17

I need an interface for making some fields of other interface as required. For example: I have IUserInterface:

interface IUser {
  name: string;
  role?: string;
}

interface IUserFromDB {
  id: number;
  name: string;
  role: string;
}

When I create new user - role is optional. DB set default role and when I select user from DB - role must be in userObject. I can write Interfaces like I've written above, but in a real project this approach creates a lot of redundant code. So, I need some interface, that help me to get old interface and make some optional fields as required.

I want something like this:

interface IUser {
  name: string;
  role?: string;
}

type IUserFromDB = WithRequired<IUser, 'role'[|...]> & {
  id: number;
  ...;
};

Please help me to create this WithRequired type.

2

2 Answers 2

23

You can create a helper type and use it like this:

// Helper type
export type RequiredFields<T, K extends keyof T> = T & Required<Pick<T, K>>;


// Use
RequiredFields<IUser, 'role'>

For multiple fields you can use a union type:

RequiredFields<IUser, 'role' | 'someField'>
1
  • You can use it also for multiple fields with RequiredField<IUser, 'role' | 'someField'>, so I think more appropriate name for that type would be RequiredFields (plural)
    – Dor Meiri
    Oct 10, 2023 at 6:14
19

Keeping your IUser interface

Using Partial, Pick, and Required:

interface IUser {
    name: string;
    role?: string;
}

type IUserFromDB = Partial<IUser> & Required<Pick<IUser, 'name' | 'role'>> & {
    id: number;
    ...;
};

In this case the use of Partial is not required unless IUser grows. As it does not affect in run time, I suggest to keep it anyway :)

Alternative approach

With a common fully-required model and using Partial and Pick for any derived type:

interface IUserModel {
    name: string;
    role: string;
}

type IUser = Partial<IUserModel> & Pick<IUserModel, 'name'>; 

type IUserFromDB = Partial<IUserModel> & Pick<IUserModel, 'name' | 'role'> & {
    id: number;
    ...;
};

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.