This rule prevents characters that you may have meant as JSX escape characters from being accidentally injected as a text node in JSX statements.
For example, if one were to misplace their closing >
in a tag:
<MyComponent
name="name"
type="string"
foo="bar"> {/* oops! */}
x="y">
Body Text
</MyComponent>
The body text of this would render as x="y"> Body Text
, which is probably not
what was intended. This rule requires that these special characters are
escaped if they appear in the body of a tag.
Another example is when one accidentally includes an extra closing brace.
<MyComponent>{'Text'}}</MyComponent>
The extra brace will be rendered, and the body text will be Text}
.
This rule will also check for "
and '
, which might be accidentally included
when the closing >
is in the wrong place.
<MyComponent
a="b"> {/* oops! */}
c="d"
Intended body text
</MyComponent>
The preferred way to include one of these characters is to use the HTML escape code.
>
can be replaced with>
"
can be replaced with"
,“
,"
or”
'
can be replaced with'
,‘
,'
or’
}
can be replaced with}
Alternatively, you can include the literal character inside a subexpression
(such as <div>{'>'}</div>
.
The characters <
and {
should also be escaped, but they are not checked by this
rule because it is a syntax error to include those tokens inside of a tag.
The following patterns are considered warnings:
<div> > </div>
The following patterns are not considered warnings:
<div> > </div>
<div> {'>'} </div>
...
"react/no-unescaped-entities": [<enabled>, { "forbid": Array<string> }]
...
Overwrite the default forbidden entities array ['>', '"', '\'', '}']
with your own:
"react/no-unescaped-entities": ["error", {"forbid": [">", "}"]}],