A common idiom in JavaScript to differentiate between two possible types is to check for the presence in the object of a member of the desired type. Usually, to simplify the code, a boolean function is created to check the type. Typescript provides user defined type guard functions. These are just functions with a return type of ``++argumentName is SomeType++``. Such functions return ``++true++`` if the argument is of the specified type. One of the advantages of using such a function is that in a conditional block where the condition is a type guard, the compiler automatically performs the appropriate casts, so explicit casting becomes unnecessary. This rule raises an issue when a boolean function checking for the type of its only argument can be replaced with a user-defined type guard function. == Noncompliant Code Example ---- function isSomething(x: BaseType) : boolean { // Noncompliant return (x).foo !== undefined; } if (isSomething(v)) { (v).foo(); } ---- == Compliant Solution ---- function isSomething(x: BaseType) : x is Something { return (x).foo !== undefined; } if (isSomething(v)) { v.foo(); } ---- == See https://www.typescriptlang.org/docs/handbook/advanced-types.html[TypeScript advanced types]