The default value of type
attribute for button
HTML element is "submit"
which is often not the desired behavior and may lead to unexpected page reloads.
This rules enforces an explicit type
attribute for all the button
elements and checks that its value is valid per spec (i.e., is one of "button"
, "submit"
, and "reset"
).
The following patterns are considered errors:
var Hello = <button>Hello</button>
var Hello = <button type="foo">Hello</button>
var Hello = React.createElement('button', {}, 'Hello')
var Hello = React.createElement('button', {type: 'foo'}, 'Hello')
The following patterns are not considered errors:
var Hello = <span>Hello</span>
var Hello = <span type="foo">Hello</span>
var Hello = <button type="button">Hello</button>
var Hello = <button type="submit">Hello</button>
var Hello = <button type="reset">Hello</button>
var Hello = React.createElement('span', {}, 'Hello')
var Hello = React.createElement('span', {type: 'foo'}, 'Hello')
var Hello = React.createElement('button', {type: 'button'}, 'Hello')
var Hello = React.createElement('button', {type: 'submit'}, 'Hello')
var Hello = React.createElement('button', {type: 'reset'}, 'Hello')
...
"react/button-has-type": [<enabled>, {
"button": <boolean>,
"submit": <boolean>,
"reset": <boolean>
}]
...
You can forbid particular type attribute values by passing false
as corresponding option (by default all of them are true
).
The following patterns are considered errors when using "react/button-has-type": ["error", {reset: false}]
:
var Hello = <button type="reset">Hello</button>
var Hello = React.createElement('button', {type: 'reset'}, 'Hello')
If you use only "submit"
buttons, you can disable this rule