# Disallow the declaration of empty interfaces (no-empty-interface)

An empty interface is equivalent to its supertype. If the interface does not implement a supertype, then 
the interface is equivalent to an empty object (`{}`). In both cases it can be omitted.

## Rule Details

This rule aims to ensure that only meaningful interfaces are declared in the code.

The following patterns are considered warnings:
```ts
// an empty interface
interface Foo { }

// an interface with only one supertype (Bar === Foo)
interface Bar extends Foo { }

// an interface with an empty list of supertypes
interface Baz extends { }
```

The following patterns are not warnings:
```ts
// an interface with any number of members
interface Foo {
    name: string;
}

// same as above
interface Bar {
    age: number;
}

// an interface with more than one supertype
// in this case the interface can be used as a replacement of a union type.
interface Baz extends Foo, Bar { }
```

## When Not To Use It

If you don't care about having empty/meaningless interfaces, then you will not need this rule.

## Compatibility

* TSLint: [no-empty-interface](https://palantir.github.io/tslint/rules/no-empty-interface/)