--- description: 'Enforce valid definition of `new` and `constructor`.' --- > 🛑 This file is source code, not the primary documentation location! 🛑 > > See **https://typescript-eslint.io/rules/no-misused-new** for documentation. JavaScript classes may define a `constructor` method that runs when a class instance is newly created. TypeScript allows interfaces that describe a static class object to define a `new()` method (though this is rarely used in real world code). Developers new to JavaScript classes and/or TypeScript interfaces may sometimes confuse when to use `constructor` or `new`. This rule reports when a class defines a method named `new` or an interface defines a method named `constructor`. ## Examples ### ❌ Incorrect ```ts declare class C { new(): C; } interface I { new (): I; constructor(): void; } ``` ### ✅ Correct ```ts declare class C { constructor(); } interface I { new (): C; } ``` ## When Not To Use It If you intentionally want a class with a `new` method, and you're confident nobody working in your code will mistake it with a constructor, you might not want this rule. You might consider using [ESLint disable comments](https://eslint.org/docs/latest/use/configure/rules#using-configuration-comments-1) for those specific situations instead of completely disabling this rule.