6

I have a question about the Omit type in Typescript, so I know the Omit type is the opposite of Pick and is build like this:

type Omit<T, K extends keyof T> = Pick<T, Exclude<keyof T, K>>

But I don't know how to construct a Omit type. I have an interface of Student that looks like this:

interface Student { 
name: string, 
surname: string, 
age: number, 
email: string 
}

I need a function that takes a Student as input with some given properties and outputs the Omited Student. The function should look like this:

let omit_student = <K extends keyof Student>(student: Student, ...props: K[] ): Omit<Student, K> => null!

But I don't know how I can dynamicaly omit the given properties from Student and what should happen in the body of the funtion.

Calling the function like this: omit_student(student1, "name", "age") should output the following type:

{ 
surname: string, 
email: string 
}
1
  • What have you tried so far?
    – Aleksey L.
    Apr 16, 2019 at 8:52

2 Answers 2

4

It is a common source on confusion that object types in TypeScript are not exact (as requested in ms/TS#12936). A value of type Student is known to have name, surname, age, and email properties of the appropriate types, but it is not known to have only these properties. This allows you to extend types by adding known properties to them:

interface Student { 
    name: string, 
    surname: string, 
    age: number, 
    email: string 
}

interface HogwartsStudent extends Student {
    house: string,
    spells: string[]
}

In the above, a HogwartsStudent is a special type of Student. If I give you a Student, you don't know that she is not a HogwartsStudent, so you can't be sure that she has no house or spells property.

The Omit<T, K> type alias produces a supertype of T. That is, T extends Omit<T, K>. Every value of type T is also a value of type Omit<T, K>. All you are "omitting" with Omit<T, K> is the known presence and type of properties with keys in K.


What you are asking for is not only to remove the known keys from the type, but to remove the actual properties from the produced object. This needs to happen at runtime in exactly the way you'd do it in JavaScript:

function omit_student<K extends Array<keyof Student>>(
  student: Student, ...props: K): Omit<Student, K[number]> {
    const newStudent: Omit<Student, K[number]> = Object.assign({}, student);
    for (let prop of props) {
        delete (newStudent as any)[prop];
    }
    return newStudent;
}

Notice that I've used a rest tuple type for the K parameter, but you can probably do it your way also.

0
1

To declare the Omit type use CRice's answer:

interface Student { 
    name: string, 
    surname: string, 
    age: number, 
    email: string 
}

type Omit<T, K extends keyof T> = Pick<T, Exclude<keyof T, K>>

let student: Student = { name: "John", surname: "Doe", age: 21, email: "[email protected]" }
let omit_student: Omit<Student, "name" | "age"> = student

This will create a new type with only the surname and email. This will however only complain at compile-time (when using other properties than surname or email), you have to write a filter method yourself to comply with the interface you describe with Omit

function omitStudent(student: Student, ...args: string[]): Omit<Student, "name" | "age"> {
    for (let key of args) {
        delete student[key]
    }
    return student
}

console.log(student);
console.log(omitStudent(student, "name", "age"));

Though I realize this is probably not as 'dynamic' as you asked in the question.

1
  • The problem with this is that it doesn't do anything you just asign student to omit_student. when you console.log(omit_student) it prints the orignal student, with all the properties
    – user11367285
    Apr 16, 2019 at 9:30

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