99

I am extending String prototype chain with a new method but when I try to use it it throws me an error: property 'padZero' does not exist on type 'string'. Could anyone solve this for me?

The code is below. You can also see the same error in Typescript Playground.

interface NumberConstructor {
    padZero(length: number);
}
interface StringConstructor {
    padZero(length: number): string;
}
String.padZero = (length: number) => {
    var s = this;
    while (s.length < length) {
      s = '0' + s;
    }
    return s;
};
Number.padZero = function (length) {
    return String(this).padZero(length);
}

6 Answers 6

149

This answer applies to TypeScript 1.8+. There are lots of other answers to this sort of question, but they all seem to cover older versions.

There are two parts to extending a prototype in TypeScript.

Part 1 - Declare

Declaring the new member so it can pass type-checking. You need to declare an interface with the same name as the constructor/class you want to modify and put it under the correct declared namespace/module. This is called scope augmentation.

Extending the modules in this way can only be done in a special declaration .d.ts files*.

//in a .d.ts file:
declare global {
    interface String {
        padZero(length : number) : string;
    }
}

Types in external modules have names that include quotation marks, such as "bluebird".

The module name for global types such as Array<T> and String is global, without any quotes. However, in many versions of TypeScript you can forego the module declaration completely and declare an interface directly, to have something like:

declare interface String {
        padZero(length : number) : string;
}

This is the case in some versions pre-1.8, and also some versions post-2.0, such as the most recent version, 2.5.

Note that you cannot have anything except declare statements in the .d.ts file, otherwise it won't work.

These declarations are added to the ambient scope of your package, so they will apply in all TypeScript files even if you never import or ///<reference the file directly. However, you still need to import the implementation you write in the 2nd part, and if you forget to do this, you'll run into runtime errors.

* Technically you can get past this restriction and put declarations in regular .ts files, but this results in some finicky behavior by the compiler, and it's not recommended.

Part 2 - Implement

Part 2 is actually implementing the member and adding it to the object it should exist on like you would do in JavaScript.

String.prototype.padZero = function (this : string, length: number) {
    var s = this;
    while (s.length < length) {
      s = '0' + s;
    }
    return s;
};

Note a few things:

  1. String.prototype instead of just String, which is the String constructor, rather than its prototype.
  2. I use an explicit function instead of an arrow function, because a function will correctly receive the this parameter from where it's invoked. An arrow function will always use the same this as the place it's declared in. The one time we don't want that to happen is when extending a prototype.
  3. The explicit this, so the compiler knows the type of this we expect. This part is only available in TS 2.0+. Remove the this annotation if you're compiling for 1.8-. Without an annotation, this may be implicitly typed any.

Import the JavaScript

In TypeScript, the declare construct adds members to the ambient scope, which means they appear in all files. To make sure your implementation from part 2 is hooked up, import the file right at the start of your application.

You import the file as follows:

import '/path/to/implementation/file';

Without importing anything. You can also import something from the file, but you don't need to import the function you defined on the prototype.

13
  • I am using v2.1.0-dev.20161001. I tried this before, but it gives me the error above in declare global too. Also, I noticed a lot of answers from stackoverflow tell us to extend without prototype but the code generated doesn't use it... what is the catch here? Why is this so hard? Oct 6, 2016 at 0:53
  • 9
    also, if you try to put it in a .d.ts file in 2.5.1 you get the following error: Augmentations for the global scope can only be directly nested in external modules or ambient module declarations.
    – NSjonas
    Nov 7, 2017 at 3:26
  • 1
    @GregRos Yea, I had other stuff in my .d.ts file. I put it in the root types.d.ts and it seems to work without the declare. Thanks for clarifying the import.
    – NSjonas
    Nov 7, 2017 at 19:05
  • 1
    Hey this is a great answer, I was wondering if you know of any way to modify a global interface in a non-ambient context? Jul 4, 2018 at 19:42
  • 1
    @PatrickRoberts If the type declarations are inside a package, only an application that imports the package will be able to see them. Other than that, there isn't really a way to do it directly. But maybe there are alternatives. Open a question and explain what you mean.
    – GregRos
    Jul 9, 2018 at 14:50
85

If you want to augment the class, and not the instance, augment the constructor:

declare global {
  interface StringConstructor {
    padZero(s: string, length: number): string;
  }
}

String.padZero = (s: string, length: number) => {
  while (s.length < length) {
    s = '0' + s;
  }
  return s;
};

console.log(String.padZero('hi', 5))

export {}

*The empty export on the bottom is required if you declare global in .ts and do not export anything. This forces the file to be a module. *

If you want the function on the instance (aka prototype),

declare global {
  interface String {
    padZero(length: number): string;
  }
}

String.prototype.padZero = function (length: number) {
  let d = String(this)
  while (d.length < length) {
    d = '0' + d;
  }
  return d;
};

console.log('hi'.padZero(5))

export {}
9
  • I've done the second option, but for some reason at runtime I still get isNullOrEmpty is not a function.
    – Jacques
    Oct 27, 2020 at 15:58
  • 1
    Managed to figure out my mistake: I augmented the instance, which is kind of pointless when you're trying to test for Null OR Empty considering if the variable is null you'll end up with the exception I had. I changed it to augmenting the class which solved my issue. Thanks for the insight in your answer.
    – Jacques
    Oct 30, 2020 at 14:33
  • 5
    It is so sad that such a poorly designed language has gained so much popularity...
    – pishpish
    Jan 5, 2021 at 17:22
  • 6
    It is so sad that you didn't take the time to understand the design choices in the language.
    – Adam Arold
    Feb 10, 2021 at 8:58
  • 2
    In my experiments, putting declare global produces a compile error -- "Augmentations for the global scope can only be directly nested in external modules or ambient module declarations.ts". Is this still possible to enhance String, without having to import something every time?
    – GGizmos
    Jan 9, 2022 at 20:50
28

Here is a working example, a simple Camel Case string modifier.

in my index.d.ts for my project

interface String {
    toCamelCase(): string;
}

in my root .ts somewhere accessible

String.prototype.toCamelCase = function(): string { 
    return this.replace(/(?:^\w|[A-Z]|-|\b\w)/g, 
       (ltr, idx) => idx === 0
              ? ltr.toLowerCase()
              : ltr.toUpperCase()
    ).replace(/\s+|-/g, '');
};

That was all I needed to do to get it working in typescript ^2.0.10.

I use it like str.toCamelCase()

update

I realized I had this need too and this is what I had

interface String {
    leadingChars(chars: string|number, length: number): string;
}


String.prototype.leadingChars = function (chars: string|number, length: number): string  {
    return (chars.toString().repeat(length) + this).substr(-length);
};

so console.log('1214'.leadingChars('0', 10)); gets me 0000001214

0
26

For me the following worked in an Angular 6 project using TypeScript 2.8.4.

In the typings.d.ts file add:

interface Number {
  padZero(length: number);
}

interface String {
  padZero(length: number);
}

Note: No need to 'declare global'.

In a new file called string.extensions.ts add the following:

interface Number {
  padZero(length: number);
}

interface String {
  padZero(length: number);
}

String.prototype.padZero = function (length: number) {
  var s: string = String(this);
  while (s.length < length) {
    s = '0' + s;
  }
  return s;
}

Number.prototype.padZero = function (length: number) {
  return String(this).padZero(length)
}

To use it, first import it:

import '../../string.extensions';

Obviously your import statement should point to the correct path.
Inside your class's constructor or any method:

var num: number = 7;
var str: string = "7";
console.log("padded number: ", num.padZero(5));
console.log("padding string: ", str.padZero(5));
3
  • 1
    The only answer that works for Node.JS, TypeScript 3.3.1
    – Serg
    Mar 7, 2019 at 18:17
  • 2
    Can you kindly explain how to use typing.d.ts file?
    – RDV
    Mar 23, 2020 at 17:53
  • If your file uses imports your interface will implictly become module-scoped, so declare globalwill be required. Apr 1, 2020 at 10:47
8

2022 typescript 4.9

The solution is pretty simple but getting to that solution was not. Ignore the top voted answer; most of that isn't needed and doesn't work any more.

index.d.ts

Not needed!

strings.ts

interface String {
    toProperCase(): string;
    bool(): boolean;
}

String.prototype.toProperCase = function (): string {
    return this.toLowerCase().replace(/\b\w/g, (c: string) => c.toUpperCase())
}

String.prototype.bool = function (): boolean {
    return this.toLowerCase() == 'true';
};

using it

import './lib/strings'

var a = 'hello'
var b = a.toProperCase()

outputs:

Hello

5
  • 2
    If we have some import (let's say helper function for logging) on top of interface String in strings.ts. TypeScript gives the error Property 'x' does not exist on type 'String' . @toddmo do you have any clue how to resolve this?
    – JD Solanki
    Dec 1, 2022 at 12:04
  • @JDSolanki, your interface statements need to come first in the file for the compiler. Import statements can go lower and don't need to be on top. They only need to be above where they are used.
    – toddmo
    Dec 1, 2022 at 14:32
  • Worked fine for me.
    – bechir
    Feb 2 at 1:36
  • @toddmo Unfortunately with import in between interface and String.prototype it simply doesn't work for me, always property does not exist on type
    – zaitsman
    Aug 8 at 0:20
  • is this anywhere to guarantee these extension methods are always imported without needing an import line?
    – petrosmm
    Nov 3 at 17:58
1

A slight modification on toddmo's answer: I needed to declare the interface via declare global {}:

declare global {
    interface String {
        repeatAction: (action: (str: string) => string) => string;
    }
}

String.prototype.repeatAction = function(this: string, action: (str: string) => string) {
    let str = this;
    do {
        var tempStr = str;
        str = action(str);
    } while (tempStr != str);

    return str;
};
1
  • What is the difference between your answer and Steven's?
    – petrosmm
    Feb 14 at 15:25

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