JS.BASE.NO.CATCH.SHADOW
Disallow 'catch' clause parameters from shadowing variables in the outer scope
This rule was deprecated in ESLint v5.1.0.
In IE 8 and earlier, the catch clause parameter can overwrite the value of a variable in the outer scope, if that variable has the same name as the catch clause parameter.
Copy
var err = "x";
try {
throw "problem";
} catch (err) {
}
console.log(err) // err is 'problem', not 'x'
Rule Details
This rule is aimed at preventing unexpected behavior in your program that may arise from a bug in IE 8 and earlier, in which the catch clause parameter can leak into outer scopes. This rule will warn whenever it encounters a catch clause parameter that has the same name as a variable in an outer scope.
Examples of incorrect code for this rule:
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/*eslint no-catch-shadow: "error"*/
var err = "x";
try {
throw "problem";
} catch (err) {
}
function err() {
// ...
};
try {
throw "problem";
} catch (err) {
}
Examples of correct code for this rule:
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/*eslint no-catch-shadow: "error"*/
var err = "x";
try {
throw "problem";
} catch (e) {
}
function err() {
// ...
};
try {
throw "problem";
} catch (e) {
}
When Not To Use It
If you do not need to support IE 8 and earlier, you should turn this rule off.