Edit: Re-written the question to be more clear and added some additional examples.
I want to create one big object (this is a requirement of the underlying system) and I'd like to model one relationship between two elements of that object as a TypeScript interface/type that is automatically inferred by the TypeScript engine.
My object looks like this:
{
selection: {
name: "",
email: ""
},
handler: (values) => {
// Do something
}
}
What I'd like is to define a type such that the keys defined in selection
object (name
and email
in this example, but could be many more) are inferred as keys on the values
object.
E.g.:
{
selection: {
name: "",
email: ""
},
handler: (values) => {
values.name // Valid
values.email // Valid
values.foobar // Not valid
}
}
// or
{
selection: {{
name: "",
email: ""
address: "",
role: ""
},
handler: (values) => {
values.name // Valid
values.email // Valid
values.address // Valid
values.role // Valid
values.foobar // Not valid
}
}
Using this type:
interface HandlerObject<TSelection extends { [key: string]: string }> {
selection: TSelection
handler?: (selection: { [key in keyof TSelection]: any }) => any
}
I am able to type the object as long as I explicitly set the generic TSelection
first:
interface Selection {
name: string
email: string
}
const obj: HandlerObject<Selection> = {
selection: {
name: "",
email: ""
},
handler: (values) => {
values.name // Valid
values.email // Valid
values.foobar // Not valid
}
}
To me, however, it seems like TypeScript should be able to infer TSelection
itself based on what I type in the selection
property. Though I may be wrong of course. I'm theorizing that I should be able to do this:
const obj: InferredHandlerObject = {
selection: {
name: "",
email: ""
},
handler: (values) => {
values.name // Valid
values.email // Valid
values.foobar // Not valid
}
}
and still get proper type inference for name
and email
in some way. Is this possible or am I required to type out the selection explicitly?
Original question
// SomeType is just a placeholder. This is where I want the proper type to go.
const obj: AType = {
selection: {
name: "something", // The value here is irrelevant. The key is important
email: "something elese" // The value here is irrelevant. The key is important
},
handler: (selection) => {
selection.name // selection only contains keys from the selection object defined above
}
}
Is there a way to type this using Typescript in such a way that the selection argument
always contains the same keys as those defined in the selection
property? The values of the keys in the argument should also not be the same.
I've tried this:
interface HandlerObject<TSelection extends { [key: string]: string }> {
selection: TSelection
handler?: (selection: { [key in keyof TSelection]: any }) => any
}
but it requires me to specify the generic explicitly.
I'd like it to infer TSelection
based on the selection
property automatically.
SomeType
?obj
, you can't refer to it in the object initializer to get the type information. You get "'obj' implicitly has type 'any' because it does not have a type annotation and is referenced directly or indirectly in its own initializer.(7022)"