153

I have a function that takes data from server:

function getData(data){
    console.log(data.someVar);
}

WebStorm says that someVar is an unresolved variable. How can I get rid of such warnings?

I see several options:

  • Suppress warnings in IDE settings;
  • Add a JSON source file with fields (details);
  • Use array-like syntax: data['some_unres_var'];

Also, WebStorm is offering me to create namespace for the "data" (add an annotation like /** @namespace data.some_unres_var*/), create such field, or rename it.

1
  • 3
    @hellboy Quick answer: right-click -> Use Javascript Library -> make sure HTML is checked. Follow this up by looking at the available javascript libraries in the project settings to get a better understanding of what's going on. Aug 4, 2014 at 15:30

7 Answers 7

134

Use JSDoc:

/**
 * @param {{some_unres_var:string}} data
 */
function getData(data){
    console.log(data.some_unres_var);
}
4
  • 12
    For variables use this syntax /** * @type {Object} * @property {string} sortval - value to sort by */ var a; Oct 1, 2015 at 12:56
  • 6
    How would you do that when the function is an anonymouns function ? as in ........ .then(function(data){ .... })
    – David V.
    Oct 24, 2016 at 12:00
  • 2
    Is there a similar method to define global variables? I'm referencing an external library in my web app, I need to use stuff such as MediumEditor, but intellij gives me the infamous unresolved variable warning.
    – borislemke
    Apr 9, 2017 at 16:09
  • 1
    @borislemke: this answer won't work for variables that aren't parameters. The general solution is to use @namespace. May 21, 2017 at 5:30
60

JSDoc the object. Then its members.

/**
 * @param data          Information about the object.
 * @param data.member   Information about the object's members.
 */
function getData(data){
    console.log(data.member);
}
  • @property for local variables (non parameters).
  • Tested in PyCharm. @Nicholi confirms it works in WebStorm.
  • The {{ member:type }} syntax Andreas suggested may conflict with Django templates.
  • Thanks to Jonny Buchanan's answer citing the @param wiki.

To document arrays of objects, use [] brackets as JSDoc suggests:

/**
 * @param data
 * @param data.array_member[].foo
 */
1
33

All other answers are incorrect for the general case. What if you don't get data as a parameter? You don't have JSDoc then:

function niceApiCall(parameters) {
  const result = await ...  // HTTP call to the API here
  for (const e of result.entries) {
    .. // decorate each entry in the result
  }
  return result;
}

WebStorm will warn that "result.entries" is an unresolved variable (field).

The general solution is to add an @namespace declaration:

function niceApiCall(parameters) {
  /** @namespace result.entries **/
  const result = await ...  // HTTP call to the API here
  for (const e of result.entries) {
    .. // decorate each entry in the result
  }
  return result;
}
4
  • 4
    Thanks for this solution. I have many attributes returned from an API so using your technique I presume I would need to list the lot of them to avoid the errors I'm seeing like this: ``` /** @namespace req.headers.signaturecertchainurl / / @namespace req.headers.signature / / @namespace req.headers.slots / / @namespace req.headers.nutrientslot **/ ``` Is there a way to create a higher level namespace (e.g. req.headers) and automagically assign children to it? (sorry for no formatting in comments!)
    – James
    May 24, 2017 at 11:23
  • Is this a webstorm specific solution or an editor standard solution? That's what I'm still unsure of...
    – phil o.O
    Jul 14, 2021 at 1:49
  • @philo.O: it's a JSDoc solution, which WebStorm parses. But using TypeScript avoids this problem altogether. Aug 17, 2021 at 19:36
  • When using this solution, I am getting a Unresolved variable or type 'entries' message. How to fix this? Jul 21, 2022 at 8:13
17

Destructuring use, Luke.

function getData(data){
    const {member} = data;
    console.log(member);
}
1
  • 1
    To help with a complication I ran into, if the variable you're destructuring has an Eslint-illegal name like my_var, you can rename it: const { my_var: myVar } = data.
    – Noumenon
    Jun 10, 2021 at 1:23
7

using a dummy js file with anonymous function expression returning the json literal, as written at http://devnet.jetbrains.com/message/5366907, may be a solution. I can also suggest creating a fake variable that will hold this json value, and use this var as a value of @param annotation to let WebStorm know what the actual type is. Like:

var jsontext = {"some_unres_var":"val"};
/** @param {jsontext} data */
function getData(data){
    console.log(data.some_unres_var);
}

See also http://devnet.jetbrains.com/message/5504337#5504337

1
4

To remove the warnings on The WebStorm IDE you can simply uncheck the inspection options for:

  • Unresolved Javascript function
  • Unresolved Javascript variable

ps. this will remove the warnings on the IDE, that I don't think is the best idea, because we will lost one of the best utilities in a IDE like Webstorm, which can worsen the quality of our code.

Even so, if you want to follow in the menu: File > Settings > Editor > Inspections we can disable the Javascript warnings

Like the following picture:

uncheck options

0
2

Tons of "unresolved variables" when using "moduleResolution": "bundler" in the tsconfig.json

I ran into a similar issue when porting a React app to NextJs. The fact is that modern NextJs suggests using "moduleResolution": "bundler" in the tsconfig.json configuration file, but this causes an error in the webstorm.

If you're facing a similar issue, try changing moduleResolution to node.

tsconfig.json:

{
  "compilerOptions": {
    /* ... */
    "moduleResolution": "node",
    /* ... */
  },
 /* ... */
}

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