662

TypeScript 3.0 introduces unknown type, according to their wiki:

unknown is now a reserved type name, as it is now a built-in type. Depending on your intended use of unknown, you may want to remove the declaration entirely (favoring the newly introduced unknown type), or rename it to something else.

What is difference between unknown and any? When should we use unknown over any?

3
  • 4
    Anything is assignable to unknown, but unknown isn't assignable to anything but itself sounds like rhyme
    – Naren
    Jul 10, 2022 at 19:45
  • 1
    unknown and any are 2 special types that can hold any value in typescript. However, Unknown is recommended over any because it offers type checking whenever we try to use the variable.
    – Amit kumar
    Jul 29, 2022 at 8:17
  • 1
    @Naren more like a deep poem :)
    – Robo Robok
    Nov 7, 2022 at 13:27

9 Answers 9

812

You can read more about unknown in the PR or the RC announcement, but the gist of it is:

[..] unknown which is the type-safe counterpart of any. Anything is assignable to unknown, but unknown isn't assignable to anything but itself and any without a type assertion or a control flow based narrowing. Likewise, no operations are permitted on an unknown without first asserting or narrowing to a more specific type.

A few examples:

let vAny: any = 10;          // We can assign anything to any
let vUnknown: unknown =  10; // We can assign anything to unknown just like any 


let s1: string = vAny;     // Any is assignable to anything 
let s2: string = vUnknown; // Invalid; we can't assign vUnknown to any other type (without an explicit assertion)

vAny.method();     // Ok; anything goes with any
vUnknown.method(); // Not ok; we don't know anything about this variable

The suggested usage is:

There are often times where we want to describe the least-capable type in TypeScript. This is useful for APIs that want to signal “this can be any value, so you must perform some type of checking before you use it”. This forces users to safely introspect returned values.

7
  • 206
    Anyone coming from C# background, any is like dynamic and unknown is like object. I like unknown as it is just more type safe. Confusing names though.
    – nawfal
    Mar 12, 2019 at 13:33
  • 3
    I don't know that this is a fair to compare unknown and object @nawfal although I think I see what you're getting at in terms of the contravariance and covariance (e.g. any object is assignable to type object although for unknown any object or primitive may be assigned - similarly unknown can be assigned to any or itself and object could be assigned to dynamic or itself). On a side note I'm unclear why the TS docs refer to unknown as a top type because it doesn't really contain all types ¯_(ツ)_/¯
    – Jordan
    Jun 13, 2019 at 1:35
  • 337
    How I read it: unknown is I don't know; any is I don't care
    – bozdoz
    Jan 27, 2021 at 21:09
  • 32
    More verbosely, unknown is I don't know (yet), thus I have to figure it out, any is I don't care, thus I don't care Dec 23, 2021 at 3:25
  • 2
    So with type unknown, your code has to identify a type before you can access any members of that type or the TS compiler will complain; with type any, the compiler will not complain about accessing a property, even though that property may not exist at runtime?
    – Suncat2000
    Apr 4, 2022 at 13:38
76

they are different in semantics.

unknown is the parent type of all other types. it's a regular type in the type system.

any means "turn off the type check". it's a compiler directive and kind of meta programming.

3
  • 16
    These simple sentences make a lot of sense. Dec 23, 2021 at 3:31
  • 1
    Could you elaborate on "meta programming"? Why did you use it in relation to any?
    – Andru
    Feb 6, 2022 at 11:32
  • 1
    @Andru "meta programming" means the word "any" is not the content being compiled, that's to say, it doesn't tell the compiler what to be compiled. Instead, it configures the process of compilation, that's to say, it tells the compiler how to compile.
    – Zim
    Feb 6, 2022 at 12:21
72

The difference between unknown and any is described as:

Much like any, any value is assignable to unknown; however, unlike any, you cannot access any properties on values with the type unknown, nor can you call/construct them. Furthermore, values of type unknown can only be assigned to unknown or any.

To answer your question of when should you use unknown over any:

This is useful for APIs that want to signal “this can be any value, so you must perform some type of checking before you use it”. This forces users to safely introspect returned values.

Take a look at the TypeScript 3.0 announcement for examples of type checking a variable of type unknown and a more detailed explanation.

1
  • "this can be any value, so you must perform some type of checking before you use it". Let's say I'm writing a reusable function, which takes an argument of type unknown, by "you" here you mean me or the ones who consume my function? Who have to do the type check? Dec 23, 2021 at 3:28
52

any type:

The any type represents all possible JS values. Every type is assignable to type any. Therefore the type any is an universal supertype of the type system. The TS compiler will allow any operation on values typed any. For example:

let myVar: any;

myVar[0];
myVar();
myVar.length;
new myVar();

In many occasions this is too lenient of the TS compiler. i.e. it will allow operations which we could have known to be resulting into a runtime error.

unknown type:

The unknown type represents (just like any) all possible JS values. Every type is assignable to type unknown. Therefore the type unknown is another universal supertype of the type system (alongside any). However, the TS compiler won't allow any operation on values typed unknown. Furthermore, the unknown type is only assignable to the type any. An example will clarify this:

let myVar: unknown;

let myVar1: unknown = myVar;   // No error
let myVar2: any = myVar;       // No error
let myVar3: boolean = myVar;   // Type 'unknown' is not assignable to type 'boolean'

// The following operations on myVar all give the error:
// Object is of type 'unknown'
myVar[0];
myVar();
myVar.length;
new myVar();
49

any, unknown:

  • allow assigning any type

any:

  • allows being assigned to any type
  • allows calling any method

unknown:

  • doesn't allow being assigned to any type
  • doesn't allow calling any method
const a: any = 'a'; // OK
const b: unknown = 'b' // OK

const v1: string = a; // OK
const v2: string = b; // ERROR
const v3: string = b as string; // OK

a.trim() // OK
b.trim() // ERROR
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  • 4
    doesn't allow to call any method, this is incorrect (or maybe just hard to understand?). anyway, you can call any method on a value typed as any.
    – MEMark
    Aug 21, 2020 at 12:00
  • 5
    The only answer to show use of as T, which will change the type from unknown to T. Very good. Dec 23, 2020 at 5:42
  • As I understand now (even using them for some good time), any is basically using bare javascript. unknown is basically a safer way to deal with stuff you don't know the type. Apr 23, 2021 at 21:45
13

Unknown

If you write a function that only passes down an input to another function, use unknown. From the perspective of the function: "I don't know, I don't wanna know". There is nothing wrong with using unknown.

E.g.:

function buy(item: unknown): Purchase {
  if (item) {
    return purchase(item);
  } else {
    throw new TypeError('item is missing');
  }
}

Any

If you need to call properties on that value, then any is more suited.

Linting might not like any, suggesting you to be more specific with your input. That way, if you change the interface from isItem to isValid, typescript tells you to update your code.

E.g.:

// eslint-disable-next-line @typescript-eslint/explicit-module-boundary-types
function isItem(item: any): item is Purchase {
  return !!item?.price;
}

Calling properties

function isStuff(item: unknown): item is Stuff {
  return (item as Stuff).it !== undefined;
}
function isStuff(item: any): item is Stuff {
  return item.it !== undefined;
}
camelcaseKeys(item) as unknown as Item;

See user defined guards if you're interested, I brought it in because it's one of the few cases where I need any.

From this blog from ultimatecourses:

Use the any type when there are no other options

It's hard to find good examples for any.

12

I am late to the party but will try to demystify it.

const canBeAnything: any = 100;
const canNotBeAnything: unknown = 100;

// If we try to use a .startsWith() method
canBeAnything.startsWith('10'); // no error
canNotBeAnything.startsWith('10'); // Property 'startsWith' does not exist on type 'unknown'

only way to use the method .startsWith() on unknown is explicitly telling compiler the type, like

(canNotBeAnything as string).startsWith('10'); // Chill down TS compiler, I know what I am doing. 

The latter on doesn't show any compilation error but it throws error during runtime because canNotBeAnything is a number type and we are forcing it to be string

0

The accepted answer says "unknown which is the type-safe counterpart of any."

However, as this example shows unknown is its own beast and it sometimes behaves very differently from any:

type Foo = unknown extends string ? true : false // false
type Bar = any extends string ? true : false     // boolean - i.e. both true and false
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  • 5
    This answer seems like more of a comment for the accepted answer - not an actual answer.
    – CodeFinity
    Mar 9, 2022 at 11:39
  • 2
    @CodeFinity It is both - the question is "What is difference between unknown and any?" and my answer provides a key and important difference that's worth understanding.
    – TrevTheDev
    Mar 10, 2022 at 0:15
0

Here's the mental to easily distinguish any from unknown.

What's common

You can assign anything to any and anything to unknown.

let anyVar: any = 'Value';         // OK
anyVar = 3;                        // OK
let unknownVar: unknown = 'Value'; // OK
unknownVar = 3;                    // OK

See the demo

What's different

You can perform any operation on any, but you have to do a type check or type assertion to operate on unknown.

let anyVar: any = 'Value';

anyVar.length // OK
let unknownVar: unknown = 'Value';

unknownVar.length             // NOT OK

(unknownVar as string).length // OK (with type assertion)
if (typeof unknownVar === 'string') {
  unknownVar.length;          // OK (with type check)
}

See the demo

Check also the post "unknown vs any in TypeScript" (I'm the post author).

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