regexp/no-optional-assertion
💼 This rule is enabled in the following configs: 🟢 flat/recommended, 🔵 recommended.
disallow optional assertions
📖 Rule Details
Assertions that are quantified (directly or indirectly) can be considered optional if the quantifier has a minimum of zero.
A simple example is the following pattern: /a(?:$)*b/. The $ assertion will reject, but if that happens it will simply be ignored because of the * quantifier. The assertion is optional, serving no function whatsoever.
More generally, an assertion is optional, if there exists a parent quantifier with a minimum of zero such that all possible paths of the quantified element that contain the assertion do not consume characters.
Here's an example: a(?:foo|(?<!-)(?:-|\b))*b. The \b is optional. However, the lookbehind (?<!-) is not optional because the group (?:-|\b) right after it can consume a character.
Optional assertions don't affect the pattern in any way. They are essentially dead code.
🔧 Options
Nothing.
❤️ Compatibility
This rule was taken from eslint-plugin-clean-regex.
This rule is compatible with clean-regex/no-optional-assertion rule.
🚀 Version
This rule was introduced in eslint-plugin-regexp v0.9.0