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The library for web and native user interfaces.

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Improve DEV errors if string coercion throws (Temporal.*, Symbol, etc.) (#22064) * Revise ESLint rules for string coercion Currently, react uses `'' + value` to coerce mixed values to strings. This code will throw for Temporal objects or symbols. To make string-coercion safer and to improve user-facing error messages, This commit adds a new ESLint rule called `safe-string-coercion`. This rule has two modes: a production mode and a non-production mode. * If the `isProductionUserAppCode` option is true, then `'' + value` coercions are allowed (because they're faster, although they may throw) and `String(value)` coercions are disallowed. Exception: when building error messages or running DEV-only code in prod files, `String()` should be used because it won't throw. * If the `isProductionUserAppCode` option is false, then `'' + value` coercions are disallowed (because they may throw, and in non-prod code it's not worth the risk) and `String(value)` are allowed. Production mode is used for all files which will be bundled with developers' userland apps. Non-prod mode is used for all other React code: tests, DEV blocks, devtools extension, etc. In production mode, in addiiton to flagging `String(value)` calls, the rule will also flag `'' + value` or `value + ''` coercions that may throw. The rule is smart enough to silence itself in the following "will never throw" cases: * When the coercion is wrapped in a `typeof` test that restricts to safe (non-symbol, non-object) types. Example: if (typeof value === 'string' || typeof value === 'number') { thisWontReport('' + value); } * When what's being coerced is a unary function result, because unary functions never return an object or a symbol. * When the coerced value is a commonly-used numeric identifier: `i`, `idx`, or `lineNumber`. * When the statement immeidately before the coercion is a DEV-only call to a function from shared/CheckStringCoercion.js. This call is a no-op in production, but in DEV it will show a console error explaining the problem, then will throw right after a long explanatory code comment so that debugger users will have an idea what's going on. The check function call must be in the following format: if (__DEV__) { checkXxxxxStringCoercion(value); }; Manually disabling the rule is usually not necessary because almost all prod use of the `'' + value` pattern falls into one of the categories above. But in the rare cases where the rule isn't smart enough to detect safe usage (e.g. when a coercion is inside a nested ternary operator), manually disabling the rule will be needed. The rule should also be manually disabled in prod error handling code where `String(value)` should be used for coercions, because it'd be bad to throw while building an error message or stack trace! The prod and non-prod modes have differentiated error messages to explain how to do a proper coercion in that mode. If a production check call is needed but is missing or incorrect (e.g. not in a DEV block or not immediately before the coercion), then a context-sensitive error message will be reported so that developers can figure out what's wrong and how to fix the problem. Because string coercions are now handled by the `safe-string-coercion` rule, the `no-primitive-constructor` rule no longer flags `String()` usage. It still flags `new String(value)` because that usage is almost always a bug. * Add DEV-only string coercion check functions This commit adds DEV-only functions to check whether coercing values to strings using the `'' + value` pattern will throw. If it will throw, these functions will: 1. Display a console error with a friendly error message describing the problem and the developer can fix it. 2. Perform the coercion, which will throw. Right before the line where the throwing happens, there's a long code comment that will help debugger users (or others looking at the exception call stack) figure out what happened and how to fix the problem. One of these check functions should be called before all string coercion of user-provided values, except when the the coercion is guaranteed not to throw, e.g. * if inside a typeof check like `if (typeof value === 'string')` * if coercing the result of a unary function like `+value` or `value++` * if coercing a variable named in a whitelist of numeric identifiers: `i`, `idx`, or `lineNumber`. The new `safe-string-coercion` internal ESLint rule enforces that these check functions are called when they are required. Only use these check functions in production code that will be bundled with user apps. For non-prod code (and for production error-handling code), use `String(value)` instead which may be a little slower but will never throw. * Add failing tests for string coercion Added failing tests to verify: * That input, select, and textarea elements with value and defaultValue set to Temporal-like objects which will throw when coerced to string using the `'' + value` pattern. * That text elements will throw for Temporal-like objects * That dangerouslySetInnerHTML will *not* throw for Temporal-like objects because this value is not cast to a string before passing to the DOM. * That keys that are Temporal-like objects will throw All tests above validate the friendly error messages thrown. * Use `String(value)` for coercion in non-prod files This commit switches non-production code from `'' + value` (which throws for Temporal objects and symbols) to instead use `String(value)` which won't throw for these or other future plus-phobic types. "Non-produciton code" includes anything not bundled into user apps: * Tests and test utilities. Note that I didn't change legacy React test fixtures because I assumed it was good for those files to act just like old React, including coercion behavior. * Build scripts * Dev tools package - In addition to switching to `String`, I also removed special-case code for coercing symbols which is now unnecessary. * Add DEV-only string coercion checks to prod files This commit adds DEV-only function calls to to check if string coercion using `'' + value` will throw, which it will if the value is a Temporal object or a symbol because those types can't be added with `+`. If it will throw, then in DEV these checks will show a console error to help the user undertsand what went wrong and how to fix the problem. After emitting the console error, the check functions will retry the coercion which will throw with a call stack that's easy (or at least easier!) to troubleshoot because the exception happens right after a long comment explaining the issue. So whether the user is in a debugger, looking at the browser console, or viewing the in-browser DEV call stack, it should be easy to understand and fix the problem. In most cases, the safe-string-coercion ESLint rule is smart enough to detect when a coercion is safe. But in rare cases (e.g. when a coercion is inside a ternary) this rule will have to be manually disabled. This commit also switches error-handling code to use `String(value)` for coercion, because it's bad to crash when you're trying to build an error message or a call stack! Because `String()` is usually disallowed by the `safe-string-coercion` ESLint rule in production code, the rule must be disabled when `String()` is used.
2021-09-27 10:05:07 -07:00
/**
* Copyright (c) Meta Platforms, Inc. and affiliates.
Improve DEV errors if string coercion throws (Temporal.*, Symbol, etc.) (#22064) * Revise ESLint rules for string coercion Currently, react uses `'' + value` to coerce mixed values to strings. This code will throw for Temporal objects or symbols. To make string-coercion safer and to improve user-facing error messages, This commit adds a new ESLint rule called `safe-string-coercion`. This rule has two modes: a production mode and a non-production mode. * If the `isProductionUserAppCode` option is true, then `'' + value` coercions are allowed (because they're faster, although they may throw) and `String(value)` coercions are disallowed. Exception: when building error messages or running DEV-only code in prod files, `String()` should be used because it won't throw. * If the `isProductionUserAppCode` option is false, then `'' + value` coercions are disallowed (because they may throw, and in non-prod code it's not worth the risk) and `String(value)` are allowed. Production mode is used for all files which will be bundled with developers' userland apps. Non-prod mode is used for all other React code: tests, DEV blocks, devtools extension, etc. In production mode, in addiiton to flagging `String(value)` calls, the rule will also flag `'' + value` or `value + ''` coercions that may throw. The rule is smart enough to silence itself in the following "will never throw" cases: * When the coercion is wrapped in a `typeof` test that restricts to safe (non-symbol, non-object) types. Example: if (typeof value === 'string' || typeof value === 'number') { thisWontReport('' + value); } * When what's being coerced is a unary function result, because unary functions never return an object or a symbol. * When the coerced value is a commonly-used numeric identifier: `i`, `idx`, or `lineNumber`. * When the statement immeidately before the coercion is a DEV-only call to a function from shared/CheckStringCoercion.js. This call is a no-op in production, but in DEV it will show a console error explaining the problem, then will throw right after a long explanatory code comment so that debugger users will have an idea what's going on. The check function call must be in the following format: if (__DEV__) { checkXxxxxStringCoercion(value); }; Manually disabling the rule is usually not necessary because almost all prod use of the `'' + value` pattern falls into one of the categories above. But in the rare cases where the rule isn't smart enough to detect safe usage (e.g. when a coercion is inside a nested ternary operator), manually disabling the rule will be needed. The rule should also be manually disabled in prod error handling code where `String(value)` should be used for coercions, because it'd be bad to throw while building an error message or stack trace! The prod and non-prod modes have differentiated error messages to explain how to do a proper coercion in that mode. If a production check call is needed but is missing or incorrect (e.g. not in a DEV block or not immediately before the coercion), then a context-sensitive error message will be reported so that developers can figure out what's wrong and how to fix the problem. Because string coercions are now handled by the `safe-string-coercion` rule, the `no-primitive-constructor` rule no longer flags `String()` usage. It still flags `new String(value)` because that usage is almost always a bug. * Add DEV-only string coercion check functions This commit adds DEV-only functions to check whether coercing values to strings using the `'' + value` pattern will throw. If it will throw, these functions will: 1. Display a console error with a friendly error message describing the problem and the developer can fix it. 2. Perform the coercion, which will throw. Right before the line where the throwing happens, there's a long code comment that will help debugger users (or others looking at the exception call stack) figure out what happened and how to fix the problem. One of these check functions should be called before all string coercion of user-provided values, except when the the coercion is guaranteed not to throw, e.g. * if inside a typeof check like `if (typeof value === 'string')` * if coercing the result of a unary function like `+value` or `value++` * if coercing a variable named in a whitelist of numeric identifiers: `i`, `idx`, or `lineNumber`. The new `safe-string-coercion` internal ESLint rule enforces that these check functions are called when they are required. Only use these check functions in production code that will be bundled with user apps. For non-prod code (and for production error-handling code), use `String(value)` instead which may be a little slower but will never throw. * Add failing tests for string coercion Added failing tests to verify: * That input, select, and textarea elements with value and defaultValue set to Temporal-like objects which will throw when coerced to string using the `'' + value` pattern. * That text elements will throw for Temporal-like objects * That dangerouslySetInnerHTML will *not* throw for Temporal-like objects because this value is not cast to a string before passing to the DOM. * That keys that are Temporal-like objects will throw All tests above validate the friendly error messages thrown. * Use `String(value)` for coercion in non-prod files This commit switches non-production code from `'' + value` (which throws for Temporal objects and symbols) to instead use `String(value)` which won't throw for these or other future plus-phobic types. "Non-produciton code" includes anything not bundled into user apps: * Tests and test utilities. Note that I didn't change legacy React test fixtures because I assumed it was good for those files to act just like old React, including coercion behavior. * Build scripts * Dev tools package - In addition to switching to `String`, I also removed special-case code for coercing symbols which is now unnecessary. * Add DEV-only string coercion checks to prod files This commit adds DEV-only function calls to to check if string coercion using `'' + value` will throw, which it will if the value is a Temporal object or a symbol because those types can't be added with `+`. If it will throw, then in DEV these checks will show a console error to help the user undertsand what went wrong and how to fix the problem. After emitting the console error, the check functions will retry the coercion which will throw with a call stack that's easy (or at least easier!) to troubleshoot because the exception happens right after a long comment explaining the issue. So whether the user is in a debugger, looking at the browser console, or viewing the in-browser DEV call stack, it should be easy to understand and fix the problem. In most cases, the safe-string-coercion ESLint rule is smart enough to detect when a coercion is safe. But in rare cases (e.g. when a coercion is inside a ternary) this rule will have to be manually disabled. This commit also switches error-handling code to use `String(value)` for coercion, because it's bad to crash when you're trying to build an error message or a call stack! Because `String()` is usually disallowed by the `safe-string-coercion` ESLint rule in production code, the rule must be disabled when `String()` is used.
2021-09-27 10:05:07 -07:00
*
* This source code is licensed under the MIT license found in the
* LICENSE file in the root directory of this source tree.
*
* @flow
*/
/*
* The `'' + value` pattern (used in perf-sensitive code) throws for Symbol
Improve DEV errors if string coercion throws (Temporal.*, Symbol, etc.) (#22064) * Revise ESLint rules for string coercion Currently, react uses `'' + value` to coerce mixed values to strings. This code will throw for Temporal objects or symbols. To make string-coercion safer and to improve user-facing error messages, This commit adds a new ESLint rule called `safe-string-coercion`. This rule has two modes: a production mode and a non-production mode. * If the `isProductionUserAppCode` option is true, then `'' + value` coercions are allowed (because they're faster, although they may throw) and `String(value)` coercions are disallowed. Exception: when building error messages or running DEV-only code in prod files, `String()` should be used because it won't throw. * If the `isProductionUserAppCode` option is false, then `'' + value` coercions are disallowed (because they may throw, and in non-prod code it's not worth the risk) and `String(value)` are allowed. Production mode is used for all files which will be bundled with developers' userland apps. Non-prod mode is used for all other React code: tests, DEV blocks, devtools extension, etc. In production mode, in addiiton to flagging `String(value)` calls, the rule will also flag `'' + value` or `value + ''` coercions that may throw. The rule is smart enough to silence itself in the following "will never throw" cases: * When the coercion is wrapped in a `typeof` test that restricts to safe (non-symbol, non-object) types. Example: if (typeof value === 'string' || typeof value === 'number') { thisWontReport('' + value); } * When what's being coerced is a unary function result, because unary functions never return an object or a symbol. * When the coerced value is a commonly-used numeric identifier: `i`, `idx`, or `lineNumber`. * When the statement immeidately before the coercion is a DEV-only call to a function from shared/CheckStringCoercion.js. This call is a no-op in production, but in DEV it will show a console error explaining the problem, then will throw right after a long explanatory code comment so that debugger users will have an idea what's going on. The check function call must be in the following format: if (__DEV__) { checkXxxxxStringCoercion(value); }; Manually disabling the rule is usually not necessary because almost all prod use of the `'' + value` pattern falls into one of the categories above. But in the rare cases where the rule isn't smart enough to detect safe usage (e.g. when a coercion is inside a nested ternary operator), manually disabling the rule will be needed. The rule should also be manually disabled in prod error handling code where `String(value)` should be used for coercions, because it'd be bad to throw while building an error message or stack trace! The prod and non-prod modes have differentiated error messages to explain how to do a proper coercion in that mode. If a production check call is needed but is missing or incorrect (e.g. not in a DEV block or not immediately before the coercion), then a context-sensitive error message will be reported so that developers can figure out what's wrong and how to fix the problem. Because string coercions are now handled by the `safe-string-coercion` rule, the `no-primitive-constructor` rule no longer flags `String()` usage. It still flags `new String(value)` because that usage is almost always a bug. * Add DEV-only string coercion check functions This commit adds DEV-only functions to check whether coercing values to strings using the `'' + value` pattern will throw. If it will throw, these functions will: 1. Display a console error with a friendly error message describing the problem and the developer can fix it. 2. Perform the coercion, which will throw. Right before the line where the throwing happens, there's a long code comment that will help debugger users (or others looking at the exception call stack) figure out what happened and how to fix the problem. One of these check functions should be called before all string coercion of user-provided values, except when the the coercion is guaranteed not to throw, e.g. * if inside a typeof check like `if (typeof value === 'string')` * if coercing the result of a unary function like `+value` or `value++` * if coercing a variable named in a whitelist of numeric identifiers: `i`, `idx`, or `lineNumber`. The new `safe-string-coercion` internal ESLint rule enforces that these check functions are called when they are required. Only use these check functions in production code that will be bundled with user apps. For non-prod code (and for production error-handling code), use `String(value)` instead which may be a little slower but will never throw. * Add failing tests for string coercion Added failing tests to verify: * That input, select, and textarea elements with value and defaultValue set to Temporal-like objects which will throw when coerced to string using the `'' + value` pattern. * That text elements will throw for Temporal-like objects * That dangerouslySetInnerHTML will *not* throw for Temporal-like objects because this value is not cast to a string before passing to the DOM. * That keys that are Temporal-like objects will throw All tests above validate the friendly error messages thrown. * Use `String(value)` for coercion in non-prod files This commit switches non-production code from `'' + value` (which throws for Temporal objects and symbols) to instead use `String(value)` which won't throw for these or other future plus-phobic types. "Non-produciton code" includes anything not bundled into user apps: * Tests and test utilities. Note that I didn't change legacy React test fixtures because I assumed it was good for those files to act just like old React, including coercion behavior. * Build scripts * Dev tools package - In addition to switching to `String`, I also removed special-case code for coercing symbols which is now unnecessary. * Add DEV-only string coercion checks to prod files This commit adds DEV-only function calls to to check if string coercion using `'' + value` will throw, which it will if the value is a Temporal object or a symbol because those types can't be added with `+`. If it will throw, then in DEV these checks will show a console error to help the user undertsand what went wrong and how to fix the problem. After emitting the console error, the check functions will retry the coercion which will throw with a call stack that's easy (or at least easier!) to troubleshoot because the exception happens right after a long comment explaining the issue. So whether the user is in a debugger, looking at the browser console, or viewing the in-browser DEV call stack, it should be easy to understand and fix the problem. In most cases, the safe-string-coercion ESLint rule is smart enough to detect when a coercion is safe. But in rare cases (e.g. when a coercion is inside a ternary) this rule will have to be manually disabled. This commit also switches error-handling code to use `String(value)` for coercion, because it's bad to crash when you're trying to build an error message or a call stack! Because `String()` is usually disallowed by the `safe-string-coercion` ESLint rule in production code, the rule must be disabled when `String()` is used.
2021-09-27 10:05:07 -07:00
* and Temporal.* types. See https://github.com/facebook/react/pull/22064.
*
* The functions in this module will throw an easier-to-understand,
* easier-to-debug exception with a clear errors message message explaining the
* problem. (Instead of a confusing exception thrown inside the implementation
* of the `value` object).
*/
// $FlowFixMe[incompatible-return] only called in DEV, so void return is not possible.
Improve DEV errors if string coercion throws (Temporal.*, Symbol, etc.) (#22064) * Revise ESLint rules for string coercion Currently, react uses `'' + value` to coerce mixed values to strings. This code will throw for Temporal objects or symbols. To make string-coercion safer and to improve user-facing error messages, This commit adds a new ESLint rule called `safe-string-coercion`. This rule has two modes: a production mode and a non-production mode. * If the `isProductionUserAppCode` option is true, then `'' + value` coercions are allowed (because they're faster, although they may throw) and `String(value)` coercions are disallowed. Exception: when building error messages or running DEV-only code in prod files, `String()` should be used because it won't throw. * If the `isProductionUserAppCode` option is false, then `'' + value` coercions are disallowed (because they may throw, and in non-prod code it's not worth the risk) and `String(value)` are allowed. Production mode is used for all files which will be bundled with developers' userland apps. Non-prod mode is used for all other React code: tests, DEV blocks, devtools extension, etc. In production mode, in addiiton to flagging `String(value)` calls, the rule will also flag `'' + value` or `value + ''` coercions that may throw. The rule is smart enough to silence itself in the following "will never throw" cases: * When the coercion is wrapped in a `typeof` test that restricts to safe (non-symbol, non-object) types. Example: if (typeof value === 'string' || typeof value === 'number') { thisWontReport('' + value); } * When what's being coerced is a unary function result, because unary functions never return an object or a symbol. * When the coerced value is a commonly-used numeric identifier: `i`, `idx`, or `lineNumber`. * When the statement immeidately before the coercion is a DEV-only call to a function from shared/CheckStringCoercion.js. This call is a no-op in production, but in DEV it will show a console error explaining the problem, then will throw right after a long explanatory code comment so that debugger users will have an idea what's going on. The check function call must be in the following format: if (__DEV__) { checkXxxxxStringCoercion(value); }; Manually disabling the rule is usually not necessary because almost all prod use of the `'' + value` pattern falls into one of the categories above. But in the rare cases where the rule isn't smart enough to detect safe usage (e.g. when a coercion is inside a nested ternary operator), manually disabling the rule will be needed. The rule should also be manually disabled in prod error handling code where `String(value)` should be used for coercions, because it'd be bad to throw while building an error message or stack trace! The prod and non-prod modes have differentiated error messages to explain how to do a proper coercion in that mode. If a production check call is needed but is missing or incorrect (e.g. not in a DEV block or not immediately before the coercion), then a context-sensitive error message will be reported so that developers can figure out what's wrong and how to fix the problem. Because string coercions are now handled by the `safe-string-coercion` rule, the `no-primitive-constructor` rule no longer flags `String()` usage. It still flags `new String(value)` because that usage is almost always a bug. * Add DEV-only string coercion check functions This commit adds DEV-only functions to check whether coercing values to strings using the `'' + value` pattern will throw. If it will throw, these functions will: 1. Display a console error with a friendly error message describing the problem and the developer can fix it. 2. Perform the coercion, which will throw. Right before the line where the throwing happens, there's a long code comment that will help debugger users (or others looking at the exception call stack) figure out what happened and how to fix the problem. One of these check functions should be called before all string coercion of user-provided values, except when the the coercion is guaranteed not to throw, e.g. * if inside a typeof check like `if (typeof value === 'string')` * if coercing the result of a unary function like `+value` or `value++` * if coercing a variable named in a whitelist of numeric identifiers: `i`, `idx`, or `lineNumber`. The new `safe-string-coercion` internal ESLint rule enforces that these check functions are called when they are required. Only use these check functions in production code that will be bundled with user apps. For non-prod code (and for production error-handling code), use `String(value)` instead which may be a little slower but will never throw. * Add failing tests for string coercion Added failing tests to verify: * That input, select, and textarea elements with value and defaultValue set to Temporal-like objects which will throw when coerced to string using the `'' + value` pattern. * That text elements will throw for Temporal-like objects * That dangerouslySetInnerHTML will *not* throw for Temporal-like objects because this value is not cast to a string before passing to the DOM. * That keys that are Temporal-like objects will throw All tests above validate the friendly error messages thrown. * Use `String(value)` for coercion in non-prod files This commit switches non-production code from `'' + value` (which throws for Temporal objects and symbols) to instead use `String(value)` which won't throw for these or other future plus-phobic types. "Non-produciton code" includes anything not bundled into user apps: * Tests and test utilities. Note that I didn't change legacy React test fixtures because I assumed it was good for those files to act just like old React, including coercion behavior. * Build scripts * Dev tools package - In addition to switching to `String`, I also removed special-case code for coercing symbols which is now unnecessary. * Add DEV-only string coercion checks to prod files This commit adds DEV-only function calls to to check if string coercion using `'' + value` will throw, which it will if the value is a Temporal object or a symbol because those types can't be added with `+`. If it will throw, then in DEV these checks will show a console error to help the user undertsand what went wrong and how to fix the problem. After emitting the console error, the check functions will retry the coercion which will throw with a call stack that's easy (or at least easier!) to troubleshoot because the exception happens right after a long comment explaining the issue. So whether the user is in a debugger, looking at the browser console, or viewing the in-browser DEV call stack, it should be easy to understand and fix the problem. In most cases, the safe-string-coercion ESLint rule is smart enough to detect when a coercion is safe. But in rare cases (e.g. when a coercion is inside a ternary) this rule will have to be manually disabled. This commit also switches error-handling code to use `String(value)` for coercion, because it's bad to crash when you're trying to build an error message or a call stack! Because `String()` is usually disallowed by the `safe-string-coercion` ESLint rule in production code, the rule must be disabled when `String()` is used.
2021-09-27 10:05:07 -07:00
function typeName(value: mixed): string {
if (__DEV__) {
// toStringTag is needed for namespaced types like Temporal.Instant
const hasToStringTag = typeof Symbol === 'function' && Symbol.toStringTag;
const type =
(hasToStringTag && (value: any)[Symbol.toStringTag]) ||
(value: any).constructor.name ||
'Object';
// $FlowFixMe[incompatible-return]
Improve DEV errors if string coercion throws (Temporal.*, Symbol, etc.) (#22064) * Revise ESLint rules for string coercion Currently, react uses `'' + value` to coerce mixed values to strings. This code will throw for Temporal objects or symbols. To make string-coercion safer and to improve user-facing error messages, This commit adds a new ESLint rule called `safe-string-coercion`. This rule has two modes: a production mode and a non-production mode. * If the `isProductionUserAppCode` option is true, then `'' + value` coercions are allowed (because they're faster, although they may throw) and `String(value)` coercions are disallowed. Exception: when building error messages or running DEV-only code in prod files, `String()` should be used because it won't throw. * If the `isProductionUserAppCode` option is false, then `'' + value` coercions are disallowed (because they may throw, and in non-prod code it's not worth the risk) and `String(value)` are allowed. Production mode is used for all files which will be bundled with developers' userland apps. Non-prod mode is used for all other React code: tests, DEV blocks, devtools extension, etc. In production mode, in addiiton to flagging `String(value)` calls, the rule will also flag `'' + value` or `value + ''` coercions that may throw. The rule is smart enough to silence itself in the following "will never throw" cases: * When the coercion is wrapped in a `typeof` test that restricts to safe (non-symbol, non-object) types. Example: if (typeof value === 'string' || typeof value === 'number') { thisWontReport('' + value); } * When what's being coerced is a unary function result, because unary functions never return an object or a symbol. * When the coerced value is a commonly-used numeric identifier: `i`, `idx`, or `lineNumber`. * When the statement immeidately before the coercion is a DEV-only call to a function from shared/CheckStringCoercion.js. This call is a no-op in production, but in DEV it will show a console error explaining the problem, then will throw right after a long explanatory code comment so that debugger users will have an idea what's going on. The check function call must be in the following format: if (__DEV__) { checkXxxxxStringCoercion(value); }; Manually disabling the rule is usually not necessary because almost all prod use of the `'' + value` pattern falls into one of the categories above. But in the rare cases where the rule isn't smart enough to detect safe usage (e.g. when a coercion is inside a nested ternary operator), manually disabling the rule will be needed. The rule should also be manually disabled in prod error handling code where `String(value)` should be used for coercions, because it'd be bad to throw while building an error message or stack trace! The prod and non-prod modes have differentiated error messages to explain how to do a proper coercion in that mode. If a production check call is needed but is missing or incorrect (e.g. not in a DEV block or not immediately before the coercion), then a context-sensitive error message will be reported so that developers can figure out what's wrong and how to fix the problem. Because string coercions are now handled by the `safe-string-coercion` rule, the `no-primitive-constructor` rule no longer flags `String()` usage. It still flags `new String(value)` because that usage is almost always a bug. * Add DEV-only string coercion check functions This commit adds DEV-only functions to check whether coercing values to strings using the `'' + value` pattern will throw. If it will throw, these functions will: 1. Display a console error with a friendly error message describing the problem and the developer can fix it. 2. Perform the coercion, which will throw. Right before the line where the throwing happens, there's a long code comment that will help debugger users (or others looking at the exception call stack) figure out what happened and how to fix the problem. One of these check functions should be called before all string coercion of user-provided values, except when the the coercion is guaranteed not to throw, e.g. * if inside a typeof check like `if (typeof value === 'string')` * if coercing the result of a unary function like `+value` or `value++` * if coercing a variable named in a whitelist of numeric identifiers: `i`, `idx`, or `lineNumber`. The new `safe-string-coercion` internal ESLint rule enforces that these check functions are called when they are required. Only use these check functions in production code that will be bundled with user apps. For non-prod code (and for production error-handling code), use `String(value)` instead which may be a little slower but will never throw. * Add failing tests for string coercion Added failing tests to verify: * That input, select, and textarea elements with value and defaultValue set to Temporal-like objects which will throw when coerced to string using the `'' + value` pattern. * That text elements will throw for Temporal-like objects * That dangerouslySetInnerHTML will *not* throw for Temporal-like objects because this value is not cast to a string before passing to the DOM. * That keys that are Temporal-like objects will throw All tests above validate the friendly error messages thrown. * Use `String(value)` for coercion in non-prod files This commit switches non-production code from `'' + value` (which throws for Temporal objects and symbols) to instead use `String(value)` which won't throw for these or other future plus-phobic types. "Non-produciton code" includes anything not bundled into user apps: * Tests and test utilities. Note that I didn't change legacy React test fixtures because I assumed it was good for those files to act just like old React, including coercion behavior. * Build scripts * Dev tools package - In addition to switching to `String`, I also removed special-case code for coercing symbols which is now unnecessary. * Add DEV-only string coercion checks to prod files This commit adds DEV-only function calls to to check if string coercion using `'' + value` will throw, which it will if the value is a Temporal object or a symbol because those types can't be added with `+`. If it will throw, then in DEV these checks will show a console error to help the user undertsand what went wrong and how to fix the problem. After emitting the console error, the check functions will retry the coercion which will throw with a call stack that's easy (or at least easier!) to troubleshoot because the exception happens right after a long comment explaining the issue. So whether the user is in a debugger, looking at the browser console, or viewing the in-browser DEV call stack, it should be easy to understand and fix the problem. In most cases, the safe-string-coercion ESLint rule is smart enough to detect when a coercion is safe. But in rare cases (e.g. when a coercion is inside a ternary) this rule will have to be manually disabled. This commit also switches error-handling code to use `String(value)` for coercion, because it's bad to crash when you're trying to build an error message or a call stack! Because `String()` is usually disallowed by the `safe-string-coercion` ESLint rule in production code, the rule must be disabled when `String()` is used.
2021-09-27 10:05:07 -07:00
return type;
}
}
// $FlowFixMe[incompatible-return] only called in DEV, so void return is not possible.
Improve DEV errors if string coercion throws (Temporal.*, Symbol, etc.) (#22064) * Revise ESLint rules for string coercion Currently, react uses `'' + value` to coerce mixed values to strings. This code will throw for Temporal objects or symbols. To make string-coercion safer and to improve user-facing error messages, This commit adds a new ESLint rule called `safe-string-coercion`. This rule has two modes: a production mode and a non-production mode. * If the `isProductionUserAppCode` option is true, then `'' + value` coercions are allowed (because they're faster, although they may throw) and `String(value)` coercions are disallowed. Exception: when building error messages or running DEV-only code in prod files, `String()` should be used because it won't throw. * If the `isProductionUserAppCode` option is false, then `'' + value` coercions are disallowed (because they may throw, and in non-prod code it's not worth the risk) and `String(value)` are allowed. Production mode is used for all files which will be bundled with developers' userland apps. Non-prod mode is used for all other React code: tests, DEV blocks, devtools extension, etc. In production mode, in addiiton to flagging `String(value)` calls, the rule will also flag `'' + value` or `value + ''` coercions that may throw. The rule is smart enough to silence itself in the following "will never throw" cases: * When the coercion is wrapped in a `typeof` test that restricts to safe (non-symbol, non-object) types. Example: if (typeof value === 'string' || typeof value === 'number') { thisWontReport('' + value); } * When what's being coerced is a unary function result, because unary functions never return an object or a symbol. * When the coerced value is a commonly-used numeric identifier: `i`, `idx`, or `lineNumber`. * When the statement immeidately before the coercion is a DEV-only call to a function from shared/CheckStringCoercion.js. This call is a no-op in production, but in DEV it will show a console error explaining the problem, then will throw right after a long explanatory code comment so that debugger users will have an idea what's going on. The check function call must be in the following format: if (__DEV__) { checkXxxxxStringCoercion(value); }; Manually disabling the rule is usually not necessary because almost all prod use of the `'' + value` pattern falls into one of the categories above. But in the rare cases where the rule isn't smart enough to detect safe usage (e.g. when a coercion is inside a nested ternary operator), manually disabling the rule will be needed. The rule should also be manually disabled in prod error handling code where `String(value)` should be used for coercions, because it'd be bad to throw while building an error message or stack trace! The prod and non-prod modes have differentiated error messages to explain how to do a proper coercion in that mode. If a production check call is needed but is missing or incorrect (e.g. not in a DEV block or not immediately before the coercion), then a context-sensitive error message will be reported so that developers can figure out what's wrong and how to fix the problem. Because string coercions are now handled by the `safe-string-coercion` rule, the `no-primitive-constructor` rule no longer flags `String()` usage. It still flags `new String(value)` because that usage is almost always a bug. * Add DEV-only string coercion check functions This commit adds DEV-only functions to check whether coercing values to strings using the `'' + value` pattern will throw. If it will throw, these functions will: 1. Display a console error with a friendly error message describing the problem and the developer can fix it. 2. Perform the coercion, which will throw. Right before the line where the throwing happens, there's a long code comment that will help debugger users (or others looking at the exception call stack) figure out what happened and how to fix the problem. One of these check functions should be called before all string coercion of user-provided values, except when the the coercion is guaranteed not to throw, e.g. * if inside a typeof check like `if (typeof value === 'string')` * if coercing the result of a unary function like `+value` or `value++` * if coercing a variable named in a whitelist of numeric identifiers: `i`, `idx`, or `lineNumber`. The new `safe-string-coercion` internal ESLint rule enforces that these check functions are called when they are required. Only use these check functions in production code that will be bundled with user apps. For non-prod code (and for production error-handling code), use `String(value)` instead which may be a little slower but will never throw. * Add failing tests for string coercion Added failing tests to verify: * That input, select, and textarea elements with value and defaultValue set to Temporal-like objects which will throw when coerced to string using the `'' + value` pattern. * That text elements will throw for Temporal-like objects * That dangerouslySetInnerHTML will *not* throw for Temporal-like objects because this value is not cast to a string before passing to the DOM. * That keys that are Temporal-like objects will throw All tests above validate the friendly error messages thrown. * Use `String(value)` for coercion in non-prod files This commit switches non-production code from `'' + value` (which throws for Temporal objects and symbols) to instead use `String(value)` which won't throw for these or other future plus-phobic types. "Non-produciton code" includes anything not bundled into user apps: * Tests and test utilities. Note that I didn't change legacy React test fixtures because I assumed it was good for those files to act just like old React, including coercion behavior. * Build scripts * Dev tools package - In addition to switching to `String`, I also removed special-case code for coercing symbols which is now unnecessary. * Add DEV-only string coercion checks to prod files This commit adds DEV-only function calls to to check if string coercion using `'' + value` will throw, which it will if the value is a Temporal object or a symbol because those types can't be added with `+`. If it will throw, then in DEV these checks will show a console error to help the user undertsand what went wrong and how to fix the problem. After emitting the console error, the check functions will retry the coercion which will throw with a call stack that's easy (or at least easier!) to troubleshoot because the exception happens right after a long comment explaining the issue. So whether the user is in a debugger, looking at the browser console, or viewing the in-browser DEV call stack, it should be easy to understand and fix the problem. In most cases, the safe-string-coercion ESLint rule is smart enough to detect when a coercion is safe. But in rare cases (e.g. when a coercion is inside a ternary) this rule will have to be manually disabled. This commit also switches error-handling code to use `String(value)` for coercion, because it's bad to crash when you're trying to build an error message or a call stack! Because `String()` is usually disallowed by the `safe-string-coercion` ESLint rule in production code, the rule must be disabled when `String()` is used.
2021-09-27 10:05:07 -07:00
function willCoercionThrow(value: mixed): boolean {
if (__DEV__) {
try {
testStringCoercion(value);
return false;
} catch (e) {
return true;
}
}
}
/** @noinline */
Improve DEV errors if string coercion throws (Temporal.*, Symbol, etc.) (#22064) * Revise ESLint rules for string coercion Currently, react uses `'' + value` to coerce mixed values to strings. This code will throw for Temporal objects or symbols. To make string-coercion safer and to improve user-facing error messages, This commit adds a new ESLint rule called `safe-string-coercion`. This rule has two modes: a production mode and a non-production mode. * If the `isProductionUserAppCode` option is true, then `'' + value` coercions are allowed (because they're faster, although they may throw) and `String(value)` coercions are disallowed. Exception: when building error messages or running DEV-only code in prod files, `String()` should be used because it won't throw. * If the `isProductionUserAppCode` option is false, then `'' + value` coercions are disallowed (because they may throw, and in non-prod code it's not worth the risk) and `String(value)` are allowed. Production mode is used for all files which will be bundled with developers' userland apps. Non-prod mode is used for all other React code: tests, DEV blocks, devtools extension, etc. In production mode, in addiiton to flagging `String(value)` calls, the rule will also flag `'' + value` or `value + ''` coercions that may throw. The rule is smart enough to silence itself in the following "will never throw" cases: * When the coercion is wrapped in a `typeof` test that restricts to safe (non-symbol, non-object) types. Example: if (typeof value === 'string' || typeof value === 'number') { thisWontReport('' + value); } * When what's being coerced is a unary function result, because unary functions never return an object or a symbol. * When the coerced value is a commonly-used numeric identifier: `i`, `idx`, or `lineNumber`. * When the statement immeidately before the coercion is a DEV-only call to a function from shared/CheckStringCoercion.js. This call is a no-op in production, but in DEV it will show a console error explaining the problem, then will throw right after a long explanatory code comment so that debugger users will have an idea what's going on. The check function call must be in the following format: if (__DEV__) { checkXxxxxStringCoercion(value); }; Manually disabling the rule is usually not necessary because almost all prod use of the `'' + value` pattern falls into one of the categories above. But in the rare cases where the rule isn't smart enough to detect safe usage (e.g. when a coercion is inside a nested ternary operator), manually disabling the rule will be needed. The rule should also be manually disabled in prod error handling code where `String(value)` should be used for coercions, because it'd be bad to throw while building an error message or stack trace! The prod and non-prod modes have differentiated error messages to explain how to do a proper coercion in that mode. If a production check call is needed but is missing or incorrect (e.g. not in a DEV block or not immediately before the coercion), then a context-sensitive error message will be reported so that developers can figure out what's wrong and how to fix the problem. Because string coercions are now handled by the `safe-string-coercion` rule, the `no-primitive-constructor` rule no longer flags `String()` usage. It still flags `new String(value)` because that usage is almost always a bug. * Add DEV-only string coercion check functions This commit adds DEV-only functions to check whether coercing values to strings using the `'' + value` pattern will throw. If it will throw, these functions will: 1. Display a console error with a friendly error message describing the problem and the developer can fix it. 2. Perform the coercion, which will throw. Right before the line where the throwing happens, there's a long code comment that will help debugger users (or others looking at the exception call stack) figure out what happened and how to fix the problem. One of these check functions should be called before all string coercion of user-provided values, except when the the coercion is guaranteed not to throw, e.g. * if inside a typeof check like `if (typeof value === 'string')` * if coercing the result of a unary function like `+value` or `value++` * if coercing a variable named in a whitelist of numeric identifiers: `i`, `idx`, or `lineNumber`. The new `safe-string-coercion` internal ESLint rule enforces that these check functions are called when they are required. Only use these check functions in production code that will be bundled with user apps. For non-prod code (and for production error-handling code), use `String(value)` instead which may be a little slower but will never throw. * Add failing tests for string coercion Added failing tests to verify: * That input, select, and textarea elements with value and defaultValue set to Temporal-like objects which will throw when coerced to string using the `'' + value` pattern. * That text elements will throw for Temporal-like objects * That dangerouslySetInnerHTML will *not* throw for Temporal-like objects because this value is not cast to a string before passing to the DOM. * That keys that are Temporal-like objects will throw All tests above validate the friendly error messages thrown. * Use `String(value)` for coercion in non-prod files This commit switches non-production code from `'' + value` (which throws for Temporal objects and symbols) to instead use `String(value)` which won't throw for these or other future plus-phobic types. "Non-produciton code" includes anything not bundled into user apps: * Tests and test utilities. Note that I didn't change legacy React test fixtures because I assumed it was good for those files to act just like old React, including coercion behavior. * Build scripts * Dev tools package - In addition to switching to `String`, I also removed special-case code for coercing symbols which is now unnecessary. * Add DEV-only string coercion checks to prod files This commit adds DEV-only function calls to to check if string coercion using `'' + value` will throw, which it will if the value is a Temporal object or a symbol because those types can't be added with `+`. If it will throw, then in DEV these checks will show a console error to help the user undertsand what went wrong and how to fix the problem. After emitting the console error, the check functions will retry the coercion which will throw with a call stack that's easy (or at least easier!) to troubleshoot because the exception happens right after a long comment explaining the issue. So whether the user is in a debugger, looking at the browser console, or viewing the in-browser DEV call stack, it should be easy to understand and fix the problem. In most cases, the safe-string-coercion ESLint rule is smart enough to detect when a coercion is safe. But in rare cases (e.g. when a coercion is inside a ternary) this rule will have to be manually disabled. This commit also switches error-handling code to use `String(value)` for coercion, because it's bad to crash when you're trying to build an error message or a call stack! Because `String()` is usually disallowed by the `safe-string-coercion` ESLint rule in production code, the rule must be disabled when `String()` is used.
2021-09-27 10:05:07 -07:00
function testStringCoercion(value: mixed) {
// If you ended up here by following an exception call stack, here's what's
// happened: you supplied an object or symbol value to React (as a prop, key,
// DOM attribute, CSS property, string ref, etc.) and when React tried to
// coerce it to a string using `'' + value`, an exception was thrown.
//
// The most common types that will cause this exception are `Symbol` instances
// and Temporal objects like `Temporal.Instant`. But any object that has a
// `valueOf` or `[Symbol.toPrimitive]` method that throws will also cause this
// exception. (Library authors do this to prevent users from using built-in
// numeric operators like `+` or comparison operators like `>=` because custom
// methods are needed to perform accurate arithmetic or comparison.)
//
// To fix the problem, coerce this object or symbol value to a string before
// passing it to React. The most reliable way is usually `String(value)`.
//
// To find which value is throwing, check the browser or debugger console.
// Before this exception was thrown, there should be `console.error` output
// that shows the type (Symbol, Temporal.PlainDate, etc.) that caused the
// problem and how that type was used: key, atrribute, input value prop, etc.
// In most cases, this console output also shows the component and its
// ancestor components where the exception happened.
//
// eslint-disable-next-line react-internal/safe-string-coercion
return '' + (value: any);
}
export function checkAttributeStringCoercion(
value: mixed,
attributeName: string,
2022-09-13 17:57:38 -04:00
): void | string {
Improve DEV errors if string coercion throws (Temporal.*, Symbol, etc.) (#22064) * Revise ESLint rules for string coercion Currently, react uses `'' + value` to coerce mixed values to strings. This code will throw for Temporal objects or symbols. To make string-coercion safer and to improve user-facing error messages, This commit adds a new ESLint rule called `safe-string-coercion`. This rule has two modes: a production mode and a non-production mode. * If the `isProductionUserAppCode` option is true, then `'' + value` coercions are allowed (because they're faster, although they may throw) and `String(value)` coercions are disallowed. Exception: when building error messages or running DEV-only code in prod files, `String()` should be used because it won't throw. * If the `isProductionUserAppCode` option is false, then `'' + value` coercions are disallowed (because they may throw, and in non-prod code it's not worth the risk) and `String(value)` are allowed. Production mode is used for all files which will be bundled with developers' userland apps. Non-prod mode is used for all other React code: tests, DEV blocks, devtools extension, etc. In production mode, in addiiton to flagging `String(value)` calls, the rule will also flag `'' + value` or `value + ''` coercions that may throw. The rule is smart enough to silence itself in the following "will never throw" cases: * When the coercion is wrapped in a `typeof` test that restricts to safe (non-symbol, non-object) types. Example: if (typeof value === 'string' || typeof value === 'number') { thisWontReport('' + value); } * When what's being coerced is a unary function result, because unary functions never return an object or a symbol. * When the coerced value is a commonly-used numeric identifier: `i`, `idx`, or `lineNumber`. * When the statement immeidately before the coercion is a DEV-only call to a function from shared/CheckStringCoercion.js. This call is a no-op in production, but in DEV it will show a console error explaining the problem, then will throw right after a long explanatory code comment so that debugger users will have an idea what's going on. The check function call must be in the following format: if (__DEV__) { checkXxxxxStringCoercion(value); }; Manually disabling the rule is usually not necessary because almost all prod use of the `'' + value` pattern falls into one of the categories above. But in the rare cases where the rule isn't smart enough to detect safe usage (e.g. when a coercion is inside a nested ternary operator), manually disabling the rule will be needed. The rule should also be manually disabled in prod error handling code where `String(value)` should be used for coercions, because it'd be bad to throw while building an error message or stack trace! The prod and non-prod modes have differentiated error messages to explain how to do a proper coercion in that mode. If a production check call is needed but is missing or incorrect (e.g. not in a DEV block or not immediately before the coercion), then a context-sensitive error message will be reported so that developers can figure out what's wrong and how to fix the problem. Because string coercions are now handled by the `safe-string-coercion` rule, the `no-primitive-constructor` rule no longer flags `String()` usage. It still flags `new String(value)` because that usage is almost always a bug. * Add DEV-only string coercion check functions This commit adds DEV-only functions to check whether coercing values to strings using the `'' + value` pattern will throw. If it will throw, these functions will: 1. Display a console error with a friendly error message describing the problem and the developer can fix it. 2. Perform the coercion, which will throw. Right before the line where the throwing happens, there's a long code comment that will help debugger users (or others looking at the exception call stack) figure out what happened and how to fix the problem. One of these check functions should be called before all string coercion of user-provided values, except when the the coercion is guaranteed not to throw, e.g. * if inside a typeof check like `if (typeof value === 'string')` * if coercing the result of a unary function like `+value` or `value++` * if coercing a variable named in a whitelist of numeric identifiers: `i`, `idx`, or `lineNumber`. The new `safe-string-coercion` internal ESLint rule enforces that these check functions are called when they are required. Only use these check functions in production code that will be bundled with user apps. For non-prod code (and for production error-handling code), use `String(value)` instead which may be a little slower but will never throw. * Add failing tests for string coercion Added failing tests to verify: * That input, select, and textarea elements with value and defaultValue set to Temporal-like objects which will throw when coerced to string using the `'' + value` pattern. * That text elements will throw for Temporal-like objects * That dangerouslySetInnerHTML will *not* throw for Temporal-like objects because this value is not cast to a string before passing to the DOM. * That keys that are Temporal-like objects will throw All tests above validate the friendly error messages thrown. * Use `String(value)` for coercion in non-prod files This commit switches non-production code from `'' + value` (which throws for Temporal objects and symbols) to instead use `String(value)` which won't throw for these or other future plus-phobic types. "Non-produciton code" includes anything not bundled into user apps: * Tests and test utilities. Note that I didn't change legacy React test fixtures because I assumed it was good for those files to act just like old React, including coercion behavior. * Build scripts * Dev tools package - In addition to switching to `String`, I also removed special-case code for coercing symbols which is now unnecessary. * Add DEV-only string coercion checks to prod files This commit adds DEV-only function calls to to check if string coercion using `'' + value` will throw, which it will if the value is a Temporal object or a symbol because those types can't be added with `+`. If it will throw, then in DEV these checks will show a console error to help the user undertsand what went wrong and how to fix the problem. After emitting the console error, the check functions will retry the coercion which will throw with a call stack that's easy (or at least easier!) to troubleshoot because the exception happens right after a long comment explaining the issue. So whether the user is in a debugger, looking at the browser console, or viewing the in-browser DEV call stack, it should be easy to understand and fix the problem. In most cases, the safe-string-coercion ESLint rule is smart enough to detect when a coercion is safe. But in rare cases (e.g. when a coercion is inside a ternary) this rule will have to be manually disabled. This commit also switches error-handling code to use `String(value)` for coercion, because it's bad to crash when you're trying to build an error message or a call stack! Because `String()` is usually disallowed by the `safe-string-coercion` ESLint rule in production code, the rule must be disabled when `String()` is used.
2021-09-27 10:05:07 -07:00
if (__DEV__) {
if (willCoercionThrow(value)) {
console.error(
'The provided `%s` attribute is an unsupported type %s.' +
Fix: error messages (#27523) <!-- Thanks for submitting a pull request! We appreciate you spending the time to work on these changes. Please provide enough information so that others can review your pull request. The three fields below are mandatory. Before submitting a pull request, please make sure the following is done: 1. Fork [the repository](https://github.com/facebook/react) and create your branch from `main`. 2. Run `yarn` in the repository root. 3. If you've fixed a bug or added code that should be tested, add tests! 4. Ensure the test suite passes (`yarn test`). Tip: `yarn test --watch TestName` is helpful in development. 5. Run `yarn test --prod` to test in the production environment. It supports the same options as `yarn test`. 6. If you need a debugger, run `yarn test --debug --watch TestName`, open `chrome://inspect`, and press "Inspect". 7. Format your code with [prettier](https://github.com/prettier/prettier) (`yarn prettier`). 8. Make sure your code lints (`yarn lint`). Tip: `yarn linc` to only check changed files. 9. Run the [Flow](https://flowtype.org/) type checks (`yarn flow`). 10. If you haven't already, complete the CLA. Learn more about contributing: https://reactjs.org/docs/how-to-contribute.html --> ## Summary Changes `before before` to `before` in error messages. <!-- Explain the **motivation** for making this change. What existing problem does the pull request solve? --> I want to improve error logs ## How did you test this change? <!-- Demonstrate the code is solid. Example: The exact commands you ran and their output, screenshots / videos if the pull request changes the user interface. How exactly did you verify that your PR solves the issue you wanted to solve? If you leave this empty, your PR will very likely be closed. -->
2023-10-16 20:05:42 +06:00
' This value must be coerced to a string before using it here.',
Improve DEV errors if string coercion throws (Temporal.*, Symbol, etc.) (#22064) * Revise ESLint rules for string coercion Currently, react uses `'' + value` to coerce mixed values to strings. This code will throw for Temporal objects or symbols. To make string-coercion safer and to improve user-facing error messages, This commit adds a new ESLint rule called `safe-string-coercion`. This rule has two modes: a production mode and a non-production mode. * If the `isProductionUserAppCode` option is true, then `'' + value` coercions are allowed (because they're faster, although they may throw) and `String(value)` coercions are disallowed. Exception: when building error messages or running DEV-only code in prod files, `String()` should be used because it won't throw. * If the `isProductionUserAppCode` option is false, then `'' + value` coercions are disallowed (because they may throw, and in non-prod code it's not worth the risk) and `String(value)` are allowed. Production mode is used for all files which will be bundled with developers' userland apps. Non-prod mode is used for all other React code: tests, DEV blocks, devtools extension, etc. In production mode, in addiiton to flagging `String(value)` calls, the rule will also flag `'' + value` or `value + ''` coercions that may throw. The rule is smart enough to silence itself in the following "will never throw" cases: * When the coercion is wrapped in a `typeof` test that restricts to safe (non-symbol, non-object) types. Example: if (typeof value === 'string' || typeof value === 'number') { thisWontReport('' + value); } * When what's being coerced is a unary function result, because unary functions never return an object or a symbol. * When the coerced value is a commonly-used numeric identifier: `i`, `idx`, or `lineNumber`. * When the statement immeidately before the coercion is a DEV-only call to a function from shared/CheckStringCoercion.js. This call is a no-op in production, but in DEV it will show a console error explaining the problem, then will throw right after a long explanatory code comment so that debugger users will have an idea what's going on. The check function call must be in the following format: if (__DEV__) { checkXxxxxStringCoercion(value); }; Manually disabling the rule is usually not necessary because almost all prod use of the `'' + value` pattern falls into one of the categories above. But in the rare cases where the rule isn't smart enough to detect safe usage (e.g. when a coercion is inside a nested ternary operator), manually disabling the rule will be needed. The rule should also be manually disabled in prod error handling code where `String(value)` should be used for coercions, because it'd be bad to throw while building an error message or stack trace! The prod and non-prod modes have differentiated error messages to explain how to do a proper coercion in that mode. If a production check call is needed but is missing or incorrect (e.g. not in a DEV block or not immediately before the coercion), then a context-sensitive error message will be reported so that developers can figure out what's wrong and how to fix the problem. Because string coercions are now handled by the `safe-string-coercion` rule, the `no-primitive-constructor` rule no longer flags `String()` usage. It still flags `new String(value)` because that usage is almost always a bug. * Add DEV-only string coercion check functions This commit adds DEV-only functions to check whether coercing values to strings using the `'' + value` pattern will throw. If it will throw, these functions will: 1. Display a console error with a friendly error message describing the problem and the developer can fix it. 2. Perform the coercion, which will throw. Right before the line where the throwing happens, there's a long code comment that will help debugger users (or others looking at the exception call stack) figure out what happened and how to fix the problem. One of these check functions should be called before all string coercion of user-provided values, except when the the coercion is guaranteed not to throw, e.g. * if inside a typeof check like `if (typeof value === 'string')` * if coercing the result of a unary function like `+value` or `value++` * if coercing a variable named in a whitelist of numeric identifiers: `i`, `idx`, or `lineNumber`. The new `safe-string-coercion` internal ESLint rule enforces that these check functions are called when they are required. Only use these check functions in production code that will be bundled with user apps. For non-prod code (and for production error-handling code), use `String(value)` instead which may be a little slower but will never throw. * Add failing tests for string coercion Added failing tests to verify: * That input, select, and textarea elements with value and defaultValue set to Temporal-like objects which will throw when coerced to string using the `'' + value` pattern. * That text elements will throw for Temporal-like objects * That dangerouslySetInnerHTML will *not* throw for Temporal-like objects because this value is not cast to a string before passing to the DOM. * That keys that are Temporal-like objects will throw All tests above validate the friendly error messages thrown. * Use `String(value)` for coercion in non-prod files This commit switches non-production code from `'' + value` (which throws for Temporal objects and symbols) to instead use `String(value)` which won't throw for these or other future plus-phobic types. "Non-produciton code" includes anything not bundled into user apps: * Tests and test utilities. Note that I didn't change legacy React test fixtures because I assumed it was good for those files to act just like old React, including coercion behavior. * Build scripts * Dev tools package - In addition to switching to `String`, I also removed special-case code for coercing symbols which is now unnecessary. * Add DEV-only string coercion checks to prod files This commit adds DEV-only function calls to to check if string coercion using `'' + value` will throw, which it will if the value is a Temporal object or a symbol because those types can't be added with `+`. If it will throw, then in DEV these checks will show a console error to help the user undertsand what went wrong and how to fix the problem. After emitting the console error, the check functions will retry the coercion which will throw with a call stack that's easy (or at least easier!) to troubleshoot because the exception happens right after a long comment explaining the issue. So whether the user is in a debugger, looking at the browser console, or viewing the in-browser DEV call stack, it should be easy to understand and fix the problem. In most cases, the safe-string-coercion ESLint rule is smart enough to detect when a coercion is safe. But in rare cases (e.g. when a coercion is inside a ternary) this rule will have to be manually disabled. This commit also switches error-handling code to use `String(value)` for coercion, because it's bad to crash when you're trying to build an error message or a call stack! Because `String()` is usually disallowed by the `safe-string-coercion` ESLint rule in production code, the rule must be disabled when `String()` is used.
2021-09-27 10:05:07 -07:00
attributeName,
typeName(value),
);
return testStringCoercion(value); // throw (to help callers find troubleshooting comments)
}
}
}
2022-09-13 17:57:38 -04:00
export function checkKeyStringCoercion(value: mixed): void | string {
Improve DEV errors if string coercion throws (Temporal.*, Symbol, etc.) (#22064) * Revise ESLint rules for string coercion Currently, react uses `'' + value` to coerce mixed values to strings. This code will throw for Temporal objects or symbols. To make string-coercion safer and to improve user-facing error messages, This commit adds a new ESLint rule called `safe-string-coercion`. This rule has two modes: a production mode and a non-production mode. * If the `isProductionUserAppCode` option is true, then `'' + value` coercions are allowed (because they're faster, although they may throw) and `String(value)` coercions are disallowed. Exception: when building error messages or running DEV-only code in prod files, `String()` should be used because it won't throw. * If the `isProductionUserAppCode` option is false, then `'' + value` coercions are disallowed (because they may throw, and in non-prod code it's not worth the risk) and `String(value)` are allowed. Production mode is used for all files which will be bundled with developers' userland apps. Non-prod mode is used for all other React code: tests, DEV blocks, devtools extension, etc. In production mode, in addiiton to flagging `String(value)` calls, the rule will also flag `'' + value` or `value + ''` coercions that may throw. The rule is smart enough to silence itself in the following "will never throw" cases: * When the coercion is wrapped in a `typeof` test that restricts to safe (non-symbol, non-object) types. Example: if (typeof value === 'string' || typeof value === 'number') { thisWontReport('' + value); } * When what's being coerced is a unary function result, because unary functions never return an object or a symbol. * When the coerced value is a commonly-used numeric identifier: `i`, `idx`, or `lineNumber`. * When the statement immeidately before the coercion is a DEV-only call to a function from shared/CheckStringCoercion.js. This call is a no-op in production, but in DEV it will show a console error explaining the problem, then will throw right after a long explanatory code comment so that debugger users will have an idea what's going on. The check function call must be in the following format: if (__DEV__) { checkXxxxxStringCoercion(value); }; Manually disabling the rule is usually not necessary because almost all prod use of the `'' + value` pattern falls into one of the categories above. But in the rare cases where the rule isn't smart enough to detect safe usage (e.g. when a coercion is inside a nested ternary operator), manually disabling the rule will be needed. The rule should also be manually disabled in prod error handling code where `String(value)` should be used for coercions, because it'd be bad to throw while building an error message or stack trace! The prod and non-prod modes have differentiated error messages to explain how to do a proper coercion in that mode. If a production check call is needed but is missing or incorrect (e.g. not in a DEV block or not immediately before the coercion), then a context-sensitive error message will be reported so that developers can figure out what's wrong and how to fix the problem. Because string coercions are now handled by the `safe-string-coercion` rule, the `no-primitive-constructor` rule no longer flags `String()` usage. It still flags `new String(value)` because that usage is almost always a bug. * Add DEV-only string coercion check functions This commit adds DEV-only functions to check whether coercing values to strings using the `'' + value` pattern will throw. If it will throw, these functions will: 1. Display a console error with a friendly error message describing the problem and the developer can fix it. 2. Perform the coercion, which will throw. Right before the line where the throwing happens, there's a long code comment that will help debugger users (or others looking at the exception call stack) figure out what happened and how to fix the problem. One of these check functions should be called before all string coercion of user-provided values, except when the the coercion is guaranteed not to throw, e.g. * if inside a typeof check like `if (typeof value === 'string')` * if coercing the result of a unary function like `+value` or `value++` * if coercing a variable named in a whitelist of numeric identifiers: `i`, `idx`, or `lineNumber`. The new `safe-string-coercion` internal ESLint rule enforces that these check functions are called when they are required. Only use these check functions in production code that will be bundled with user apps. For non-prod code (and for production error-handling code), use `String(value)` instead which may be a little slower but will never throw. * Add failing tests for string coercion Added failing tests to verify: * That input, select, and textarea elements with value and defaultValue set to Temporal-like objects which will throw when coerced to string using the `'' + value` pattern. * That text elements will throw for Temporal-like objects * That dangerouslySetInnerHTML will *not* throw for Temporal-like objects because this value is not cast to a string before passing to the DOM. * That keys that are Temporal-like objects will throw All tests above validate the friendly error messages thrown. * Use `String(value)` for coercion in non-prod files This commit switches non-production code from `'' + value` (which throws for Temporal objects and symbols) to instead use `String(value)` which won't throw for these or other future plus-phobic types. "Non-produciton code" includes anything not bundled into user apps: * Tests and test utilities. Note that I didn't change legacy React test fixtures because I assumed it was good for those files to act just like old React, including coercion behavior. * Build scripts * Dev tools package - In addition to switching to `String`, I also removed special-case code for coercing symbols which is now unnecessary. * Add DEV-only string coercion checks to prod files This commit adds DEV-only function calls to to check if string coercion using `'' + value` will throw, which it will if the value is a Temporal object or a symbol because those types can't be added with `+`. If it will throw, then in DEV these checks will show a console error to help the user undertsand what went wrong and how to fix the problem. After emitting the console error, the check functions will retry the coercion which will throw with a call stack that's easy (or at least easier!) to troubleshoot because the exception happens right after a long comment explaining the issue. So whether the user is in a debugger, looking at the browser console, or viewing the in-browser DEV call stack, it should be easy to understand and fix the problem. In most cases, the safe-string-coercion ESLint rule is smart enough to detect when a coercion is safe. But in rare cases (e.g. when a coercion is inside a ternary) this rule will have to be manually disabled. This commit also switches error-handling code to use `String(value)` for coercion, because it's bad to crash when you're trying to build an error message or a call stack! Because `String()` is usually disallowed by the `safe-string-coercion` ESLint rule in production code, the rule must be disabled when `String()` is used.
2021-09-27 10:05:07 -07:00
if (__DEV__) {
if (willCoercionThrow(value)) {
console.error(
'The provided key is an unsupported type %s.' +
Fix: error messages (#27523) <!-- Thanks for submitting a pull request! We appreciate you spending the time to work on these changes. Please provide enough information so that others can review your pull request. The three fields below are mandatory. Before submitting a pull request, please make sure the following is done: 1. Fork [the repository](https://github.com/facebook/react) and create your branch from `main`. 2. Run `yarn` in the repository root. 3. If you've fixed a bug or added code that should be tested, add tests! 4. Ensure the test suite passes (`yarn test`). Tip: `yarn test --watch TestName` is helpful in development. 5. Run `yarn test --prod` to test in the production environment. It supports the same options as `yarn test`. 6. If you need a debugger, run `yarn test --debug --watch TestName`, open `chrome://inspect`, and press "Inspect". 7. Format your code with [prettier](https://github.com/prettier/prettier) (`yarn prettier`). 8. Make sure your code lints (`yarn lint`). Tip: `yarn linc` to only check changed files. 9. Run the [Flow](https://flowtype.org/) type checks (`yarn flow`). 10. If you haven't already, complete the CLA. Learn more about contributing: https://reactjs.org/docs/how-to-contribute.html --> ## Summary Changes `before before` to `before` in error messages. <!-- Explain the **motivation** for making this change. What existing problem does the pull request solve? --> I want to improve error logs ## How did you test this change? <!-- Demonstrate the code is solid. Example: The exact commands you ran and their output, screenshots / videos if the pull request changes the user interface. How exactly did you verify that your PR solves the issue you wanted to solve? If you leave this empty, your PR will very likely be closed. -->
2023-10-16 20:05:42 +06:00
' This value must be coerced to a string before using it here.',
Improve DEV errors if string coercion throws (Temporal.*, Symbol, etc.) (#22064) * Revise ESLint rules for string coercion Currently, react uses `'' + value` to coerce mixed values to strings. This code will throw for Temporal objects or symbols. To make string-coercion safer and to improve user-facing error messages, This commit adds a new ESLint rule called `safe-string-coercion`. This rule has two modes: a production mode and a non-production mode. * If the `isProductionUserAppCode` option is true, then `'' + value` coercions are allowed (because they're faster, although they may throw) and `String(value)` coercions are disallowed. Exception: when building error messages or running DEV-only code in prod files, `String()` should be used because it won't throw. * If the `isProductionUserAppCode` option is false, then `'' + value` coercions are disallowed (because they may throw, and in non-prod code it's not worth the risk) and `String(value)` are allowed. Production mode is used for all files which will be bundled with developers' userland apps. Non-prod mode is used for all other React code: tests, DEV blocks, devtools extension, etc. In production mode, in addiiton to flagging `String(value)` calls, the rule will also flag `'' + value` or `value + ''` coercions that may throw. The rule is smart enough to silence itself in the following "will never throw" cases: * When the coercion is wrapped in a `typeof` test that restricts to safe (non-symbol, non-object) types. Example: if (typeof value === 'string' || typeof value === 'number') { thisWontReport('' + value); } * When what's being coerced is a unary function result, because unary functions never return an object or a symbol. * When the coerced value is a commonly-used numeric identifier: `i`, `idx`, or `lineNumber`. * When the statement immeidately before the coercion is a DEV-only call to a function from shared/CheckStringCoercion.js. This call is a no-op in production, but in DEV it will show a console error explaining the problem, then will throw right after a long explanatory code comment so that debugger users will have an idea what's going on. The check function call must be in the following format: if (__DEV__) { checkXxxxxStringCoercion(value); }; Manually disabling the rule is usually not necessary because almost all prod use of the `'' + value` pattern falls into one of the categories above. But in the rare cases where the rule isn't smart enough to detect safe usage (e.g. when a coercion is inside a nested ternary operator), manually disabling the rule will be needed. The rule should also be manually disabled in prod error handling code where `String(value)` should be used for coercions, because it'd be bad to throw while building an error message or stack trace! The prod and non-prod modes have differentiated error messages to explain how to do a proper coercion in that mode. If a production check call is needed but is missing or incorrect (e.g. not in a DEV block or not immediately before the coercion), then a context-sensitive error message will be reported so that developers can figure out what's wrong and how to fix the problem. Because string coercions are now handled by the `safe-string-coercion` rule, the `no-primitive-constructor` rule no longer flags `String()` usage. It still flags `new String(value)` because that usage is almost always a bug. * Add DEV-only string coercion check functions This commit adds DEV-only functions to check whether coercing values to strings using the `'' + value` pattern will throw. If it will throw, these functions will: 1. Display a console error with a friendly error message describing the problem and the developer can fix it. 2. Perform the coercion, which will throw. Right before the line where the throwing happens, there's a long code comment that will help debugger users (or others looking at the exception call stack) figure out what happened and how to fix the problem. One of these check functions should be called before all string coercion of user-provided values, except when the the coercion is guaranteed not to throw, e.g. * if inside a typeof check like `if (typeof value === 'string')` * if coercing the result of a unary function like `+value` or `value++` * if coercing a variable named in a whitelist of numeric identifiers: `i`, `idx`, or `lineNumber`. The new `safe-string-coercion` internal ESLint rule enforces that these check functions are called when they are required. Only use these check functions in production code that will be bundled with user apps. For non-prod code (and for production error-handling code), use `String(value)` instead which may be a little slower but will never throw. * Add failing tests for string coercion Added failing tests to verify: * That input, select, and textarea elements with value and defaultValue set to Temporal-like objects which will throw when coerced to string using the `'' + value` pattern. * That text elements will throw for Temporal-like objects * That dangerouslySetInnerHTML will *not* throw for Temporal-like objects because this value is not cast to a string before passing to the DOM. * That keys that are Temporal-like objects will throw All tests above validate the friendly error messages thrown. * Use `String(value)` for coercion in non-prod files This commit switches non-production code from `'' + value` (which throws for Temporal objects and symbols) to instead use `String(value)` which won't throw for these or other future plus-phobic types. "Non-produciton code" includes anything not bundled into user apps: * Tests and test utilities. Note that I didn't change legacy React test fixtures because I assumed it was good for those files to act just like old React, including coercion behavior. * Build scripts * Dev tools package - In addition to switching to `String`, I also removed special-case code for coercing symbols which is now unnecessary. * Add DEV-only string coercion checks to prod files This commit adds DEV-only function calls to to check if string coercion using `'' + value` will throw, which it will if the value is a Temporal object or a symbol because those types can't be added with `+`. If it will throw, then in DEV these checks will show a console error to help the user undertsand what went wrong and how to fix the problem. After emitting the console error, the check functions will retry the coercion which will throw with a call stack that's easy (or at least easier!) to troubleshoot because the exception happens right after a long comment explaining the issue. So whether the user is in a debugger, looking at the browser console, or viewing the in-browser DEV call stack, it should be easy to understand and fix the problem. In most cases, the safe-string-coercion ESLint rule is smart enough to detect when a coercion is safe. But in rare cases (e.g. when a coercion is inside a ternary) this rule will have to be manually disabled. This commit also switches error-handling code to use `String(value)` for coercion, because it's bad to crash when you're trying to build an error message or a call stack! Because `String()` is usually disallowed by the `safe-string-coercion` ESLint rule in production code, the rule must be disabled when `String()` is used.
2021-09-27 10:05:07 -07:00
typeName(value),
);
return testStringCoercion(value); // throw (to help callers find troubleshooting comments)
}
}
}
2022-09-13 17:57:38 -04:00
export function checkPropStringCoercion(
value: mixed,
propName: string,
): void | string {
Improve DEV errors if string coercion throws (Temporal.*, Symbol, etc.) (#22064) * Revise ESLint rules for string coercion Currently, react uses `'' + value` to coerce mixed values to strings. This code will throw for Temporal objects or symbols. To make string-coercion safer and to improve user-facing error messages, This commit adds a new ESLint rule called `safe-string-coercion`. This rule has two modes: a production mode and a non-production mode. * If the `isProductionUserAppCode` option is true, then `'' + value` coercions are allowed (because they're faster, although they may throw) and `String(value)` coercions are disallowed. Exception: when building error messages or running DEV-only code in prod files, `String()` should be used because it won't throw. * If the `isProductionUserAppCode` option is false, then `'' + value` coercions are disallowed (because they may throw, and in non-prod code it's not worth the risk) and `String(value)` are allowed. Production mode is used for all files which will be bundled with developers' userland apps. Non-prod mode is used for all other React code: tests, DEV blocks, devtools extension, etc. In production mode, in addiiton to flagging `String(value)` calls, the rule will also flag `'' + value` or `value + ''` coercions that may throw. The rule is smart enough to silence itself in the following "will never throw" cases: * When the coercion is wrapped in a `typeof` test that restricts to safe (non-symbol, non-object) types. Example: if (typeof value === 'string' || typeof value === 'number') { thisWontReport('' + value); } * When what's being coerced is a unary function result, because unary functions never return an object or a symbol. * When the coerced value is a commonly-used numeric identifier: `i`, `idx`, or `lineNumber`. * When the statement immeidately before the coercion is a DEV-only call to a function from shared/CheckStringCoercion.js. This call is a no-op in production, but in DEV it will show a console error explaining the problem, then will throw right after a long explanatory code comment so that debugger users will have an idea what's going on. The check function call must be in the following format: if (__DEV__) { checkXxxxxStringCoercion(value); }; Manually disabling the rule is usually not necessary because almost all prod use of the `'' + value` pattern falls into one of the categories above. But in the rare cases where the rule isn't smart enough to detect safe usage (e.g. when a coercion is inside a nested ternary operator), manually disabling the rule will be needed. The rule should also be manually disabled in prod error handling code where `String(value)` should be used for coercions, because it'd be bad to throw while building an error message or stack trace! The prod and non-prod modes have differentiated error messages to explain how to do a proper coercion in that mode. If a production check call is needed but is missing or incorrect (e.g. not in a DEV block or not immediately before the coercion), then a context-sensitive error message will be reported so that developers can figure out what's wrong and how to fix the problem. Because string coercions are now handled by the `safe-string-coercion` rule, the `no-primitive-constructor` rule no longer flags `String()` usage. It still flags `new String(value)` because that usage is almost always a bug. * Add DEV-only string coercion check functions This commit adds DEV-only functions to check whether coercing values to strings using the `'' + value` pattern will throw. If it will throw, these functions will: 1. Display a console error with a friendly error message describing the problem and the developer can fix it. 2. Perform the coercion, which will throw. Right before the line where the throwing happens, there's a long code comment that will help debugger users (or others looking at the exception call stack) figure out what happened and how to fix the problem. One of these check functions should be called before all string coercion of user-provided values, except when the the coercion is guaranteed not to throw, e.g. * if inside a typeof check like `if (typeof value === 'string')` * if coercing the result of a unary function like `+value` or `value++` * if coercing a variable named in a whitelist of numeric identifiers: `i`, `idx`, or `lineNumber`. The new `safe-string-coercion` internal ESLint rule enforces that these check functions are called when they are required. Only use these check functions in production code that will be bundled with user apps. For non-prod code (and for production error-handling code), use `String(value)` instead which may be a little slower but will never throw. * Add failing tests for string coercion Added failing tests to verify: * That input, select, and textarea elements with value and defaultValue set to Temporal-like objects which will throw when coerced to string using the `'' + value` pattern. * That text elements will throw for Temporal-like objects * That dangerouslySetInnerHTML will *not* throw for Temporal-like objects because this value is not cast to a string before passing to the DOM. * That keys that are Temporal-like objects will throw All tests above validate the friendly error messages thrown. * Use `String(value)` for coercion in non-prod files This commit switches non-production code from `'' + value` (which throws for Temporal objects and symbols) to instead use `String(value)` which won't throw for these or other future plus-phobic types. "Non-produciton code" includes anything not bundled into user apps: * Tests and test utilities. Note that I didn't change legacy React test fixtures because I assumed it was good for those files to act just like old React, including coercion behavior. * Build scripts * Dev tools package - In addition to switching to `String`, I also removed special-case code for coercing symbols which is now unnecessary. * Add DEV-only string coercion checks to prod files This commit adds DEV-only function calls to to check if string coercion using `'' + value` will throw, which it will if the value is a Temporal object or a symbol because those types can't be added with `+`. If it will throw, then in DEV these checks will show a console error to help the user undertsand what went wrong and how to fix the problem. After emitting the console error, the check functions will retry the coercion which will throw with a call stack that's easy (or at least easier!) to troubleshoot because the exception happens right after a long comment explaining the issue. So whether the user is in a debugger, looking at the browser console, or viewing the in-browser DEV call stack, it should be easy to understand and fix the problem. In most cases, the safe-string-coercion ESLint rule is smart enough to detect when a coercion is safe. But in rare cases (e.g. when a coercion is inside a ternary) this rule will have to be manually disabled. This commit also switches error-handling code to use `String(value)` for coercion, because it's bad to crash when you're trying to build an error message or a call stack! Because `String()` is usually disallowed by the `safe-string-coercion` ESLint rule in production code, the rule must be disabled when `String()` is used.
2021-09-27 10:05:07 -07:00
if (__DEV__) {
if (willCoercionThrow(value)) {
console.error(
'The provided `%s` prop is an unsupported type %s.' +
Fix: error messages (#27523) <!-- Thanks for submitting a pull request! We appreciate you spending the time to work on these changes. Please provide enough information so that others can review your pull request. The three fields below are mandatory. Before submitting a pull request, please make sure the following is done: 1. Fork [the repository](https://github.com/facebook/react) and create your branch from `main`. 2. Run `yarn` in the repository root. 3. If you've fixed a bug or added code that should be tested, add tests! 4. Ensure the test suite passes (`yarn test`). Tip: `yarn test --watch TestName` is helpful in development. 5. Run `yarn test --prod` to test in the production environment. It supports the same options as `yarn test`. 6. If you need a debugger, run `yarn test --debug --watch TestName`, open `chrome://inspect`, and press "Inspect". 7. Format your code with [prettier](https://github.com/prettier/prettier) (`yarn prettier`). 8. Make sure your code lints (`yarn lint`). Tip: `yarn linc` to only check changed files. 9. Run the [Flow](https://flowtype.org/) type checks (`yarn flow`). 10. If you haven't already, complete the CLA. Learn more about contributing: https://reactjs.org/docs/how-to-contribute.html --> ## Summary Changes `before before` to `before` in error messages. <!-- Explain the **motivation** for making this change. What existing problem does the pull request solve? --> I want to improve error logs ## How did you test this change? <!-- Demonstrate the code is solid. Example: The exact commands you ran and their output, screenshots / videos if the pull request changes the user interface. How exactly did you verify that your PR solves the issue you wanted to solve? If you leave this empty, your PR will very likely be closed. -->
2023-10-16 20:05:42 +06:00
' This value must be coerced to a string before using it here.',
Improve DEV errors if string coercion throws (Temporal.*, Symbol, etc.) (#22064) * Revise ESLint rules for string coercion Currently, react uses `'' + value` to coerce mixed values to strings. This code will throw for Temporal objects or symbols. To make string-coercion safer and to improve user-facing error messages, This commit adds a new ESLint rule called `safe-string-coercion`. This rule has two modes: a production mode and a non-production mode. * If the `isProductionUserAppCode` option is true, then `'' + value` coercions are allowed (because they're faster, although they may throw) and `String(value)` coercions are disallowed. Exception: when building error messages or running DEV-only code in prod files, `String()` should be used because it won't throw. * If the `isProductionUserAppCode` option is false, then `'' + value` coercions are disallowed (because they may throw, and in non-prod code it's not worth the risk) and `String(value)` are allowed. Production mode is used for all files which will be bundled with developers' userland apps. Non-prod mode is used for all other React code: tests, DEV blocks, devtools extension, etc. In production mode, in addiiton to flagging `String(value)` calls, the rule will also flag `'' + value` or `value + ''` coercions that may throw. The rule is smart enough to silence itself in the following "will never throw" cases: * When the coercion is wrapped in a `typeof` test that restricts to safe (non-symbol, non-object) types. Example: if (typeof value === 'string' || typeof value === 'number') { thisWontReport('' + value); } * When what's being coerced is a unary function result, because unary functions never return an object or a symbol. * When the coerced value is a commonly-used numeric identifier: `i`, `idx`, or `lineNumber`. * When the statement immeidately before the coercion is a DEV-only call to a function from shared/CheckStringCoercion.js. This call is a no-op in production, but in DEV it will show a console error explaining the problem, then will throw right after a long explanatory code comment so that debugger users will have an idea what's going on. The check function call must be in the following format: if (__DEV__) { checkXxxxxStringCoercion(value); }; Manually disabling the rule is usually not necessary because almost all prod use of the `'' + value` pattern falls into one of the categories above. But in the rare cases where the rule isn't smart enough to detect safe usage (e.g. when a coercion is inside a nested ternary operator), manually disabling the rule will be needed. The rule should also be manually disabled in prod error handling code where `String(value)` should be used for coercions, because it'd be bad to throw while building an error message or stack trace! The prod and non-prod modes have differentiated error messages to explain how to do a proper coercion in that mode. If a production check call is needed but is missing or incorrect (e.g. not in a DEV block or not immediately before the coercion), then a context-sensitive error message will be reported so that developers can figure out what's wrong and how to fix the problem. Because string coercions are now handled by the `safe-string-coercion` rule, the `no-primitive-constructor` rule no longer flags `String()` usage. It still flags `new String(value)` because that usage is almost always a bug. * Add DEV-only string coercion check functions This commit adds DEV-only functions to check whether coercing values to strings using the `'' + value` pattern will throw. If it will throw, these functions will: 1. Display a console error with a friendly error message describing the problem and the developer can fix it. 2. Perform the coercion, which will throw. Right before the line where the throwing happens, there's a long code comment that will help debugger users (or others looking at the exception call stack) figure out what happened and how to fix the problem. One of these check functions should be called before all string coercion of user-provided values, except when the the coercion is guaranteed not to throw, e.g. * if inside a typeof check like `if (typeof value === 'string')` * if coercing the result of a unary function like `+value` or `value++` * if coercing a variable named in a whitelist of numeric identifiers: `i`, `idx`, or `lineNumber`. The new `safe-string-coercion` internal ESLint rule enforces that these check functions are called when they are required. Only use these check functions in production code that will be bundled with user apps. For non-prod code (and for production error-handling code), use `String(value)` instead which may be a little slower but will never throw. * Add failing tests for string coercion Added failing tests to verify: * That input, select, and textarea elements with value and defaultValue set to Temporal-like objects which will throw when coerced to string using the `'' + value` pattern. * That text elements will throw for Temporal-like objects * That dangerouslySetInnerHTML will *not* throw for Temporal-like objects because this value is not cast to a string before passing to the DOM. * That keys that are Temporal-like objects will throw All tests above validate the friendly error messages thrown. * Use `String(value)` for coercion in non-prod files This commit switches non-production code from `'' + value` (which throws for Temporal objects and symbols) to instead use `String(value)` which won't throw for these or other future plus-phobic types. "Non-produciton code" includes anything not bundled into user apps: * Tests and test utilities. Note that I didn't change legacy React test fixtures because I assumed it was good for those files to act just like old React, including coercion behavior. * Build scripts * Dev tools package - In addition to switching to `String`, I also removed special-case code for coercing symbols which is now unnecessary. * Add DEV-only string coercion checks to prod files This commit adds DEV-only function calls to to check if string coercion using `'' + value` will throw, which it will if the value is a Temporal object or a symbol because those types can't be added with `+`. If it will throw, then in DEV these checks will show a console error to help the user undertsand what went wrong and how to fix the problem. After emitting the console error, the check functions will retry the coercion which will throw with a call stack that's easy (or at least easier!) to troubleshoot because the exception happens right after a long comment explaining the issue. So whether the user is in a debugger, looking at the browser console, or viewing the in-browser DEV call stack, it should be easy to understand and fix the problem. In most cases, the safe-string-coercion ESLint rule is smart enough to detect when a coercion is safe. But in rare cases (e.g. when a coercion is inside a ternary) this rule will have to be manually disabled. This commit also switches error-handling code to use `String(value)` for coercion, because it's bad to crash when you're trying to build an error message or a call stack! Because `String()` is usually disallowed by the `safe-string-coercion` ESLint rule in production code, the rule must be disabled when `String()` is used.
2021-09-27 10:05:07 -07:00
propName,
typeName(value),
);
return testStringCoercion(value); // throw (to help callers find troubleshooting comments)
}
}
}
[Fizz] implement `onHeaders` and `headersLengthHint` options (#27641) Adds a new option to `react-dom/server` entrypoints. `onHeaders: (headers: Headers) => void` (non node envs) `onHeaders: (headers: { Link?: string }) => void` (node envs) When any `renderTo...` or `prerender...` function is called and this option is provided the supplied function will be called sometime on or before completion of the render with some preload link headers. When provided during a `renderTo...` the callback will usually be called after the first pass at work. The idea here is we want to get a set of headers to start the browser loading well before the shell is ready. We don't wait for the shell because if we did we may as well send the preloads as tags in the HTML. When provided during a `prerender...` the callback will be called after the entire prerender is complete. The idea here is we are not responding to a live request and it is preferable to capture as much as possible for preloading as Headers in case the prerender was unable to finish the shell. Currently the following resources are always preloaded as headers when the option is provided 1. prefetchDNS and preconnects 2. font preloads 3. high priority image preloads Additionally if we are providing headers when the shell is incomplete (regardless of whether it is render or prerender) we will also include any stylesheet Resources (ones with a precedence prop) There is a second option `maxHeadersLength?: number` which allows you to specify the maximum length of the header content in unicode code units. This is what you get when you read the length property of a string in javascript. It's improtant to note that this is not the same as the utf-8 byte length when these headers are serialized in a Response. The utf8 representation may be the same size, or larger but it will never be smaller. If you do not supply a `maxHeadersLength` we defaul to `2000`. This was chosen as half the value of the max headers length supported by commonly known web servers and CDNs. many browser and web server can support significantly more headers than this so you can use this option to increase the headers limit. You can also of course use it to be even more conservative. Again it is important to keep in mind there is no direct translation between the max length and the bytelength and so if you want to stay under a certain byte length you need to be potentially more aggressive in the maxHeadersLength you choose. Conceptually `onHeaders` could be called more than once as new headers are discovered however if we haven't started flushing yet but since most APIs for the server including the web standard Response only allow you to set headers once the current implementation will only call it one time
2023-11-07 10:16:33 -08:00
export function checkOptionStringCoercion(
value: mixed,
propName: string,
): void | string {
if (__DEV__) {
if (willCoercionThrow(value)) {
console.error(
'The provided `%s` option is an unsupported type %s.' +
' This value must be coerced to a string before using it here.',
propName,
typeName(value),
);
return testStringCoercion(value); // throw (to help callers find troubleshooting comments)
}
}
}
2022-09-13 17:57:38 -04:00
export function checkCSSPropertyStringCoercion(
value: mixed,
propName: string,
): void | string {
Improve DEV errors if string coercion throws (Temporal.*, Symbol, etc.) (#22064) * Revise ESLint rules for string coercion Currently, react uses `'' + value` to coerce mixed values to strings. This code will throw for Temporal objects or symbols. To make string-coercion safer and to improve user-facing error messages, This commit adds a new ESLint rule called `safe-string-coercion`. This rule has two modes: a production mode and a non-production mode. * If the `isProductionUserAppCode` option is true, then `'' + value` coercions are allowed (because they're faster, although they may throw) and `String(value)` coercions are disallowed. Exception: when building error messages or running DEV-only code in prod files, `String()` should be used because it won't throw. * If the `isProductionUserAppCode` option is false, then `'' + value` coercions are disallowed (because they may throw, and in non-prod code it's not worth the risk) and `String(value)` are allowed. Production mode is used for all files which will be bundled with developers' userland apps. Non-prod mode is used for all other React code: tests, DEV blocks, devtools extension, etc. In production mode, in addiiton to flagging `String(value)` calls, the rule will also flag `'' + value` or `value + ''` coercions that may throw. The rule is smart enough to silence itself in the following "will never throw" cases: * When the coercion is wrapped in a `typeof` test that restricts to safe (non-symbol, non-object) types. Example: if (typeof value === 'string' || typeof value === 'number') { thisWontReport('' + value); } * When what's being coerced is a unary function result, because unary functions never return an object or a symbol. * When the coerced value is a commonly-used numeric identifier: `i`, `idx`, or `lineNumber`. * When the statement immeidately before the coercion is a DEV-only call to a function from shared/CheckStringCoercion.js. This call is a no-op in production, but in DEV it will show a console error explaining the problem, then will throw right after a long explanatory code comment so that debugger users will have an idea what's going on. The check function call must be in the following format: if (__DEV__) { checkXxxxxStringCoercion(value); }; Manually disabling the rule is usually not necessary because almost all prod use of the `'' + value` pattern falls into one of the categories above. But in the rare cases where the rule isn't smart enough to detect safe usage (e.g. when a coercion is inside a nested ternary operator), manually disabling the rule will be needed. The rule should also be manually disabled in prod error handling code where `String(value)` should be used for coercions, because it'd be bad to throw while building an error message or stack trace! The prod and non-prod modes have differentiated error messages to explain how to do a proper coercion in that mode. If a production check call is needed but is missing or incorrect (e.g. not in a DEV block or not immediately before the coercion), then a context-sensitive error message will be reported so that developers can figure out what's wrong and how to fix the problem. Because string coercions are now handled by the `safe-string-coercion` rule, the `no-primitive-constructor` rule no longer flags `String()` usage. It still flags `new String(value)` because that usage is almost always a bug. * Add DEV-only string coercion check functions This commit adds DEV-only functions to check whether coercing values to strings using the `'' + value` pattern will throw. If it will throw, these functions will: 1. Display a console error with a friendly error message describing the problem and the developer can fix it. 2. Perform the coercion, which will throw. Right before the line where the throwing happens, there's a long code comment that will help debugger users (or others looking at the exception call stack) figure out what happened and how to fix the problem. One of these check functions should be called before all string coercion of user-provided values, except when the the coercion is guaranteed not to throw, e.g. * if inside a typeof check like `if (typeof value === 'string')` * if coercing the result of a unary function like `+value` or `value++` * if coercing a variable named in a whitelist of numeric identifiers: `i`, `idx`, or `lineNumber`. The new `safe-string-coercion` internal ESLint rule enforces that these check functions are called when they are required. Only use these check functions in production code that will be bundled with user apps. For non-prod code (and for production error-handling code), use `String(value)` instead which may be a little slower but will never throw. * Add failing tests for string coercion Added failing tests to verify: * That input, select, and textarea elements with value and defaultValue set to Temporal-like objects which will throw when coerced to string using the `'' + value` pattern. * That text elements will throw for Temporal-like objects * That dangerouslySetInnerHTML will *not* throw for Temporal-like objects because this value is not cast to a string before passing to the DOM. * That keys that are Temporal-like objects will throw All tests above validate the friendly error messages thrown. * Use `String(value)` for coercion in non-prod files This commit switches non-production code from `'' + value` (which throws for Temporal objects and symbols) to instead use `String(value)` which won't throw for these or other future plus-phobic types. "Non-produciton code" includes anything not bundled into user apps: * Tests and test utilities. Note that I didn't change legacy React test fixtures because I assumed it was good for those files to act just like old React, including coercion behavior. * Build scripts * Dev tools package - In addition to switching to `String`, I also removed special-case code for coercing symbols which is now unnecessary. * Add DEV-only string coercion checks to prod files This commit adds DEV-only function calls to to check if string coercion using `'' + value` will throw, which it will if the value is a Temporal object or a symbol because those types can't be added with `+`. If it will throw, then in DEV these checks will show a console error to help the user undertsand what went wrong and how to fix the problem. After emitting the console error, the check functions will retry the coercion which will throw with a call stack that's easy (or at least easier!) to troubleshoot because the exception happens right after a long comment explaining the issue. So whether the user is in a debugger, looking at the browser console, or viewing the in-browser DEV call stack, it should be easy to understand and fix the problem. In most cases, the safe-string-coercion ESLint rule is smart enough to detect when a coercion is safe. But in rare cases (e.g. when a coercion is inside a ternary) this rule will have to be manually disabled. This commit also switches error-handling code to use `String(value)` for coercion, because it's bad to crash when you're trying to build an error message or a call stack! Because `String()` is usually disallowed by the `safe-string-coercion` ESLint rule in production code, the rule must be disabled when `String()` is used.
2021-09-27 10:05:07 -07:00
if (__DEV__) {
if (willCoercionThrow(value)) {
console.error(
'The provided `%s` CSS property is an unsupported type %s.' +
Fix: error messages (#27523) <!-- Thanks for submitting a pull request! We appreciate you spending the time to work on these changes. Please provide enough information so that others can review your pull request. The three fields below are mandatory. Before submitting a pull request, please make sure the following is done: 1. Fork [the repository](https://github.com/facebook/react) and create your branch from `main`. 2. Run `yarn` in the repository root. 3. If you've fixed a bug or added code that should be tested, add tests! 4. Ensure the test suite passes (`yarn test`). Tip: `yarn test --watch TestName` is helpful in development. 5. Run `yarn test --prod` to test in the production environment. It supports the same options as `yarn test`. 6. If you need a debugger, run `yarn test --debug --watch TestName`, open `chrome://inspect`, and press "Inspect". 7. Format your code with [prettier](https://github.com/prettier/prettier) (`yarn prettier`). 8. Make sure your code lints (`yarn lint`). Tip: `yarn linc` to only check changed files. 9. Run the [Flow](https://flowtype.org/) type checks (`yarn flow`). 10. If you haven't already, complete the CLA. Learn more about contributing: https://reactjs.org/docs/how-to-contribute.html --> ## Summary Changes `before before` to `before` in error messages. <!-- Explain the **motivation** for making this change. What existing problem does the pull request solve? --> I want to improve error logs ## How did you test this change? <!-- Demonstrate the code is solid. Example: The exact commands you ran and their output, screenshots / videos if the pull request changes the user interface. How exactly did you verify that your PR solves the issue you wanted to solve? If you leave this empty, your PR will very likely be closed. -->
2023-10-16 20:05:42 +06:00
' This value must be coerced to a string before using it here.',
Improve DEV errors if string coercion throws (Temporal.*, Symbol, etc.) (#22064) * Revise ESLint rules for string coercion Currently, react uses `'' + value` to coerce mixed values to strings. This code will throw for Temporal objects or symbols. To make string-coercion safer and to improve user-facing error messages, This commit adds a new ESLint rule called `safe-string-coercion`. This rule has two modes: a production mode and a non-production mode. * If the `isProductionUserAppCode` option is true, then `'' + value` coercions are allowed (because they're faster, although they may throw) and `String(value)` coercions are disallowed. Exception: when building error messages or running DEV-only code in prod files, `String()` should be used because it won't throw. * If the `isProductionUserAppCode` option is false, then `'' + value` coercions are disallowed (because they may throw, and in non-prod code it's not worth the risk) and `String(value)` are allowed. Production mode is used for all files which will be bundled with developers' userland apps. Non-prod mode is used for all other React code: tests, DEV blocks, devtools extension, etc. In production mode, in addiiton to flagging `String(value)` calls, the rule will also flag `'' + value` or `value + ''` coercions that may throw. The rule is smart enough to silence itself in the following "will never throw" cases: * When the coercion is wrapped in a `typeof` test that restricts to safe (non-symbol, non-object) types. Example: if (typeof value === 'string' || typeof value === 'number') { thisWontReport('' + value); } * When what's being coerced is a unary function result, because unary functions never return an object or a symbol. * When the coerced value is a commonly-used numeric identifier: `i`, `idx`, or `lineNumber`. * When the statement immeidately before the coercion is a DEV-only call to a function from shared/CheckStringCoercion.js. This call is a no-op in production, but in DEV it will show a console error explaining the problem, then will throw right after a long explanatory code comment so that debugger users will have an idea what's going on. The check function call must be in the following format: if (__DEV__) { checkXxxxxStringCoercion(value); }; Manually disabling the rule is usually not necessary because almost all prod use of the `'' + value` pattern falls into one of the categories above. But in the rare cases where the rule isn't smart enough to detect safe usage (e.g. when a coercion is inside a nested ternary operator), manually disabling the rule will be needed. The rule should also be manually disabled in prod error handling code where `String(value)` should be used for coercions, because it'd be bad to throw while building an error message or stack trace! The prod and non-prod modes have differentiated error messages to explain how to do a proper coercion in that mode. If a production check call is needed but is missing or incorrect (e.g. not in a DEV block or not immediately before the coercion), then a context-sensitive error message will be reported so that developers can figure out what's wrong and how to fix the problem. Because string coercions are now handled by the `safe-string-coercion` rule, the `no-primitive-constructor` rule no longer flags `String()` usage. It still flags `new String(value)` because that usage is almost always a bug. * Add DEV-only string coercion check functions This commit adds DEV-only functions to check whether coercing values to strings using the `'' + value` pattern will throw. If it will throw, these functions will: 1. Display a console error with a friendly error message describing the problem and the developer can fix it. 2. Perform the coercion, which will throw. Right before the line where the throwing happens, there's a long code comment that will help debugger users (or others looking at the exception call stack) figure out what happened and how to fix the problem. One of these check functions should be called before all string coercion of user-provided values, except when the the coercion is guaranteed not to throw, e.g. * if inside a typeof check like `if (typeof value === 'string')` * if coercing the result of a unary function like `+value` or `value++` * if coercing a variable named in a whitelist of numeric identifiers: `i`, `idx`, or `lineNumber`. The new `safe-string-coercion` internal ESLint rule enforces that these check functions are called when they are required. Only use these check functions in production code that will be bundled with user apps. For non-prod code (and for production error-handling code), use `String(value)` instead which may be a little slower but will never throw. * Add failing tests for string coercion Added failing tests to verify: * That input, select, and textarea elements with value and defaultValue set to Temporal-like objects which will throw when coerced to string using the `'' + value` pattern. * That text elements will throw for Temporal-like objects * That dangerouslySetInnerHTML will *not* throw for Temporal-like objects because this value is not cast to a string before passing to the DOM. * That keys that are Temporal-like objects will throw All tests above validate the friendly error messages thrown. * Use `String(value)` for coercion in non-prod files This commit switches non-production code from `'' + value` (which throws for Temporal objects and symbols) to instead use `String(value)` which won't throw for these or other future plus-phobic types. "Non-produciton code" includes anything not bundled into user apps: * Tests and test utilities. Note that I didn't change legacy React test fixtures because I assumed it was good for those files to act just like old React, including coercion behavior. * Build scripts * Dev tools package - In addition to switching to `String`, I also removed special-case code for coercing symbols which is now unnecessary. * Add DEV-only string coercion checks to prod files This commit adds DEV-only function calls to to check if string coercion using `'' + value` will throw, which it will if the value is a Temporal object or a symbol because those types can't be added with `+`. If it will throw, then in DEV these checks will show a console error to help the user undertsand what went wrong and how to fix the problem. After emitting the console error, the check functions will retry the coercion which will throw with a call stack that's easy (or at least easier!) to troubleshoot because the exception happens right after a long comment explaining the issue. So whether the user is in a debugger, looking at the browser console, or viewing the in-browser DEV call stack, it should be easy to understand and fix the problem. In most cases, the safe-string-coercion ESLint rule is smart enough to detect when a coercion is safe. But in rare cases (e.g. when a coercion is inside a ternary) this rule will have to be manually disabled. This commit also switches error-handling code to use `String(value)` for coercion, because it's bad to crash when you're trying to build an error message or a call stack! Because `String()` is usually disallowed by the `safe-string-coercion` ESLint rule in production code, the rule must be disabled when `String()` is used.
2021-09-27 10:05:07 -07:00
propName,
typeName(value),
);
return testStringCoercion(value); // throw (to help callers find troubleshooting comments)
}
}
}
2022-09-13 17:57:38 -04:00
export function checkHtmlStringCoercion(value: mixed): void | string {
Improve DEV errors if string coercion throws (Temporal.*, Symbol, etc.) (#22064) * Revise ESLint rules for string coercion Currently, react uses `'' + value` to coerce mixed values to strings. This code will throw for Temporal objects or symbols. To make string-coercion safer and to improve user-facing error messages, This commit adds a new ESLint rule called `safe-string-coercion`. This rule has two modes: a production mode and a non-production mode. * If the `isProductionUserAppCode` option is true, then `'' + value` coercions are allowed (because they're faster, although they may throw) and `String(value)` coercions are disallowed. Exception: when building error messages or running DEV-only code in prod files, `String()` should be used because it won't throw. * If the `isProductionUserAppCode` option is false, then `'' + value` coercions are disallowed (because they may throw, and in non-prod code it's not worth the risk) and `String(value)` are allowed. Production mode is used for all files which will be bundled with developers' userland apps. Non-prod mode is used for all other React code: tests, DEV blocks, devtools extension, etc. In production mode, in addiiton to flagging `String(value)` calls, the rule will also flag `'' + value` or `value + ''` coercions that may throw. The rule is smart enough to silence itself in the following "will never throw" cases: * When the coercion is wrapped in a `typeof` test that restricts to safe (non-symbol, non-object) types. Example: if (typeof value === 'string' || typeof value === 'number') { thisWontReport('' + value); } * When what's being coerced is a unary function result, because unary functions never return an object or a symbol. * When the coerced value is a commonly-used numeric identifier: `i`, `idx`, or `lineNumber`. * When the statement immeidately before the coercion is a DEV-only call to a function from shared/CheckStringCoercion.js. This call is a no-op in production, but in DEV it will show a console error explaining the problem, then will throw right after a long explanatory code comment so that debugger users will have an idea what's going on. The check function call must be in the following format: if (__DEV__) { checkXxxxxStringCoercion(value); }; Manually disabling the rule is usually not necessary because almost all prod use of the `'' + value` pattern falls into one of the categories above. But in the rare cases where the rule isn't smart enough to detect safe usage (e.g. when a coercion is inside a nested ternary operator), manually disabling the rule will be needed. The rule should also be manually disabled in prod error handling code where `String(value)` should be used for coercions, because it'd be bad to throw while building an error message or stack trace! The prod and non-prod modes have differentiated error messages to explain how to do a proper coercion in that mode. If a production check call is needed but is missing or incorrect (e.g. not in a DEV block or not immediately before the coercion), then a context-sensitive error message will be reported so that developers can figure out what's wrong and how to fix the problem. Because string coercions are now handled by the `safe-string-coercion` rule, the `no-primitive-constructor` rule no longer flags `String()` usage. It still flags `new String(value)` because that usage is almost always a bug. * Add DEV-only string coercion check functions This commit adds DEV-only functions to check whether coercing values to strings using the `'' + value` pattern will throw. If it will throw, these functions will: 1. Display a console error with a friendly error message describing the problem and the developer can fix it. 2. Perform the coercion, which will throw. Right before the line where the throwing happens, there's a long code comment that will help debugger users (or others looking at the exception call stack) figure out what happened and how to fix the problem. One of these check functions should be called before all string coercion of user-provided values, except when the the coercion is guaranteed not to throw, e.g. * if inside a typeof check like `if (typeof value === 'string')` * if coercing the result of a unary function like `+value` or `value++` * if coercing a variable named in a whitelist of numeric identifiers: `i`, `idx`, or `lineNumber`. The new `safe-string-coercion` internal ESLint rule enforces that these check functions are called when they are required. Only use these check functions in production code that will be bundled with user apps. For non-prod code (and for production error-handling code), use `String(value)` instead which may be a little slower but will never throw. * Add failing tests for string coercion Added failing tests to verify: * That input, select, and textarea elements with value and defaultValue set to Temporal-like objects which will throw when coerced to string using the `'' + value` pattern. * That text elements will throw for Temporal-like objects * That dangerouslySetInnerHTML will *not* throw for Temporal-like objects because this value is not cast to a string before passing to the DOM. * That keys that are Temporal-like objects will throw All tests above validate the friendly error messages thrown. * Use `String(value)` for coercion in non-prod files This commit switches non-production code from `'' + value` (which throws for Temporal objects and symbols) to instead use `String(value)` which won't throw for these or other future plus-phobic types. "Non-produciton code" includes anything not bundled into user apps: * Tests and test utilities. Note that I didn't change legacy React test fixtures because I assumed it was good for those files to act just like old React, including coercion behavior. * Build scripts * Dev tools package - In addition to switching to `String`, I also removed special-case code for coercing symbols which is now unnecessary. * Add DEV-only string coercion checks to prod files This commit adds DEV-only function calls to to check if string coercion using `'' + value` will throw, which it will if the value is a Temporal object or a symbol because those types can't be added with `+`. If it will throw, then in DEV these checks will show a console error to help the user undertsand what went wrong and how to fix the problem. After emitting the console error, the check functions will retry the coercion which will throw with a call stack that's easy (or at least easier!) to troubleshoot because the exception happens right after a long comment explaining the issue. So whether the user is in a debugger, looking at the browser console, or viewing the in-browser DEV call stack, it should be easy to understand and fix the problem. In most cases, the safe-string-coercion ESLint rule is smart enough to detect when a coercion is safe. But in rare cases (e.g. when a coercion is inside a ternary) this rule will have to be manually disabled. This commit also switches error-handling code to use `String(value)` for coercion, because it's bad to crash when you're trying to build an error message or a call stack! Because `String()` is usually disallowed by the `safe-string-coercion` ESLint rule in production code, the rule must be disabled when `String()` is used.
2021-09-27 10:05:07 -07:00
if (__DEV__) {
if (willCoercionThrow(value)) {
console.error(
'The provided HTML markup uses a value of unsupported type %s.' +
Fix: error messages (#27523) <!-- Thanks for submitting a pull request! We appreciate you spending the time to work on these changes. Please provide enough information so that others can review your pull request. The three fields below are mandatory. Before submitting a pull request, please make sure the following is done: 1. Fork [the repository](https://github.com/facebook/react) and create your branch from `main`. 2. Run `yarn` in the repository root. 3. If you've fixed a bug or added code that should be tested, add tests! 4. Ensure the test suite passes (`yarn test`). Tip: `yarn test --watch TestName` is helpful in development. 5. Run `yarn test --prod` to test in the production environment. It supports the same options as `yarn test`. 6. If you need a debugger, run `yarn test --debug --watch TestName`, open `chrome://inspect`, and press "Inspect". 7. Format your code with [prettier](https://github.com/prettier/prettier) (`yarn prettier`). 8. Make sure your code lints (`yarn lint`). Tip: `yarn linc` to only check changed files. 9. Run the [Flow](https://flowtype.org/) type checks (`yarn flow`). 10. If you haven't already, complete the CLA. Learn more about contributing: https://reactjs.org/docs/how-to-contribute.html --> ## Summary Changes `before before` to `before` in error messages. <!-- Explain the **motivation** for making this change. What existing problem does the pull request solve? --> I want to improve error logs ## How did you test this change? <!-- Demonstrate the code is solid. Example: The exact commands you ran and their output, screenshots / videos if the pull request changes the user interface. How exactly did you verify that your PR solves the issue you wanted to solve? If you leave this empty, your PR will very likely be closed. -->
2023-10-16 20:05:42 +06:00
' This value must be coerced to a string before using it here.',
Improve DEV errors if string coercion throws (Temporal.*, Symbol, etc.) (#22064) * Revise ESLint rules for string coercion Currently, react uses `'' + value` to coerce mixed values to strings. This code will throw for Temporal objects or symbols. To make string-coercion safer and to improve user-facing error messages, This commit adds a new ESLint rule called `safe-string-coercion`. This rule has two modes: a production mode and a non-production mode. * If the `isProductionUserAppCode` option is true, then `'' + value` coercions are allowed (because they're faster, although they may throw) and `String(value)` coercions are disallowed. Exception: when building error messages or running DEV-only code in prod files, `String()` should be used because it won't throw. * If the `isProductionUserAppCode` option is false, then `'' + value` coercions are disallowed (because they may throw, and in non-prod code it's not worth the risk) and `String(value)` are allowed. Production mode is used for all files which will be bundled with developers' userland apps. Non-prod mode is used for all other React code: tests, DEV blocks, devtools extension, etc. In production mode, in addiiton to flagging `String(value)` calls, the rule will also flag `'' + value` or `value + ''` coercions that may throw. The rule is smart enough to silence itself in the following "will never throw" cases: * When the coercion is wrapped in a `typeof` test that restricts to safe (non-symbol, non-object) types. Example: if (typeof value === 'string' || typeof value === 'number') { thisWontReport('' + value); } * When what's being coerced is a unary function result, because unary functions never return an object or a symbol. * When the coerced value is a commonly-used numeric identifier: `i`, `idx`, or `lineNumber`. * When the statement immeidately before the coercion is a DEV-only call to a function from shared/CheckStringCoercion.js. This call is a no-op in production, but in DEV it will show a console error explaining the problem, then will throw right after a long explanatory code comment so that debugger users will have an idea what's going on. The check function call must be in the following format: if (__DEV__) { checkXxxxxStringCoercion(value); }; Manually disabling the rule is usually not necessary because almost all prod use of the `'' + value` pattern falls into one of the categories above. But in the rare cases where the rule isn't smart enough to detect safe usage (e.g. when a coercion is inside a nested ternary operator), manually disabling the rule will be needed. The rule should also be manually disabled in prod error handling code where `String(value)` should be used for coercions, because it'd be bad to throw while building an error message or stack trace! The prod and non-prod modes have differentiated error messages to explain how to do a proper coercion in that mode. If a production check call is needed but is missing or incorrect (e.g. not in a DEV block or not immediately before the coercion), then a context-sensitive error message will be reported so that developers can figure out what's wrong and how to fix the problem. Because string coercions are now handled by the `safe-string-coercion` rule, the `no-primitive-constructor` rule no longer flags `String()` usage. It still flags `new String(value)` because that usage is almost always a bug. * Add DEV-only string coercion check functions This commit adds DEV-only functions to check whether coercing values to strings using the `'' + value` pattern will throw. If it will throw, these functions will: 1. Display a console error with a friendly error message describing the problem and the developer can fix it. 2. Perform the coercion, which will throw. Right before the line where the throwing happens, there's a long code comment that will help debugger users (or others looking at the exception call stack) figure out what happened and how to fix the problem. One of these check functions should be called before all string coercion of user-provided values, except when the the coercion is guaranteed not to throw, e.g. * if inside a typeof check like `if (typeof value === 'string')` * if coercing the result of a unary function like `+value` or `value++` * if coercing a variable named in a whitelist of numeric identifiers: `i`, `idx`, or `lineNumber`. The new `safe-string-coercion` internal ESLint rule enforces that these check functions are called when they are required. Only use these check functions in production code that will be bundled with user apps. For non-prod code (and for production error-handling code), use `String(value)` instead which may be a little slower but will never throw. * Add failing tests for string coercion Added failing tests to verify: * That input, select, and textarea elements with value and defaultValue set to Temporal-like objects which will throw when coerced to string using the `'' + value` pattern. * That text elements will throw for Temporal-like objects * That dangerouslySetInnerHTML will *not* throw for Temporal-like objects because this value is not cast to a string before passing to the DOM. * That keys that are Temporal-like objects will throw All tests above validate the friendly error messages thrown. * Use `String(value)` for coercion in non-prod files This commit switches non-production code from `'' + value` (which throws for Temporal objects and symbols) to instead use `String(value)` which won't throw for these or other future plus-phobic types. "Non-produciton code" includes anything not bundled into user apps: * Tests and test utilities. Note that I didn't change legacy React test fixtures because I assumed it was good for those files to act just like old React, including coercion behavior. * Build scripts * Dev tools package - In addition to switching to `String`, I also removed special-case code for coercing symbols which is now unnecessary. * Add DEV-only string coercion checks to prod files This commit adds DEV-only function calls to to check if string coercion using `'' + value` will throw, which it will if the value is a Temporal object or a symbol because those types can't be added with `+`. If it will throw, then in DEV these checks will show a console error to help the user undertsand what went wrong and how to fix the problem. After emitting the console error, the check functions will retry the coercion which will throw with a call stack that's easy (or at least easier!) to troubleshoot because the exception happens right after a long comment explaining the issue. So whether the user is in a debugger, looking at the browser console, or viewing the in-browser DEV call stack, it should be easy to understand and fix the problem. In most cases, the safe-string-coercion ESLint rule is smart enough to detect when a coercion is safe. But in rare cases (e.g. when a coercion is inside a ternary) this rule will have to be manually disabled. This commit also switches error-handling code to use `String(value)` for coercion, because it's bad to crash when you're trying to build an error message or a call stack! Because `String()` is usually disallowed by the `safe-string-coercion` ESLint rule in production code, the rule must be disabled when `String()` is used.
2021-09-27 10:05:07 -07:00
typeName(value),
);
return testStringCoercion(value); // throw (to help callers find troubleshooting comments)
}
}
}
2022-09-13 17:57:38 -04:00
export function checkFormFieldValueStringCoercion(value: mixed): void | string {
Improve DEV errors if string coercion throws (Temporal.*, Symbol, etc.) (#22064) * Revise ESLint rules for string coercion Currently, react uses `'' + value` to coerce mixed values to strings. This code will throw for Temporal objects or symbols. To make string-coercion safer and to improve user-facing error messages, This commit adds a new ESLint rule called `safe-string-coercion`. This rule has two modes: a production mode and a non-production mode. * If the `isProductionUserAppCode` option is true, then `'' + value` coercions are allowed (because they're faster, although they may throw) and `String(value)` coercions are disallowed. Exception: when building error messages or running DEV-only code in prod files, `String()` should be used because it won't throw. * If the `isProductionUserAppCode` option is false, then `'' + value` coercions are disallowed (because they may throw, and in non-prod code it's not worth the risk) and `String(value)` are allowed. Production mode is used for all files which will be bundled with developers' userland apps. Non-prod mode is used for all other React code: tests, DEV blocks, devtools extension, etc. In production mode, in addiiton to flagging `String(value)` calls, the rule will also flag `'' + value` or `value + ''` coercions that may throw. The rule is smart enough to silence itself in the following "will never throw" cases: * When the coercion is wrapped in a `typeof` test that restricts to safe (non-symbol, non-object) types. Example: if (typeof value === 'string' || typeof value === 'number') { thisWontReport('' + value); } * When what's being coerced is a unary function result, because unary functions never return an object or a symbol. * When the coerced value is a commonly-used numeric identifier: `i`, `idx`, or `lineNumber`. * When the statement immeidately before the coercion is a DEV-only call to a function from shared/CheckStringCoercion.js. This call is a no-op in production, but in DEV it will show a console error explaining the problem, then will throw right after a long explanatory code comment so that debugger users will have an idea what's going on. The check function call must be in the following format: if (__DEV__) { checkXxxxxStringCoercion(value); }; Manually disabling the rule is usually not necessary because almost all prod use of the `'' + value` pattern falls into one of the categories above. But in the rare cases where the rule isn't smart enough to detect safe usage (e.g. when a coercion is inside a nested ternary operator), manually disabling the rule will be needed. The rule should also be manually disabled in prod error handling code where `String(value)` should be used for coercions, because it'd be bad to throw while building an error message or stack trace! The prod and non-prod modes have differentiated error messages to explain how to do a proper coercion in that mode. If a production check call is needed but is missing or incorrect (e.g. not in a DEV block or not immediately before the coercion), then a context-sensitive error message will be reported so that developers can figure out what's wrong and how to fix the problem. Because string coercions are now handled by the `safe-string-coercion` rule, the `no-primitive-constructor` rule no longer flags `String()` usage. It still flags `new String(value)` because that usage is almost always a bug. * Add DEV-only string coercion check functions This commit adds DEV-only functions to check whether coercing values to strings using the `'' + value` pattern will throw. If it will throw, these functions will: 1. Display a console error with a friendly error message describing the problem and the developer can fix it. 2. Perform the coercion, which will throw. Right before the line where the throwing happens, there's a long code comment that will help debugger users (or others looking at the exception call stack) figure out what happened and how to fix the problem. One of these check functions should be called before all string coercion of user-provided values, except when the the coercion is guaranteed not to throw, e.g. * if inside a typeof check like `if (typeof value === 'string')` * if coercing the result of a unary function like `+value` or `value++` * if coercing a variable named in a whitelist of numeric identifiers: `i`, `idx`, or `lineNumber`. The new `safe-string-coercion` internal ESLint rule enforces that these check functions are called when they are required. Only use these check functions in production code that will be bundled with user apps. For non-prod code (and for production error-handling code), use `String(value)` instead which may be a little slower but will never throw. * Add failing tests for string coercion Added failing tests to verify: * That input, select, and textarea elements with value and defaultValue set to Temporal-like objects which will throw when coerced to string using the `'' + value` pattern. * That text elements will throw for Temporal-like objects * That dangerouslySetInnerHTML will *not* throw for Temporal-like objects because this value is not cast to a string before passing to the DOM. * That keys that are Temporal-like objects will throw All tests above validate the friendly error messages thrown. * Use `String(value)` for coercion in non-prod files This commit switches non-production code from `'' + value` (which throws for Temporal objects and symbols) to instead use `String(value)` which won't throw for these or other future plus-phobic types. "Non-produciton code" includes anything not bundled into user apps: * Tests and test utilities. Note that I didn't change legacy React test fixtures because I assumed it was good for those files to act just like old React, including coercion behavior. * Build scripts * Dev tools package - In addition to switching to `String`, I also removed special-case code for coercing symbols which is now unnecessary. * Add DEV-only string coercion checks to prod files This commit adds DEV-only function calls to to check if string coercion using `'' + value` will throw, which it will if the value is a Temporal object or a symbol because those types can't be added with `+`. If it will throw, then in DEV these checks will show a console error to help the user undertsand what went wrong and how to fix the problem. After emitting the console error, the check functions will retry the coercion which will throw with a call stack that's easy (or at least easier!) to troubleshoot because the exception happens right after a long comment explaining the issue. So whether the user is in a debugger, looking at the browser console, or viewing the in-browser DEV call stack, it should be easy to understand and fix the problem. In most cases, the safe-string-coercion ESLint rule is smart enough to detect when a coercion is safe. But in rare cases (e.g. when a coercion is inside a ternary) this rule will have to be manually disabled. This commit also switches error-handling code to use `String(value)` for coercion, because it's bad to crash when you're trying to build an error message or a call stack! Because `String()` is usually disallowed by the `safe-string-coercion` ESLint rule in production code, the rule must be disabled when `String()` is used.
2021-09-27 10:05:07 -07:00
if (__DEV__) {
if (willCoercionThrow(value)) {
console.error(
'Form field values (value, checked, defaultValue, or defaultChecked props)' +
' must be strings, not %s.' +
Fix: error messages (#27523) <!-- Thanks for submitting a pull request! We appreciate you spending the time to work on these changes. Please provide enough information so that others can review your pull request. The three fields below are mandatory. Before submitting a pull request, please make sure the following is done: 1. Fork [the repository](https://github.com/facebook/react) and create your branch from `main`. 2. Run `yarn` in the repository root. 3. If you've fixed a bug or added code that should be tested, add tests! 4. Ensure the test suite passes (`yarn test`). Tip: `yarn test --watch TestName` is helpful in development. 5. Run `yarn test --prod` to test in the production environment. It supports the same options as `yarn test`. 6. If you need a debugger, run `yarn test --debug --watch TestName`, open `chrome://inspect`, and press "Inspect". 7. Format your code with [prettier](https://github.com/prettier/prettier) (`yarn prettier`). 8. Make sure your code lints (`yarn lint`). Tip: `yarn linc` to only check changed files. 9. Run the [Flow](https://flowtype.org/) type checks (`yarn flow`). 10. If you haven't already, complete the CLA. Learn more about contributing: https://reactjs.org/docs/how-to-contribute.html --> ## Summary Changes `before before` to `before` in error messages. <!-- Explain the **motivation** for making this change. What existing problem does the pull request solve? --> I want to improve error logs ## How did you test this change? <!-- Demonstrate the code is solid. Example: The exact commands you ran and their output, screenshots / videos if the pull request changes the user interface. How exactly did you verify that your PR solves the issue you wanted to solve? If you leave this empty, your PR will very likely be closed. -->
2023-10-16 20:05:42 +06:00
' This value must be coerced to a string before using it here.',
Improve DEV errors if string coercion throws (Temporal.*, Symbol, etc.) (#22064) * Revise ESLint rules for string coercion Currently, react uses `'' + value` to coerce mixed values to strings. This code will throw for Temporal objects or symbols. To make string-coercion safer and to improve user-facing error messages, This commit adds a new ESLint rule called `safe-string-coercion`. This rule has two modes: a production mode and a non-production mode. * If the `isProductionUserAppCode` option is true, then `'' + value` coercions are allowed (because they're faster, although they may throw) and `String(value)` coercions are disallowed. Exception: when building error messages or running DEV-only code in prod files, `String()` should be used because it won't throw. * If the `isProductionUserAppCode` option is false, then `'' + value` coercions are disallowed (because they may throw, and in non-prod code it's not worth the risk) and `String(value)` are allowed. Production mode is used for all files which will be bundled with developers' userland apps. Non-prod mode is used for all other React code: tests, DEV blocks, devtools extension, etc. In production mode, in addiiton to flagging `String(value)` calls, the rule will also flag `'' + value` or `value + ''` coercions that may throw. The rule is smart enough to silence itself in the following "will never throw" cases: * When the coercion is wrapped in a `typeof` test that restricts to safe (non-symbol, non-object) types. Example: if (typeof value === 'string' || typeof value === 'number') { thisWontReport('' + value); } * When what's being coerced is a unary function result, because unary functions never return an object or a symbol. * When the coerced value is a commonly-used numeric identifier: `i`, `idx`, or `lineNumber`. * When the statement immeidately before the coercion is a DEV-only call to a function from shared/CheckStringCoercion.js. This call is a no-op in production, but in DEV it will show a console error explaining the problem, then will throw right after a long explanatory code comment so that debugger users will have an idea what's going on. The check function call must be in the following format: if (__DEV__) { checkXxxxxStringCoercion(value); }; Manually disabling the rule is usually not necessary because almost all prod use of the `'' + value` pattern falls into one of the categories above. But in the rare cases where the rule isn't smart enough to detect safe usage (e.g. when a coercion is inside a nested ternary operator), manually disabling the rule will be needed. The rule should also be manually disabled in prod error handling code where `String(value)` should be used for coercions, because it'd be bad to throw while building an error message or stack trace! The prod and non-prod modes have differentiated error messages to explain how to do a proper coercion in that mode. If a production check call is needed but is missing or incorrect (e.g. not in a DEV block or not immediately before the coercion), then a context-sensitive error message will be reported so that developers can figure out what's wrong and how to fix the problem. Because string coercions are now handled by the `safe-string-coercion` rule, the `no-primitive-constructor` rule no longer flags `String()` usage. It still flags `new String(value)` because that usage is almost always a bug. * Add DEV-only string coercion check functions This commit adds DEV-only functions to check whether coercing values to strings using the `'' + value` pattern will throw. If it will throw, these functions will: 1. Display a console error with a friendly error message describing the problem and the developer can fix it. 2. Perform the coercion, which will throw. Right before the line where the throwing happens, there's a long code comment that will help debugger users (or others looking at the exception call stack) figure out what happened and how to fix the problem. One of these check functions should be called before all string coercion of user-provided values, except when the the coercion is guaranteed not to throw, e.g. * if inside a typeof check like `if (typeof value === 'string')` * if coercing the result of a unary function like `+value` or `value++` * if coercing a variable named in a whitelist of numeric identifiers: `i`, `idx`, or `lineNumber`. The new `safe-string-coercion` internal ESLint rule enforces that these check functions are called when they are required. Only use these check functions in production code that will be bundled with user apps. For non-prod code (and for production error-handling code), use `String(value)` instead which may be a little slower but will never throw. * Add failing tests for string coercion Added failing tests to verify: * That input, select, and textarea elements with value and defaultValue set to Temporal-like objects which will throw when coerced to string using the `'' + value` pattern. * That text elements will throw for Temporal-like objects * That dangerouslySetInnerHTML will *not* throw for Temporal-like objects because this value is not cast to a string before passing to the DOM. * That keys that are Temporal-like objects will throw All tests above validate the friendly error messages thrown. * Use `String(value)` for coercion in non-prod files This commit switches non-production code from `'' + value` (which throws for Temporal objects and symbols) to instead use `String(value)` which won't throw for these or other future plus-phobic types. "Non-produciton code" includes anything not bundled into user apps: * Tests and test utilities. Note that I didn't change legacy React test fixtures because I assumed it was good for those files to act just like old React, including coercion behavior. * Build scripts * Dev tools package - In addition to switching to `String`, I also removed special-case code for coercing symbols which is now unnecessary. * Add DEV-only string coercion checks to prod files This commit adds DEV-only function calls to to check if string coercion using `'' + value` will throw, which it will if the value is a Temporal object or a symbol because those types can't be added with `+`. If it will throw, then in DEV these checks will show a console error to help the user undertsand what went wrong and how to fix the problem. After emitting the console error, the check functions will retry the coercion which will throw with a call stack that's easy (or at least easier!) to troubleshoot because the exception happens right after a long comment explaining the issue. So whether the user is in a debugger, looking at the browser console, or viewing the in-browser DEV call stack, it should be easy to understand and fix the problem. In most cases, the safe-string-coercion ESLint rule is smart enough to detect when a coercion is safe. But in rare cases (e.g. when a coercion is inside a ternary) this rule will have to be manually disabled. This commit also switches error-handling code to use `String(value)` for coercion, because it's bad to crash when you're trying to build an error message or a call stack! Because `String()` is usually disallowed by the `safe-string-coercion` ESLint rule in production code, the rule must be disabled when `String()` is used.
2021-09-27 10:05:07 -07:00
typeName(value),
);
return testStringCoercion(value); // throw (to help callers find troubleshooting comments)
}
}
}