| name | prefer-set-has |
| description | Prefer Set.has() over Array.includes() for constant allowlists/blocklists.
Read this when reviewing or writing membership checks in TypeScript files.
|
Prefer Set.has() over Array.includes()
When checking membership in a constant list of known values (allowlists, blocklists, enum-like sets), use a Set with .has() instead of an array with .includes().
const ALLOWED = ["a", "b", "c"];
if (ALLOWED.includes(value)) { … }
const ALLOWED = new Set(["a", "b", "c"]);
if (ALLOWED.has(value)) { … }
Why: Set.has() is O(1) vs .includes() O(n), communicates "membership test" intent more clearly, and avoids accidental mutation of the backing array.
When .includes() is fine: Searching within a dynamic or short-lived array (e.g. function parameters, user input) where creating a Set would add noise.