no-void
Disallows use of the void operator.
The void
operator takes an operand and returns undefined
: void expression
will evaluate expression
and return undefined
. It can be used to ignore any side effects expression
may produce:
The common case of using void
operator is to get a "pure" undefined
value as prior to ES5 the undefined
variable was mutable:
// will always return undefined
(function(){
return void 0;
})();
// will return 1 in ES3 and undefined in ES5+
(function(){
undefined = 1;
return undefined;
})();
// will throw TypeError in ES5+
(function(){
'use strict';
undefined = 1;
})();
Another common case is to minify code as void 0
is shorter than undefined
:
foo = void 0;
foo = undefined;
When used with IIFE (immediately-invoked function expression), void
can be used to force the function keyword to be treated as an expression instead of a declaration:
var foo = 1;
void function(){ foo = 1; }() // will assign foo a value of 1
+function(){ foo = 1; }() // same as above
function(){ foo = 1; }() // will throw SyntaxError
Some code styles prohibit void
operator, marking it as non-obvious and hard to read.
Rule Details
This rule aims to eliminate use of void operator.
Examples of incorrect code for this rule:
/*eslint no-void: "error"*/
void foo
void someFunction();
var foo = void bar();
function baz() {
return void 0;
}
Options
This rule has an object option:
allowAsStatement
set totrue
allows the void operator to be used as a statement (Defaultfalse
).
allowAsStatement
When allowAsStatement
is set to true, the rule will not error on cases that the void operator is used as a statement, i.e. when it's not used in an expression position, like in a variable assignment or a function return.
Examples of incorrect code for { "allowAsStatement": true }
:
/*eslint no-void: ["error", { "allowAsStatement": true }]*/
var foo = void bar();
function baz() {
return void 0;
}
Examples of correct code for { "allowAsStatement": true }
:
/*eslint no-void: ["error", { "allowAsStatement": true }]*/
void foo;
void someFunction();
When Not To Use It
If you intentionally use the void
operator then you can disable this rule.
Related Rules
Further Reading
- https://developer.mozilla.org/en-US/docs/Web/JavaScript/Reference/Operators/void
- https://oreilly.com/javascript/excerpts/javascript-good-parts/bad-parts.html
Version
This rule was introduced in ESLint 0.8.0.