Disallow unnecessary function binding (no-extra-bind)
The --fix
option on the command line can automatically fix some of the problems reported by this rule.
The bind()
method is used to create functions with specific this
values and, optionally, binds arguments to specific values. When used to specify the value of this
, it’s important that the function actually use this
in its function body. For example:
var boundGetName = (function getName() {
return this.name;
}).bind({ name: "ESLint" });
console.log(boundGetName()); // "ESLint"
This code is an example of a good use of bind()
for setting the value of this
.
Sometimes during the course of code maintenance, the this
value is removed from the function body. In that case, you can end up with a call to bind()
that doesn’t accomplish anything:
// useless bind
var boundGetName = (function getName() {
return "ESLint";
}).bind({ name: "ESLint" });
console.log(boundGetName()); // "ESLint"
In this code, the reference to this
has been removed but bind()
is still used. In this case, the bind()
is unnecessary overhead (and a performance hit) and can be safely removed.
Rule Details
This rule is aimed at avoiding the unnecessary use of bind()
and as such will warn whenever an immediately-invoked function expression (IIFE) is using bind()
and doesn’t have an appropriate this
value. This rule won’t flag usage of bind()
that includes function argument binding.
Note: Arrow functions can never have their this
value set using bind()
. This rule flags all uses of bind()
with arrow functions as a problem
Examples of incorrect code for this rule:
/*eslint no-extra-bind: "error"*/
/*eslint-env es6*/
var x = function () {
foo();
}.bind(bar);
var x = (() => {
foo();
}).bind(bar);
var x = (() => {
this.foo();
}).bind(bar);
var x = function () {
(function () {
this.foo();
}());
}.bind(bar);
var x = function () {
function foo() {
this.bar();
}
}.bind(baz);
Examples of correct code for this rule:
/*eslint no-extra-bind: "error"*/
var x = function () {
this.foo();
}.bind(bar);
var x = function (a) {
return a + 1;
}.bind(foo, bar);
When Not To Use It
If you are not concerned about unnecessary calls to bind()
, you can safely disable this rule.
Further Reading
Version
This rule was introduced in ESLint 0.8.0.