no-unsafe-argument
Disallows calling a function with an any type value.
Despite your best intentions, the any
type can sometimes leak into your codebase.
Call a function with any
typed argument are not checked at all by TypeScript, so it creates a potential safety hole, and source of bugs in your codebase.
Rule Details
This rule disallows calling a function with any
in its arguments, and it will disallow spreading any[]
.
This rule also disallows spreading a tuple type with one of its elements typed as any
.
This rule also compares the argument's type to the variable's type to ensure you don't pass an unsafe any
in a generic position to a receiver that's expecting a specific type. For example, it will error if you assign Set<any>
to an argument declared as Set<string>
.
Examples of code for this rule:
- ❌ Incorrect
- ✅ Correct
declare function foo(arg1: string, arg2: number, arg3: string): void;
const anyTyped = 1 as any;
foo(...anyTyped);
foo(anyTyped, 1, 'a');
const anyArray: any[] = [];
foo(...anyArray);
const tuple1 = ['a', anyTyped, 'b'] as const;
foo(...tuple1);
const tuple2 = [1] as const;
foo('a', ...tuple, anyTyped);
declare function bar(arg1: string, arg2: number, ...rest: string[]): void;
const x = [1, 2] as [number, ...number[]];
foo('a', ...x, anyTyped);
declare function baz(arg1: Set<string>, arg2: Map<string, string>): void;
foo(new Set<any>(), new Map<any, string>());
declare function foo(arg1: string, arg2: number, arg3: string): void;
foo('a', 1, 'b');
const tuple1 = ['a', 1, 'b'] as const;
foo(...tuple1);
declare function bar(arg1: string, arg2: number, ...rest: string[]): void;
const array: string[] = ['a'];
bar('a', 1, ...array);
declare function baz(arg1: Set<string>, arg2: Map<string, string>): void;
foo(new Set<string>(), new Map<string, string>());
There are cases where the rule allows passing an argument of any
to unknown
.
Example of any
to unknown
assignment that are allowed.
declare function foo(arg1: unknown, arg2: Set<unkown>, arg3: unknown[]): void;
foo(1 as any, new Set<any>(), [] as any[]);
Options
// .eslintrc.json
{
"rules": {
"@typescript-eslint/no-unsafe-argument": "error"
}
}
This rule is not configurable.
Related To
no-explicit-any
- TSLint:
no-unsafe-any
Attributes
- ✅ Recommended
- 🔧 Fixable
- 💭 Requires type information