Forbid modules to have too many dependencies (import
or require
statements).
This is a useful rule because a module with too many dependencies is a code smell, and usually indicates the module is doing too much and/or should be broken up into smaller modules.
Importing multiple named exports from a single module will only count once (e.g. import {x, y, z} from './foo'
will only count as a single dependency).
This rule has the following options, with these defaults:
"import/max-dependencies": ["error", {
"max": 10,
"ignoreTypeImports": false,
}]
This option sets the maximum number of dependencies allowed. Anything over will trigger the rule. Default is 10 if the rule is enabled and no max
is specified.
Given a max value of {"max": 2}
:
import a from './a'; // 1
const b = require('./b'); // 2
import c from './c'; // 3 - exceeds max!
import a from './a'; // 1
const anotherA = require('./a'); // still 1
import {x, y, z} from './foo'; // 2
Ignores type
imports. Type imports are a feature released in TypeScript 3.8, you can read more here. Defaults to false
.
Given {"max": 2, "ignoreTypeImports": true}
:
import a from './a';
import b from './b';
import c from './c';
import a from './a';
import b from './b';
import type c from './c'; // Doesn't count against max
If you don't care how many dependencies a module has.