Forbids the use of mutable exports with var
or let
.
Valid:
export const count = 1
export function getCount() {}
export class Counter {}
...whereas here exports will be reported:
export let count = 2
export var count = 3
let count = 4
export { count } // reported here
Note that exported function/class declaration identifiers may be reassigned, but are not flagged by this rule at this time. They may be in the future, if a reassignment is detected, i.e.
// possible future behavior!
export class Counter {} // reported here: exported class is reassigned on line [x].
Counter = KitchenSink // not reported here unless you enable no-class-assign
// this pre-declaration reassignment is valid on account of function hoisting
getCount = function getDuke() {} // not reported here without no-func-assign
export function getCount() {} // reported here: exported function is reassigned on line [x].
To prevent general reassignment of these identifiers, exported or not, you may want to enable the following core ESLint rules:
If your environment correctly implements mutable export bindings.