method-signature-style
Enforce using a particular method signature syntax.
Some problems reported by this rule are automatically fixable by the --fix ESLint command line option.
TypeScript provides two ways to define an object/interface function property:
interface Example {
// method shorthand syntax
func(arg: string): number;
// regular property with function type
func: (arg: string) => number;
}
The two are very similar; most of the time it doesn't matter which one you use.
A good practice is to use the TypeScript's strict option (which implies strictFunctionTypes) which enables correct typechecking for function properties only (method signatures get old behavior).
TypeScript FAQ:
A method and a function property of the same type behave differently. Methods are always bivariant in their argument, while function properties are contravariant in their argument under
strictFunctionTypes.
See the reasoning behind that in the TypeScript PR for the compiler option.
module.exports = {
"rules": {
"@typescript-eslint/method-signature-style": "error"
}
};
Try this rule in the playground ↗
Options
This rule accepts the following options:
type Options = ['method' | 'property'];
const defaultOptions: Options = ['property'];
This rule accepts one string option:
"property": Enforce using property signature for functions. Use this to enforce maximum correctness together with TypeScript's strict mode."method": Enforce using method signature for functions. Use this if you aren't using TypeScript's strict mode and prefer this style.
The default is "property".
property
Examples of code with property option.
- ❌ Incorrect
- ✅ Correct
interface T1 {
func(arg: string): number;
}
type T2 = {
func(arg: boolean): void;
};
interface T3 {
func(arg: number): void;
func(arg: string): void;
func(arg: boolean): void;
}
Open in Playgroundinterface T1 {
func: (arg: string) => number;
}
type T2 = {
func: (arg: boolean) => void;
};
// this is equivalent to the overload
interface T3 {
func: ((arg: number) => void) &
((arg: string) => void) &
((arg: boolean) => void);
}
Open in Playgroundmethod
Examples of code with method option.
- ❌ Incorrect
- ✅ Correct
interface T1 {
func: (arg: string) => number;
}
type T2 = {
func: (arg: boolean) => void;
};
Open in Playgroundinterface T1 {
func(arg: string): number;
}
type T2 = {
func(arg: boolean): void;
};
Open in PlaygroundWhen Not To Use It
If you don't want to enforce a particular style for object/interface function types, and/or if you don't use strictFunctionTypes, then you don't need this rule.
However, keep in mind that inconsistent style can harm readability in a project. We recommend picking a single option for this rule that works best for your project.