With JavaScript ES6, a new syntax was added for creating variables from an array index or object property, called destructuring. This rule enforces usage of destructuring instead of accessing a property through a member expression.
This rule takes two sets of configuration objects. The first object parameter determines what types of destructuring the rule applies to.
The two properties, array
and object
, can be used to turn on or off the destructuring requirement for each of those types independently. By default, both are true.
Alternatively, you can use separate configurations for different assignment types. It accepts 2 other keys instead of array
and object
.
One key is VariableDeclarator
and the other is AssignmentExpression
, which can be used to control the destructuring requirement for each of those types independently. Each property accepts an object that accepts two properties, array
and object
, which can be used to control the destructuring requirement for each of array
and object
independently for variable declarations and assignment expressions. By default, array
and object
are set to true for both VariableDeclarator
and AssignmentExpression
.
The rule has a second object with a single key, enforceForRenamedProperties
, which determines whether the object
destructuring applies to renamed variables.
Examples of incorrect code for this rule:
// With `array` enabled var foo = array[0]; // With `object` enabled var foo = object.foo; var foo = object['foo'];
Examples of correct code for this rule:
// With `array` enabled var [ foo ] = array; var foo = array[someIndex]; // With `object` enabled var { foo } = object; var foo = object.bar; let foo; ({ foo } = object);
Examples of incorrect code when enforceForRenamedProperties
is enabled:
var foo = object.bar;
Examples of correct code when enforceForRenamedProperties
is enabled:
var { bar: foo } = object;
An example configuration, with the defaults array
and object
filled in, looks like this:
{ "rules": { "prefer-destructuring": ["error", { "array": true, "object": true }, { "enforceForRenamedProperties": false }] } }
The two properties, array
and object
, which can be used to turn on or off the destructuring requirement for each of those types independently. By default, both are true.
For example, the following configuration enforces only object destructuring, but not array destructuring:
{ "rules": { "prefer-destructuring": ["error", {"object": true, "array": false}] } }
An example configuration, with the defaults VariableDeclarator
and AssignmentExpression
filled in, looks like this:
{ "rules": { "prefer-destructuring": ["error", { "VariableDeclarator": { "array": false, "object": true }, "AssignmentExpression": { "array": true, "object": true } }, { "enforceForRenamedProperties": false }] } }
The two properties, VariableDeclarator
and AssignmentExpression
, which can be used to turn on or off the destructuring requirement for array
and object
. By default, all values are true.
For example, the following configuration enforces object destructuring in variable declarations and enforces array destructuring in assignment expressions.
{ "rules": { "prefer-destructuring": ["error", { "VariableDeclarator": { "array": false, "object": true }, "AssignmentExpression": { "array": true, "object": false } }, { "enforceForRenamedProperties": false }] } }
Examples of correct code when object destructuring in VariableDeclarator
is enforced:
/* eslint prefer-destructuring: ["error", {VariableDeclarator: {object: true}}] */ var {bar: foo} = object;
Examples of correct code when array destructuring in AssignmentExpression
is enforced:
/* eslint prefer-destructuring: ["error", {AssignmentExpression: {array: true}}] */ [bar] = array;
If you want to be able to access array indices or object properties directly, you can either configure the rule to your tastes or disable the rule entirely.
Additionally, if you intend to access large array indices directly, like:
var foo = array[100];
Then the array
part of this rule is not recommended, as destructuring does not match this use case very well.
Or for non-iterable ‘array-like’ objects:
var $ = require('jquery'); var foo = $('body')[0]; var [bar] = $('body'); // fails with a TypeError
If you want to learn more about destructuring, check out the links below:
This rule was introduced in ESLint 3.13.0.
© JS Foundation and other contributors
Licensed under the MIT License.
https://eslint.org/docs/rules/prefer-destructuring