Using this StackOverflow post as an example, I implemented a typed event system. Simplified, it looks like:
interface MyTypeMap {
FOO: string;
BAR: number;
}
I'm trying to create an event handler utilizing this map:
function handleEvent<T extends keyof MyTypeMap>(eventKey: T, eventMsg: MyTypeMap[T]) {
switch(eventKey) {
case('FOO'):
// TS believes that eventKey is of type 'never'
// TS believes that eventMsg is 'string|number'
break;
case('BAR'):
// TS believes that eventKey is of type 'never'
// TS believes that eventMsg is 'string|number'
break;
}
}
TypeScript behaves as expected when this function is called externally. For example:
// These work as desired
handleEvent('FOO', 'asdf');
handleEvent('BAR', 5);
// These throw compile errors as desired
handleEvent('FOO', 6);
handleEvent('BAR', 'i am not a string');
However, inside the function TypeScript is very confused. It seems to believe that none of case statements can ever get hit. Why is TypeScript unable to properly infer the types inside the function, though it's working fine with external calls?