I'm doing a bit of refactoring and was wondering whether it's possible to declare and initialise a dictionary of factory functions, keyed on an enumerator, such that it can be used as a lookup for factory functions which can then be called? Or, alternatively, whether I'm going the wrong way about this and am missing a more elegant solution. I followed this answer to declare and initialise a typed dictionary but I'm unsure as to whether I've declared the signature correct or not, such that the key is a number and the value is a function. I've simplified my code into a very generic example - I'm aware it's rather contrived but the intent is much clearer this way.
// Types are enumerated as I have several different lists of types which I'd like to
// implement as an array of enumerators
enum ElementType {
TypeA,
TypeB,
TypeC
}
// Here, I'm trying to declare a dictionary where the key is a number and the value is a
// function
var ElementFactory: { [elementType: number]: () => {}; };
// Then I'm trying to declare these factory functions to return new objects
ElementFactory[ElementType.TypeA] = () => new ElementOfTypeA();
ElementFactory[ElementType.TypeB] = () => new ElementOfTypeB();
ElementFactory[ElementType.TypeC] = () => new ElementOfTypeC();
// And finally I'd like to be able to call this function like so such that they return
// instantiated objects as declared in the code block above
var a = ElementFactory[ElementType.TypeA]();
var b = ElementFactory[ElementType.TypeB]();
var c = ElementFactory[ElementType.TypeC]();
() => {}
says "this is a function that takes zero parameters and returns a{}
". You might want to change that return type to something more specific than{}
, but note that you can't specify different return types for individual indices.