397

I have some JavaScript code that uses objects as dictionaries; for example a 'person' object will hold a some personal details keyed off the email address.

var people = {<email> : <'some personal data'>};

adding   > "people[<email>] = <data>;" 
getting  > "var data = people[<email>];" 
deleting > "delete people[<email>];"

Is it possible to describe this in Typescript? or do I have to use an Array?

2

6 Answers 6

616

In newer versions of typescript you can use:

type Customers = Record<string, Customer>

In older versions you can use:

var map: { [email: string]: Customer; } = { };
map['[email protected]'] = new Customer(); // OK
map[14] = new Customer(); // Not OK, 14 is not a string
map['[email protected]'] = 'x'; // Not OK, 'x' is not a customer

You can also make an interface if you don't want to type that whole type annotation out every time:

interface StringToCustomerMap {
    [email: string]: Customer;
}

var map: StringToCustomerMap = { };
// Equivalent to first line of above
12
  • 2
    That's a useful way to make sure that the compiler restricts indexes to strings. Interesting. Doesn't look like you can specify the index type to be anything other than strings or integers, but that makes sense, since it just maps to the native JS object indexes.
    – Ken Smith
    Nov 29, 2012 at 18:03
  • 7
    You may know this, but there are also some potential gotchas with this approach, the big one being that there's no safe and easy way to iterate through all the members. This code, for instance, shows that map contains two members: (<any>Object.prototype).something = function(){}; class Customer{} var map: { [email: string]: Customer; } = { }; map['[email protected]'] = new Customer(); for (var i in map){ console.log(map[i]) }
    – Ken Smith
    Nov 30, 2012 at 17:21
  • 5
    how do you remove from it?
    – TDaver
    Apr 16, 2013 at 18:07
  • 26
    Another interesting approach is: interface MapStringTo<T> { [key:string]:T; } And the declare the variable like var map:MapStringTo<Customer> = {};
    – orellabac
    Aug 24, 2013 at 0:50
  • 1
    Take note that the index constraint no longer works. Read more. May 13, 2015 at 15:54
157

In addition to using an map-like object, there has been an actual Map object for some time now, which is available in TypeScript when compiling to ES6, or when using a polyfill with the ES6 type-definitions:

let people = new Map<string, Person>();

It supports the same functionality as Object, and more, with a slightly different syntax:

// Adding an item (a key-value pair):
people.set("John", { firstName: "John", lastName: "Doe" });

// Checking for the presence of a key:
people.has("John"); // true

// Retrieving a value by a key:
people.get("John").lastName; // "Doe"

// Deleting an item by a key:
people.delete("John");

This alone has several advantages over using a map-like object, such as:

  • Support for non-string based keys, e.g. numbers or objects, neither of which are supported by Object (no, Object does not support numbers, it converts them to strings)
  • Less room for errors when not using --noImplicitAny, as a Map always has a key type and a value type, whereas an object might not have an index-signature
  • The functionality of adding/removing items (key-value pairs) is optimized for the task, unlike creating properties on an Object

Additionally, a Map object provides a more powerful and elegant API for common tasks, most of which are not available through simple Objects without hacking together helper functions (although some of these require a full ES6 iterator/iterable polyfill for ES5 targets or below):

// Iterate over Map entries:
people.forEach((person, key) => ...);

// Clear the Map:
people.clear();

// Get Map size:
people.size;

// Extract keys into array (in insertion order):
let keys = Array.from(people.keys());

// Extract values into array (in insertion order):
let values = Array.from(people.values());
5
  • 3
    Thats awesome! But sadly it got wrong serialized using JSON.stringify(), so it can be used e.g. for socket.io :(
    – Lion
    May 25, 2018 at 17:23
  • @Lion -- well yes, Map serialization is rather funny. I, for one, perform a conversion to key-value-pair objects before serializing, and then back (e.g. object of { key: "John", value: { firstName: "John" } }).
    – John Weisz
    May 25, 2018 at 19:30
  • 5
    I made the mistake of using a map instead of a plain old object, and the serialization really got me. Steer clear in my opinion.
    – user378380
    Mar 20, 2019 at 22:44
  • 1
    This is beautiful. So glad you inspired me to finally dip into maps. This will pretty much replace my usual keymap/dictionary structures since it's so much easier to strongly type the keys. Aug 27, 2019 at 20:57
  • yeah maps aren't always the greatest choice, say for example you wanted to get a key but case insensitive. Not possible.
    – R-D
    Jun 11, 2021 at 15:23
83

You can use templated interfaces like this:

interface Map<T> {
    [K: string]: T;
}

let dict: Map<number> = {};
dict["one"] = 1;
2
  • 8
    Note that this collides with the es6 Map type. Better than the other answer because the index constraint is ignored. Jun 21, 2016 at 9:15
  • 2
    I use Dictionary instead of Map to avoid confusion, and you can use the literal object notation: let dict: Dictionary<number> = { "one": 1, "two": 2 };
    – PhiLho
    Jul 11, 2017 at 17:44
12

You can use Record for this:

https://www.typescriptlang.org/docs/handbook/utility-types.html#recordkt

Example (A mapping between AppointmentStatus enum and some meta data):

  const iconMapping: Record<AppointmentStatus, Icon> = {
    [AppointmentStatus.Failed]: { Name: 'calendar times', Color: 'red' },
    [AppointmentStatus.Canceled]: { Name: 'calendar times outline', Color: 'red' },
    [AppointmentStatus.Confirmed]: { Name: 'calendar check outline', Color: 'green' },
    [AppointmentStatus.Requested]: { Name: 'calendar alternate outline', Color: 'orange' },
    [AppointmentStatus.None]: { Name: 'calendar outline', Color: 'blue' }
  }

Now with interface as value:

interface Icon { Name: string Color: string }

Usage:

const icon: SemanticIcon = iconMapping[appointment.Status]

3
  • This is very useful. Would you use a string enum or a class/object for AppointmentStatus - or does it matter?
    – Drenai
    Oct 27, 2019 at 23:04
  • @Drenai doesn't matter, it's what you prefer
    – Nick N.
    Nov 21, 2019 at 13:41
  • I figured it out myself, to use enum in a record before I have found this answer. the main benefit is that it enforces exhaustiveness check. means none of the keys from enum can be skipped. none keys not included in enum can be added. this is a dictionary with run-type check Aug 25, 2020 at 17:53
11

You can also use the Record type in typescript :

export interface nameInterface { 
    propName : Record<string, otherComplexInterface> 
}
8

Lodash has a simple Dictionary implementation and has good TypeScript support

Install Lodash:

npm install lodash @types/lodash --save

Import and usage:

import { Dictionary } from "lodash";
let properties : Dictionary<string> = {
    "key": "value"        
}
console.log(properties["key"])

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