Fix Lint Error While Maintaining Same API
If you would like to handle the lint error without breaking any current implementations you can do the following, but you should really look at the above answer before committing to this: https://stackoverflow.com/a/63574739/349659
Before
Implementation
export namespace Container {
export function someCall() { }
export function anotherCall() { }
}
Consumer
import { Container } from './Container'
Container.someCall()
Container.anotherCall()
After
Option 1
// These are essentially private
function someCall() { }
function anotherCall() { }
// We expose them here
// This feels like a step towards CommonJS, but is valid ES Module code
export const Container = {
someCall,
anotherCall,
}
Option 2
You could also define and encapsulate the function calls directly into the object as well like so:
export const Container = {
someCall() {},
anotherCall() {},
}
In Conclusion
If you have a large codebase and want to "quickly" appease your linter, you can do a refactor like above. Make sure to consider this answer https://stackoverflow.com/a/63574739/349659 and the reasoning behind it.
At the end of the day, the quickest fix that requires no code change is to simply turn off this linting rule as mentioned in this answer: https://stackoverflow.com/a/58271234/349659
If you're starting from scratch and run into this issue I would consider utilizing the modern implementation as the linter hints towards, but you may find that you enjoy namespaces and simply want them as well. If you're part of a team you may want to get their feedback first and and follow a team standard.
Edge Cases & Considerations
One case I've ran into is having multiple namespaces in the same file. In this scenario you may then have name collisions after removing the namespace.
Example
Before
export namespace Container {
export function someCall() { }
export function anotherCall() { }
}
export namespace AnotherContainer {
export function someCall() { }
export function anotherCall() { }
}
After
Renaming Collisions
In this scenario when you remove the namespace you can rename the collisions while maintaining the export like so:
function containerSomeCall() { }
function containerAnotherCall() { }
export const Container = {
someCall: containerSomeCall,
anotherCall: containerAnotherCall,
}
function anotherContainerSomeCall() { }
function anotherContainerAnotherCall() { }
export const AnotherContainer = {
someCall: anotherContainerSomeCall,
anotherCall: anotherContainerAnotherCall,
}
Decoupling the Code
Another option is to decouple them into their own files. If you want to maintain the exports of the original file though you will need to import and expose them which may seem duplicate, but may be an intermittent step towards a larger refactoring (later updating imports to point at the new files). This also allows you to start writing more modern ESM code too if you would like, while proxying new exports through the old module.
Container.ts
function someCall() { }
function anotherCall() { }
export const Container = {
someCall,
anotherCall,
}
AnotherContainer.ts
function someCall() { }
function anotherCall() { }
export const AnotherContainer = {
someCall,
anotherCall,
}
OriginalFile.ts
export * from './Container'
export * from './AnotherContainer'
We can proxy the new ESM modules through the old original module.