examples of correct code for the default {"destructuring": "any"}
option:
/*eslint prefer-const: "error"*/ /*eslint-env es6*/ // using const. const {a: a0, b} = obj; const a = a0 + 1; // all variables are reassigned. let {a, b} = obj; a = a + 1; b = b + 1;
Examples of incorrect code for the {"destructuring": "all"}
option:
/*eslint prefer-const: ["error", {"destructuring": "all"}]*/ /*eslint-env es6*/ // all of `a` and `b` should be const, so those are warned. let {a, b} = obj; /*error 'a' is never reassigned, use 'const' instead. 'b' is never reassigned, use 'const' instead.*/
Examples of correct code for the {"destructuring": "all"}
option:
/*eslint prefer-const: ["error", {"destructuring": "all"}]*/ /*eslint-env es6*/ // 'b' is never reassigned, but all of `a` and `b` should not be const, so those are ignored. let {a, b} = obj; a = a + 1;
This is an option to avoid conflicting with no-use-before-define
rule (without "nofunc"
option). If true
is specified, this rule will ignore variables that are read between the declaration and the first assignment. Default is false
.
Examples of correct code for the {"ignoreReadBeforeAssign": true}
option:
/*eslint prefer-const: ["error", {"ignoreReadBeforeAssign": true}]*/ /*eslint-env es6*/ let timer; function initialize() { if (foo()) { clearInterval(timer); } } timer = setInterval(initialize, 100);
Examples of correct code for the default {"ignoreReadBeforeAssign": false}
option:
/*eslint prefer-const: ["error", {"ignoreReadBeforeAssign": false}]*/ /*eslint-env es6*/ const timer = setInterval(initialize, 100); function initialize() { if (foo()) { clearInterval(timer); } }
If you don’t want to be notified about variables that are never reassigned after initial assignment, you can safely disable this rule.
This rule was introduced in ESLint 0.23.0.
© JS Foundation and other contributors
Licensed under the MIT License.
https://eslint.org/docs/rules/prefer-const