| 12345678910111213141516171819202122232425262728293031323334353637383940414243444546474849505152535455 | /** * @fileoverview Rule to flag the use of empty character classes in regular expressions * @author Ian Christian Myers */"use strict";//------------------------------------------------------------------------------// Helpers//------------------------------------------------------------------------------/* * plain-English description of the following regexp: * 0. `^` fix the match at the beginning of the string * 1. `([^\\[]|\\.|\[([^\\\]]|\\.)+\])*`: regexp contents; 0 or more of the following * 1.0. `[^\\[]`: any character that's not a `\` or a `[` (anything but escape sequences and character classes) * 1.1. `\\.`: an escape sequence * 1.2. `\[([^\\\]]|\\.)+\]`: a character class that isn't empty * 2. `$`: fix the match at the end of the string */const regex = /^([^\\[]|\\.|\[([^\\\]]|\\.)+\])*$/u;//------------------------------------------------------------------------------// Rule Definition//------------------------------------------------------------------------------/** @type {import('../shared/types').Rule} */module.exports = {    meta: {        type: "problem",        docs: {            description: "Disallow empty character classes in regular expressions",            recommended: true,            url: "https://eslint.org/docs/rules/no-empty-character-class"        },        schema: [],        messages: {            unexpected: "Empty class."        }    },    create(context) {        return {            "Literal[regex]"(node) {                if (!regex.test(node.regex.pattern)) {                    context.report({ node, messageId: "unexpected" });                }            }        };    }};
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