2

I've got a QueryBuilder and would like to present all its methods as static member on the Model class.

Apparently, It's valid Javascript code. However, how could I let typescript understand the existence of those static methods on Model?

function queryable (target: any) {
  for (const prop in target.prototype.builder) {
    if (prop === 'constructor' || target.prototype.hasOwnProperty(prop)) {
      continue;
    }
    target[prop] = (...args: any[]): any => {
      return target.prototype.builder[prop](...args);
    };
  }
}

class QueryBuilder {
  where(prop: string, value: string) {
    console.log(prop, value);
    console.log("I've presented on model class as static method.");
  }
  // ...
}

@queryable
class Model {
  get builder () {
    return new QueryBuilder();
  }
  // ...
}


// calling static where
Model.where('color', 'red');

Property 'where' does not exist on type 'typeof Model'.

See in Typescript Playground

2 Answers 2

2

The issue you should keep an eye on is TypeScript#4881 but as of currently (3.5.1) a decorator can't change the type of the class it is decorating.

That being said you can still define the decorator in the same fashion but call it explicitly rather than as a decorator, as many typescript projects using redux's popular connect decorator have to do.

class _Model {
  get builder () {
    return new QueryBuilder();
  }

  // ...
}
const Model = queryable(_Model);

or if it is the main export of a module you can get away with one name:

class Model {
  get builder () {
    return new QueryBuilder();
  }

  // ...
}
export default queryable(Model);

Then the trick is to better annotate the decorator to teach typescript all the additions queryable has made to it's target:

function queryable<T extends new (...args: any[]) => {builder: any}>(target: T): InstanceType<T>['builder'] & (typeof target) {
  for (const prop in target.prototype.builder) {
    if (prop === 'constructor' || target.prototype.hasOwnProperty(prop)) {
      continue;
    }
    (target as any)[prop] = (...args: any[]): any => {
      return target.prototype.builder[prop](...args);
    };
  }
  return target as any
}

Playground link

3
  • Good point. I don't mind explicit implementation. However, in reality, Model class also accepts a type i.e. class Model<T> extends ..., I was wondering how this situation could be resolved in your example where queryable(Model) is being called? Jul 28, 2019 at 12:08
  • That should be no problem. The type of the parameter is simply a class with a builder property. The return type says it is the same class plus the builder fields. Jul 28, 2019 at 22:31
  • +1. So, addressing my original question here, to help Typescript understand dynamically added static members would be a connector like const connect = <T extends new () => {builder: any}>(target: T): InstanceType<T>['builder'] & (typeof target) => target; and then const Model = connect(OriginalModel); Aug 6, 2019 at 12:58
0

Since Typescript is a strong typing language it always checks if type usage matches type interface. This checking takes place during transpilation, when Typescript has no idea you're going to add a new method. Because you add it in run-time. The only way to call such a method is casting to something general like any:

(<any>Model).where('color', 'red');

It's like you're saying to Typescript that you're sure about method existence and transpiller shouldn't worry about it.

1
  • Thanks mate. That's a workaround to get rid of error but I'd rather not to cast but mutate the target. Jul 28, 2019 at 12:15

Your Answer

By clicking “Post Your Answer”, you agree to our terms of service and acknowledge you have read our privacy policy.

Not the answer you're looking for? Browse other questions tagged or ask your own question.