Enforces that type arguments will not be used if not required (no-unnecessary-type-arguments
)
Warns if an explicitly specified type argument is the default for that type parameter.
Rule Details
Type parameters in TypeScript may specify a default value. For example:
function f<T = number>() {}
It is redundant to provide an explicit type parameter equal to that default.
Examples of code for this rule:
- โ Incorrect
- โ Correct
function f<T = number>() {}
f<number>();
function g<T = number, U = string>() {}
g<string, string>();
class C<T = number> {}
function h(c: C<number>) {}
new C<number>();
class D extends C<number> {}
interface I<T = number> {}
class Impl implements I<number> {}
function f<T = number>() {}
f<string>();
function g<T = number, U = string>() {}
g<number, number>();
class C<T = number> {}
new C<string>();
class D extends C<string> {}
interface I<T = number> {}
class Impl implements I<string> {}
Related To
- TSLint: use-default-type-parameter
Attributes
- โ Recommended
- ๐ง Fixable
- ๐ญ Requires type information