295

I'm using Chrome 70 and Chrome does add methods .flatMap, .flatten, .flat. So my code does run as expected. Unfortunately, TypeScript doesn't like it.

// data.flatMap lint error
export const transformData = (data: any[]) => data.flatMap(abc => [
   parentObj(abc),
   ...generateTasks(abc)
]);

The warning I got is TS2339: Property 'flatMap' does not exist on type 'any[]'.

I'm using Angular 6, which uses Typescript ~2.9.2, and I already include import 'core-js/es7/array'; in polyfills.ts.

My guess is that there is no typing for these methods, and I did try to npm run -dev @types/array.prototype.flatmap but still not solve.

0

7 Answers 7

563

You should add es2019 or es2019.array to your --lib setting for TypeScript to recognize array.flat() and flatMap().

Example:

{
  "compilerOptions": {
    "target": "es5",
    "lib": [
      "es2019"
    ]
  }
}

Previously this was available as part of esnext or esnext.array, but it's now officially part of ES2019.

17
  • 8
    Yup I reproduce this and it works. Here my compilerOptions in tsconfig.app.json "lib": [ "es2017", "dom", "esnext.array", ] Thank you sir
    – Azriz
    Dec 3, 2018 at 3:07
  • 9
    This did not fix it for me in my IDE, VSCode. Any tips?
    – timelfelt
    Apr 25, 2019 at 22:13
  • 15
    @timelf123 did you restart your IDE?
    – Highspeed
    May 20, 2019 at 22:18
  • 9
    Note: flatMap is now supported in node 11+ Oct 1, 2019 at 6:17
  • 5
    @maninak es2019.array is in most cases preferred as it explicitly specifies the features of the es2019 spec that are supported in the project which avoids accidentally using es2019 features not supported
    – CervEd
    Mar 19, 2020 at 12:17
39

If you're are in a lower version than es2019, you can implement a shim to provide similar functionality to .flat() and .flatMap() provided by later libraries.

To flat single level array

arr.reduce((acc, val) => acc.concat(val), []);

To flat multi level array

function flatDeep(arr, d = 1) {
   return d > 0 ? arr.reduce((acc, val) => acc.concat(Array.isArray(val) ? flatDeep(val, d - 1) : val), []) : arr.slice();
};

to know deeply you can also check below link

https://developer.mozilla.org/en-US/docs/Web/JavaScript/Reference/Global_Objects/Array/flat

3
  • 3
    Thanks for this snippet — it was helpful as I still couldn't use .flat() even with the Typescript fix in the accepted answer. Oct 7, 2020 at 19:39
  • This snippet helped as I still couldn't get .flat() to work after adding "lib": ["ES2019"], in tsconfig.json Apr 24, 2021 at 23:49
  • be careful with concat() since it's a copying method. Use push() instead which is a mutating method
    – netotz
    Dec 10, 2022 at 0:20
21

Aaron Beall's answer is excellent. It may be worth knowing that if "lib" is not specified in the tsConfig.JSON file a default list of libraries are injected. The default libraries injected are: ► For --target ES5: DOM,ES5,ScriptHost ► For --target ES6: DOM,ES6,DOM.Iterable,ScriptHost

In other words: We must specify those libs that were previously added automatically. (see: https://www.typescriptlang.org/docs/handbook/compiler-options.html for further info)

"compilerOptions": {

   "target": "es6",

   "lib": [ "es2019", "DOM", "ES6" ,"DOM.Iterable", "ScriptHost"],}
0
8

I tried most answers and they didn't work for me. IDE: VScode

but this did

npm i -D @types/node
4

You can extend the global array interface while you wait for stability, at which point it will be added to the default library.

interface Array<T> {
    flat(): Array<T>;
    flatMap(func: (x: T) => T): Array<T>;
}
0
3

As of angular 11 and thx to typescript 3.9 this is now the new config.

"compilerOptions": {
    "target": "es2018",
    "module": "es2020",
    "lib": ["es2020", "dom"],
}

Why es2020 instead of esnext?

In TypeScript 3.9, the behavior of the TypeScript compiler controlled by module is the same with both "esnext" and "es2020" values. This behavior can change in the future, because the "esnext" option could evolve in a backwards incompatible ways, resulting in build-time or run-time errors during a TypeScript update. As a result, code can become unstable. Using the "es2020" option mitigates this risk.

for further read

1

You can also add esnext to your --lib instead of 'es2019'

"compilerOptions": {
    "target": "es2015",
    "lib": ["dom", "esnext"]
}

It worked for me.

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