3

Always wondering about this. So want to get a definite answer and set it to stone :)

What I want to do is to let the compiler/language service/reader knows that T should be nothing, empty, nada. I want to know which one (void, never, undefined) is the right / best one to use.

// to indicate there should be no props available
class MyComponent extends React.Component<???, any> { ... }

// showing the Promise should resolve to nothing
function foo(): Promise<???> { ... }

( let me know if you can think of other cases you need to think about using void, never, or undefined in generics and I can add them to this list )

Related questions: What is the difference between never and void in typescript?

From the above link, and the answer from @mierion-hughes, never seems to be clear. So the remaining question is void vs undefined

7
  • I don't get what the problem is. I can declare Promise<void>, Promise<never> and Promise<undefined> without any issue. Are you asking which one to use?? A promise does not ever resolve to "nothing". If no specific value is provided, then it resolves to undefined, and this works with any of the 3 options above.
    – Louis
    Dec 24, 2016 at 19:35
  • 1
    Yes, I'm asking which one to use. Also, in the example above, the type system infer it to {} thus the error.
    – unional
    Dec 24, 2016 at 19:39
  • I'm running tsc 2.1.4 but I do not get the error you report getting. For this question to be up to the standards of this site, please post a minimal reproducible example. (No screenshots but actual code.) Make sure to read the documentation on MCVEs and follow the instructions there. My own tests show that any of void, never and undefined work so be aware that your question may still be opinion-based once you put an actual MCVE in it.
    – Louis
    Dec 24, 2016 at 19:47
  • I am also running 2.1.4. Updated the question with the code in screen shot
    – unional
    Dec 24, 2016 at 19:47
  • Don't post fragments of code. A minimal reproducible example is supposed to be complete so post a complete example and show the output of running tsc on it. Include your tsconfig.json. People reading your question need to be able to replicate exactly the behavior you get. Otherwise, what you get instead of an actual answer are comments and stuff like the "I don't think this is a good answer" post that you got.
    – Louis
    Dec 24, 2016 at 19:53

1 Answer 1

2

I don't think this is a good answer, but your question is a little vague anyway.

I think the closest you'll get is to make the constructor argument optional T and use never or void.

enter image description here

the problem here is that using void or never both end up as undefined on the argument type. So... you can still pass undefined, and I cannot see a way to stop that.

Taking it a little further: If you don't want the property added to the instance, then you would need to drop the public on the arg:

class Foo<T>{
  prop: T;
  constructor(prop?: T) {
    if (prop != undefined)
      this.prop = prop;
  }
}

let foo = new Foo<never>(undefined);

for (let key in foo) {
  console.log(key); //prints: nothing
}

console.log(foo);  //prints:  Foo {}
4
  • Thanks. For some reason, I couldn't see your answer until now. I checked a few times yesterday and only once I saw your answer popped up, but after that, it is gone (until now). The use case you show is interesting, I never thought of that before. Do you know of any actual use case for such usage? I can't think of any :).
    – unional
    Dec 24, 2016 at 19:12
  • Also, in this case, what is the difference between void and never?
    – unional
    Dec 24, 2016 at 19:16
  • I deleted it originally... I may do again now you'd updated your question. it allows you to specify functions/promise that never return vs returning nothing (void). Dec 24, 2016 at 19:21
  • I think it is good. I learn something new from it. Please keep it. :)
    – unional
    Dec 24, 2016 at 19:27

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