vue/valid-define-emits Correctness 
What it does 
This rule checks whether defineEmits compiler macro is valid.
This rule reports defineEmits compiler macros in the following cases:
- defineEmitsis referencing locally declared variables.
- defineEmitshas both a literal type and an argument. e.g.- defineEmits<(e: 'foo')=>void>(['bar'])
- defineEmitshas been called multiple times.
- Custom events are defined in both defineEmitsandexport default {}.
- Custom events are not defined in either defineEmitsorexport default {}.
Why is this bad? 
Misusing defineEmits can lead to runtime errors, unclear component contracts, and lost type safety. Vue may still compile the code, but emitted events may break silently or be typed incorrectly.
Examples 
Examples of incorrect code for this rule:
vue
<script setup>
const def = { notify: null };
defineEmits(def);
</script>vue
<script setup lang="ts">
defineEmits<(e: "notify") => void>({ submit: null });
</script>vue
<script setup>
defineEmits({ notify: null });
defineEmits({ submit: null });
</script>vue
<script>
export default {
  emits: ["notify"],
};
</script>
<script setup>
defineEmits({ submit: null });
</script>Examples of correct code for this rule:
vue
<script setup>
defineEmits({ notify: null });
</script>vue
<script setup>
defineEmits(["notify"]);
</script>vue
<script setup lang="ts">
defineEmits<(e: "notify") => void>();
</script>vue
<script>
export default {
  emits: ["notify"],
};
</script>
<script setup>
defineEmits();
</script>How to use 
To enable this rule in the CLI or using the config file, you can use:
bash
oxlint --deny vue/valid-define-emits --vue-pluginjson
{
  "plugins": ["vue"],
  "rules": {
    "vue/valid-define-emits": "error"
  }
}