90

The typing for Object.entries provided by typescript has the return type [string, T][] but I am searching for a generic type Entries<O> to represent the return value of this function that keeps the relationship between the keys and the values.

Eg. when having an object type like

type Obj = {
    a: number,
    b: string,
    c: number
}

I'm looking for a type Entries<O> that results in one of the types below (or something similar) when provided with Obj:

(["a", number] | ["b", string] | ["c", number])[]
[["a", number], ["b", string], ["c", number]]
(["a" | "c", number] | ["b", string])[]

That this isn't correct for all use cases of Object.entries (see here) is no problem for my specific case.


Tried and failed solution:

type Entries<O> = [keyof O, O[keyof O]][] doesn't work for this as it only preserves the possible keys and values but not the relationship between these as Entries<Obj> is ["a" | "b" | "c", number | string].

type Entry<O, K extends keyof O> = [K, O[K]]
type Entries<O> = Entry<O, keyof O>[]

Here the definition of Entry works as expected eg. Entry<Obj, "a"> is ["a", number] but the application of it in the second line with keyof O as the second type variable leads again to the same result as the first try.

6 Answers 6

87

Here's a solution, but beware when using this as a return type for Object.entries; it is not always safe to do that (see below).


When you want to pair each key with something dependent on that key's type, use a mapped type:

type Entries<T> = {
    [K in keyof T]: [K, T[K]];
}[keyof T][];

type Test = Entries<Obj>;
// (["a", number] | ["b", string] | ["c", number])[]

The second version, which has a tuple type containing the properties instead of a union, is much harder to construct; it is possible to convert a union to a tuple but you basically shouldn't do it.

The third version is manageable, but a bit more complicated than the first version: you need PickByValue from this answer.

type Entries3<T> = {
    [K in keyof T]: [keyof PickByValue<T, T[K]>, T[K]]
}[keyof T][];

type Test3 = Entries3<Obj>;
// (["a" | "c", number] | ["b", string])[]

Playground Link


I guess I should also explain why Typescript doesn't give a stronger type to Object.entries. When you have a type like type Obj = {a: number, b: string, c: number}, it's only guaranteed that a value has those properties; it is not guaranteed that the value does not also have other properties. For example, the value {a: 1, b: 'foo', c: 2, d: false} is assignable to the type Obj (excess property checking for object literals aside).

In this case Object.entries would return an array containing the element ['d', false]. The type Entries<Obj> says this cannot happen, but in fact it can happen; so Entries<T> is not a sound return type for Object.entries in general. You should only use the above solution with Object.entries when you yourself know that the values will have no excess properties; Typescript won't check this for you.

4
  • 3
    Well while this may be a true motivation, they easily could have return type as Entries<T> & [string, T][]. It might be not valid TS as I'm not very goot at typelevel, but the idea they could preserve that type T has at least these properties and possibly some more (like d in your example). It would be then absolutely possible to construct an object from these values and guarantee that it still in valid shape for type T Jan 11, 2022 at 22:24
  • is this better than type-fest's Entries?
    – Sang
    Nov 26, 2022 at 13:01
  • @transang I don't know anything about that library; there is another answer by Peter Cardenas which mentions it but doesn't go into detail.
    – kaya3
    Nov 26, 2022 at 14:31
  • @transang yes! type-fest's Entries doesn't respect which values go with which keys and ignores length, e.g. Entries<{name: string, age: number}> turned into ["name" | "age", string | number][] for me. That might be sufficient if your objects are homogeneous and length doesn't matter, but I much prefer this answer's result ((["name", string] | ["age", number])[]) - doesn't retain length either, but at least it keeps track of the key-value relationships
    – jemand771
    Feb 15 at 16:25
17

Currently, a really nice utility library called type-fest has been introduced to include this functionality for you, among others, in the form of Entries. You can use it like so:

import { Entries } from 'type-fest';

Object.entries(obj) as Entries<typeof obj>;

Edit: If you want Object.entries to have this type by default:

declare global {
  interface ObjectConstructor {
    entries<T extends object>(o: T): Entries<T>
  }  
}
1
  • 1
    Yep. And a way to globally set the return type of Object.entries is to have a .d.ts file with: import type { Entries} from 'type-fest' declare global { interface ObjectConstructor { entries<T extends object>(o: T): Entries<T> } } Apr 27 at 20:46
11

I strongly believe the answer to this post should be a combination of two answers on this page:

type Entries<T> = {
    [K in keyof T]: [K, T[K]];
}[keyof T][];

from @kaya3

and

const getEntries = <T extends object>(obj: T) => Object.entries(obj) as Entries<T>;

from @minlare

Thank you both for the excellent answers.

1
  • 2
    I would actually add [K in keyof T]-?: [K, T[K]] but this is exactly what i use. If you dont have the -? then an object using all partial properties would return any as the key values. Apr 29 at 17:59
5
// utils/objectEntries.ts

export { objectEntries }

// https://stackoverflow.com/questions/60141960/typescript-key-value-relation-preserving-object-entries-type/75337277#75337277

type ValueOf<T> = T[keyof T]
type Entries<T> = [keyof T, ValueOf<T>][]

// Same as `Object.entries()` but with type inference
function objectEntries<T extends object>(obj: T): Entries<T> {
  return Object.entries(obj) as Entries<T>
}
4

Following on from Peter Cardenas answer, I created a helper function as well

const getEntries = <T extends object>(obj: T) => Object.entries(obj) as Entries<T>;
-3

we can make dedicated function as below:

depictObjectKeyType<O>(o: O) {
    return Object.keys(o) as (keyof O)[];
}

depictEntriesKeyType<T>(obj: T): Entries<T> {
    return Object.entries(obj) as any;
}

and use as:

this.depictEntriesKeyType(data).forEach(....
4
  • 5
    This answer does not define the Entries type as the OP requested, and suggests using any to overcome a lack of typing altogether. Using any is always the last resort. I don't understand why it has 4 votes...
    – JHH
    Jul 11, 2022 at 6:12
  • Hey @JHH, Thanks you for the suggestion. But, I believe that one should be aware of all the solutions and also for the developers working with TS in initial phase, might need this. Stack-overflow is the perfect place where we can have solutions from different background of developers with various different perspective. Pick what suits your need. Thanks! Have a nice day.
    – Dolly
    Jul 11, 2022 at 14:16
  • "Pick what suits your need", the one that doesn't use any 🙌 🤝
    – airtonix
    Aug 17, 2022 at 1:12
  • 1
    In this case the as any is really not a big deal, as it's only affecting the type returned from Object.entries so that it doesn't complain about it not matching Entries<T>. The return type of the function is going to replace the any anyway. If you really don't like it though, you can easily replace it with as Entries<T> instead.. Sep 20, 2022 at 13:49

Your Answer

By clicking “Post Your Answer”, you agree to our terms of service and acknowledge that you have read and understand our privacy policy and code of conduct.

Not the answer you're looking for? Browse other questions tagged or ask your own question.