In other words, the use of forms such as var foo = require("foo")
are banned. Instead use ES6 style imports or import foo = require("foo")
imports.
Examples of code for this rule:
var foo = require('foo');
const foo = require('foo');
let foo = require('foo');
import foo = require('foo');
require('foo');
import foo from 'foo';
If you don't care about TypeScript module syntax, then you will not need this rule.
- TSLint: no-var-requires
- ✅ Recommended
- 🔧 Fixable
- 💭 Requires type information