The following is what I want to disable:
I can't find it in settings.
Help appreciated as this is really annoying.
This is a new feature added in Visual Studio Code called "Suggestion Code Actions". "Suggestion Code Actions" are enabled by default in JavaScript and TypeScript.
You can disable them by setting: "typescript.suggestionActions.enabled": false or "javascript.suggestionActions.enabled": false in your user/workspace settings. The documentation can be found here.
(Image provided by Yusuf Yaşar.)
For anyone using Vim with coc.nvim, you can make the same change by adding the same in the :CocConfig object:
"javascript.suggestionActions.enabled": false
If you haven't added any settings to :CocConfig before, then you need to make sure the above setting is wrapped in a JSON object:
{
"javascript.suggestionActions.enabled": false
}
For anyone using Neovim with Native LSP and nvim-lspconfig for setting up your language servers, you can disable suggestions by adding this somewhere in your tsserver setup:
require('lspconfig').tsserver.setup({
init_options = {
preferences = {
disableSuggestions = true,
},
},
})
You can also use the nvim-lsp-ts-utils plugin to filter out this specific diagnostic message while keeping suggestions enabled by adding this somewhere in your tsserver setup:
require('lspconfig').tsserver.setup({
on_attach = function(client, bufnr)
require('nvim-lsp-ts-utils').setup({
filter_out_diagnostics_by_code = { 80001 },
})
require('nvim-lsp-ts-utils').setup_client(client)
end,
})
Alert! This approach might be too much for VSCode users who love the intelligent coding assistance. Use it as a simple & quick help, together with other linting & testing utilities.
The control of the presence of the said message is located in Settings => Extensions => TypeScript. (TypeScript !!! :P)
As shown in screenshot, I searched in Settings with keyword "validate", then click TypeScript. It's the first item.
Actually this annoying suggestion comes from TypeScript.
Thus, to turn off this suggestion, you can modify the source code of TypeScript, compile it, then tell vscode to use your fork of TypeScript.
As a quick and dirty hack, just remove the logic related to ts.Diagnostics.File_is_a_CommonJS_module_it_may_be_converted_to_an_ES6_module, then compile the project following the instructions on TypeScript's README.
The compilation will fail because removing the related logic causes some functions become unused, then you just remove those unused function definitions and recompile the project (gulp clean && gulp local).
After you successfully compile your fork of TypeScript, then change your user settings.json to point to your vscode fork:
"typescript.tsdk": "/path/to/your/fork/of/TypeScript/built/local",
Done.
Restart your vscode, and the annoying suggestion has gone.
You can check this commit to see which source files of TypeScript need to be modify.
Warn: the modification is quick and dirty, use them at your own risk. If you find anything wrong, you can just remove the tsdk configuration, to switch back to vscode's built-in TypeScript.
If your project is "type": "module" and you need to have a CommonJS file in it, e.g. to configure ESLint (which doesn't support ESM as of writing this), then just rename it from *.js to *.cjs (or from *.ts to *.cts, if appropriate), and the suggestion will go away. The fix for this has shipped with TypeScript 4.5.1 about a year ago.
.eslint.js to .cjs makes much more sense than turning suggestions in the editor!
Jul 3, 2023 at 17:27
If you are getting this error in Next js, try the code below.
Next.js includes the "next/babel" preset to your app, which includes everything needed to compile React applications and server-side code.
Open your .eslintrc.json
{ "extends" : "next/babel" }
But if you want to extend the default Babel configs, it's also possible. https://nextjs.org/docs/advanced-features/customizing-babel-config
For those using Neovim, you can ignore specifically just this diagnostic by overriding the LSP handler for publishDiagnostics.
I'm using Neovim v0.9.2 and lspconfig. If you're not using lspconfig, I think you can still override the LSP handler using vim.lsp.with().
require('lspconfig').typescript.setup {
handlers = {
["textDocument/publishDiagnostics"] = function(_, result, ctx, config)
if result.diagnostics ~= nil then
local idx = 1
while idx <= #result.diagnostics do
if result.diagnostics[idx].code == 80001 then
table.remove(result.diagnostics, idx)
else
idx = idx + 1
end
end
end
vim.lsp.diagnostic.on_publish_diagnostics(_, result, ctx, config)
end,
}
}
I found this out from How to ignore tsserver error: "File is a commonjs module..." on r/neovim, but then adapted the code to work for my version of Neovim.
Much credit goes to this previous answer but it won't work if you're using the pmizio/typescript-tools.nvim plugin for the LSP support (and much more!). And if you're using the same plugin like me, you'll need the following slightly updated configurations:
require('typescript-tools).setup({
settings = {
tsserver_file_preferences = {
disableSuggestions = true,
},
},
})
For more advanced configuration of your TypeScript development I strongly recommend checking out the repository which contains additional information.
Maybe you don't have function(request, response),
try it. It works for me