There are a number of linter-esque checks that you can tell the TypeScript compiler to make when it is checking your code. There are two that prevent values from going unused: one for parameters and the other for variables.
The noUnusedLocals
config, which defaults to false
, can be set to true
. This will cause the
compiler to fail if a locally declared variable goes unused.
function printItem(item: any, index: number) {
const indexedItem = `${index}: ${item}`;
// ^^^ 'indexedItem' is declared but its value is never read.
console.log(item);
}
The
noUnusedParameters
config, which also defaults to false
, can be set to true
. This will cause
the compiler to fail if a function param goes unused.
Fixing the previous error could then result in this one.
function printItem(item: any, index: number) {
// ^^^
// 'index' is declared but its value is never read.
console.log(item);
}
Here is what the tsconfig.json
would look like:
{
"compilerOptions": {
"noUnusedLocals": true,
"noUnusedParameters": true,
}
}