no-reserved-keys: disallow unquoted reserved words as property names in object literals

This rule was removed in ESLint v1.0 and replaced by the quote-props rule.

ECMAScript 3 described as series of keywords and reserved words, such as if and public, that are used or intended to be used for a core language feature. The specification also indicated that these keywords and reserved words could not be used as object property names without being enclosed in strings. An error occurs in an ECMAScript 3 environment when you use a keyword or reserved word in an object literal. For example:

var values = {
    enum: ["red", "blue", "green"]  // throws an error in ECMAScript 3
}

In this code, enum is used as an object key and will throw an error in an ECMAScript 3 environment (such as Internet Explorer 8).

ECMAScript 5 loosened the restriction such that keywords and reserved words can be used as object keys without causing an error. However, any code that needs to run in ECMAScript 3 still needs to avoid using keywords and reserved words as keys.

Rule Details

This rule is aimed at eliminating the use of ECMAScript 3 keywords and reserved words as object literal keys. As such, it warns whenever an object key would throw an error in an ECMAScript 3 environment.

Examples of incorrect code for this rule:

var superman = {
    class: "Superhero",
    private: "Clark Kent"
};

var values = {
    enum: ["red", "blue", "green"]
};

Examples of correct code for this rule:

var superman = {
    "class": "Superhero",
    "private": "Clark Kent"
};

var values = {
    "enum": ["red", "blue", "green"]
};

When Not To Use It

If your code is only going to be executed in an ECMAScript 5 or higher environment, then you can safely leave this rule off.

Further Reading

Version

This rule was introduced in ESLint 0.8.0 and removed in 1.0.0.

Resources