2

After reading svelte tutorial I noticed that clickOutside function returns an object with a destroy method.

What would be the correct return type of a custom use directive?

export function clickOutside(node: HTMLElement): ??? { 
    // setup work goes here...

    return {
        destroy() {
            // ...cleanup goes here
        }
    };
}

2 Answers 2

4

It's an ActionReturn

export interface ActionReturn<Parameter = any> {
  update?: (parameter: Parameter) => void;
  destroy?: () => void;
}

Available from import type { ActionReturn } from "svelte/types/runtime/action";

But instead of the ActionReturn i'll suggest using the Action type:

import type { Action } from "svelte/types/runtime/action";

const clickOutside: Action<HTMLElement, undefined> = (node) => {
  // setup work goes here...
  return {
    destroy() {
      // ...cleanup goes here
    }
  };
};

Because that allows Typescript to verify that the type of the options parameter for the action and the update method are of the same type.

2
  • I just tried to import it and suddenly VSCode suggested me a SvelteActionReturnType type which is exactly the same type as you described. Thanks May 14, 2022 at 23:40
  • SvelteActionReturnType is from the svelte2tsx package installed inside VSCode, that might present issues when running tsc validation. But I did find that ActionReturn is exported via "svelte/types/runtime/action" (i'll update my answer)
    – Bob Fanger
    May 15, 2022 at 7:32
1

The import path has changed since 3.46.6.

  • 4.0.0: Stricter types for Action and ActionReturn (see PR for migration instructions) (#7442)
  • 3.46.6: Actually include action TypeScript interface in published package (#7407)
  • 3.46.5: Add TypeScript interfaces for typing actions (#6538)

It should now be imported from svelte/action. Reference v4 docs.

<script>
  /** @type {import('svelte/action').Action}  */
  function foo(node) {
    // the node has been mounted in the DOM

    return {
      destroy() {
        // the node has been removed from the DOM
      },
    };
  }
</script>

<div use:foo />

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