JL235
JL235

Reputation: 2645

Build a function object with properties in TypeScript

I want to create a function object, which also has some properties held on it. For example in JavaScript I would do:

var f = function() { }
f.someValue = 3;

Now in TypeScript I can describe the type of this as:

var f: { (): any; someValue: number; };

However I can't actually build it, without requiring a cast. Such as:

var f: { (): any; someValue: number; } =
    <{ (): any; someValue: number; }>(
        function() { }
    );
f.someValue = 3;

How would you build this without a cast?

Upvotes: 156

Views: 90283

Answers (9)

eritbh
eritbh

Reputation: 796

Old question, but for versions of TypeScript starting with 3.1, you can simply do the property assignment as you would in plain JS, as long as you use a function declaration or the const keyword for your variable:

function f () {}
f.someValue = 3; // fine
const g = function () {};
g.someValue = 3; // also fine
var h = function () {};
h.someValue = 3; // Error: "Property 'someValue' does not exist on type '() => void'"

Reference and online example.

Upvotes: 19

Meirion Hughes
Meirion Hughes

Reputation: 26398

This is easily achievable now (typescript 2.x) with Object.assign(target, source)

example:

enter image description here

The magic here is that Object.assign<T, U>(t: T, u: U) is typed to return the intersection T & U.

Enforcing that this resolves to a known interface is also straight-forward. For example:

interface Foo {
  (a: number, b: string): string[];
  foo: string;
}

let method: Foo = Object.assign(
  (a: number, b: string) => { return a * a; },
  { foo: 10 }
); 

which errors due to incompatible typing:

Error: foo:number not assignable to foo:string
Error: number not assignable to string[] (return type)

caveat: you may need to polyfill Object.assign if targeting older browsers.

Upvotes: 149

thiagoh
thiagoh

Reputation: 7378

I can't say that it's very straightforward but it's definitely possible:

interface Optional {
  <T>(value?: T): OptionalMonad<T>;
  empty(): OptionalMonad<any>;
}

const Optional = (<T>(value?: T) => OptionalCreator(value)) as Optional;
Optional.empty = () => OptionalCreator();

if you got curious this is from a gist of mine with the TypeScript/JavaScript version of Optional

Upvotes: 3

Greg Weber
Greg Weber

Reputation: 3428

Update: This answer was the best solution in earlier versions of TypeScript, but there are better options available in newer versions (see other answers).

The accepted answer works and might be required in some situations, but have the downside of providing no type safety for building up the object. This technique will at least throw a type error if you attempt to add an undefined property.

interface F { (): any; someValue: number; }

var f = <F>function () { }
f.someValue = 3

// type error
f.notDeclard = 3

Upvotes: 132

mk.
mk.

Reputation: 11710

TypeScript is designed to handle this case through declaration merging:

you may also be familiar with JavaScript practice of creating a function and then extending the function further by adding properties onto the function. TypeScript uses declaration merging to build up definitions like this in a type-safe way.

Declaration merging lets us say that something is both a function and a namespace (internal module):

function f() { }
namespace f {
    export var someValue = 3;
}

This preserves typing and lets us write both f() and f.someValue. When writing a .d.ts file for existing JavaScript code, use declare:

declare function f(): void;
declare namespace f {
    export var someValue: number;
}

Adding properties to functions is often a confusing or unexpected pattern in TypeScript, so try to avoid it, but it can be necessary when using or converting older JS code. This is one of the only times it would be appropriate to mix internal modules (namespaces) with external.

Upvotes: 64

Daniel Earwicker
Daniel Earwicker

Reputation: 116654

An updated answer: since the addition of intersection types via &, it is possible to "merge" two inferred types on the fly.

Here's a general helper that reads the properties of some object from and copies them over an object onto. It returns the same object onto but with a new type that includes both sets of properties, so correctly describing the runtime behaviour:

function merge<T1, T2>(onto: T1, from: T2): T1 & T2 {
    Object.keys(from).forEach(key => onto[key] = from[key]);
    return onto as T1 & T2;
}

This low-level helper does still perform a type-assertion, but it is type-safe by design. With this helper in place, we have an operator that we can use to solve the OP's problem with full type safety:

interface Foo {
    (message: string): void;
    bar(count: number): void;
}

const foo: Foo = merge(
    (message: string) => console.log(`message is ${message}`), {
        bar(count: number) {
            console.log(`bar was passed ${count}`)
        }
    }
);

Click here to try it out in the TypeScript Playground. Note that we have constrained foo to be of type Foo, so the result of merge has to be a complete Foo. So if you rename bar to bad then you get a type error.

NB There is still one type hole here, however. TypeScript doesn't provide a way to constrain a type parameter to be "not a function". So you could get confused and pass your function as the second argument to merge, and that wouldn't work. So until this can be declared, we have to catch it at runtime:

function merge<T1, T2>(onto: T1, from: T2): T1 & T2 {
    if (typeof from !== "object" || from instanceof Array) {
        throw new Error("merge: 'from' must be an ordinary object");
    }
    Object.keys(from).forEach(key => onto[key] = from[key]);
    return onto as T1 & T2;
}

Upvotes: 2

WillSeitz
WillSeitz

Reputation: 73

This departs from strong typing, but you can do

var f: any = function() { }
f.someValue = 3;

if you are trying to get around oppressive strong typing like I was when I found this question. Sadly this is a case TypeScript fails on perfectly valid JavaScript so you have to you tell TypeScript to back off.

"You JavaScript is perfectly valid TypeScript" evaluates to false. (Note: using 0.95)

Upvotes: 0

Rick Love
Rick Love

Reputation: 12780

As a shortcut, you can dynamically assign the object value using the ['property'] accessor:

var f = function() { }
f['someValue'] = 3;

This bypasses the type checking. However, it is pretty safe because you have to intentionally access the property the same way:

var val = f.someValue; // This won't work
var val = f['someValue']; // Yeah, I meant to do that

However, if you really want the type checking for the property value, this won't work.

Upvotes: 3

nxn
nxn

Reputation: 4315

So if the requirement is to simply build and assign that function to "f" without a cast, here is a possible solution:

var f: { (): any; someValue: number; };

f = (() => {
    var _f : any = function () { };
    _f.someValue = 3;
    return _f;
})();

Essentially, it uses a self executing function literal to "construct" an object that will match that signature before the assignment is done. The only weirdness is that the inner declaration of the function needs to be of type 'any', otherwise the compiler cries that you're assigning to a property which does not exist on the object yet.

EDIT: Simplified the code a bit.

Upvotes: 35

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