In exporting files, this rule checks if there is default export or not.
"import/prefer-default-export": [ ( "off" | "warn" | "error" ), { "target": "single" | "any" } // default is "single" ]
There are two options available: single
and any
. By default, if you do not specify the option, rule will assume it is single
.
Definition: When there is only a single export from a module, prefer using default export over named export.
How to setup config file for this rule:
// you can manually specify it "rules": { "import/prefer-default-export": [ ( "off" | "warn" | "error" ), { "target": "single" } ] } // config setup below will also work "rules": { "import/prefer-default-export": "off" | "warn" | "error" }
The following patterns are considered warnings:
// bad.js // There is only a single module export and it's a named export. export const foo = 'foo';
The following patterns are not warnings:
// good1.js // There is a default export. export const foo = 'foo'; const bar = 'bar'; export default bar;
// good2.js // There is more than one named export in the module. export const foo = 'foo'; export const bar = 'bar';
// good3.js // There is more than one named export in the module const foo = 'foo'; const bar = 'bar'; export { foo, bar }
// good4.js // There is a default export. const foo = 'foo'; export { foo as default }
// export-star.js // Any batch export will disable this rule. The remote module is not inspected. export * from './other-module'
Definition: any exporting file must contain a default export.
How to setup config file for this rule:
// you have to manually specify it "rules": { "import/prefer-default-export": [ ( "off" | "warn" | "error" ), { "target": "any" } ] }
The following patterns are not considered warnings:
// good1.js //has default export export default function bar() {};
// good2.js // has default export let foo; export { foo as default }
// good3.js //contains multiple exports AND default export export const a = 5; export function bar(){}; let foo; export { foo as default }
// good4.js // does not contain any exports => file is not checked by the rule import * as foo from './foo';
// export-star.js // Any batch export will disable this rule. The remote module is not inspected. export * from './other-module'
The following patterns are considered warnings:
// bad1.js //has 2 named exports, but no default export export const foo = 'foo'; export const bar = 'bar';
// bad2.js // does not have default export let foo, bar; export { foo, bar }
// bad3.js // does not have default export export { a, b } from "foo.js"
// bad4.js // does not have default export let item; export const foo = item; export { item };