Reputation: 16749
Im getting this compilation error in my Angular 2 app:
TS7015: Element implicitly has an 'any' type because index expression is not of type 'number'.
The piece of code causing it is:
getApplicationCount(state:string) {
return this.applicationsByState[state] ? this.applicationsByState[state].length : 0;
}
This however doesn't cause this error:
getApplicationCount(state:string) {
return this.applicationsByState[<any>state] ? this.applicationsByState[<any>state].length : 0;
}
This doesn't make any sense to me. I would like to solve it when defining the attributes the first time. At the moment I'm writing:
private applicationsByState: Array<any> = [];
But someone mentioned that the problem is trying to use a string type as index in an array and that I should use a map. But I'm not sure how to do that.
Thans for your help!
Upvotes: 207
Views: 370473
Reputation: 41
This works for me, in tsconfig.json:
compilerOptions:{ ... "noImplicitAny": false, ... }
Upvotes: 2
Reputation: 5844
Not the OP's direct issue but for users encountering this error for libraries not under their control, one can suppress this error is by adding:
{
...
"suppressImplicitAnyIndexErrors": true,
...
}
to the tsconfig.json
file.
Deprecation Notice for configurations in TypeScript v5.5.
These configurations will continue to "work" until TypeScript 5.5, at which point they will be removed entirely. In TypeScript 4.9.5+, 5.0, 5.1, 5.2, 5.3, and 5.4, you can specify ignoreDeprecations: "5.0" to silence this warning.
Upvotes: 137
Reputation: 2651
In tsconfig.json
compilerOptions:{
"suppressImplicitAnyIndexErrors": true,
"strictNullChecks":false,
"strictPropertyInitialization": false,
}
Upvotes: 7
Reputation: 13709
I was actually working with React and I got this error when I assigned an object's property through a custom key (i.e. myObj[myKey] =
). To resolve it, I simply used as keyof:
interface IMyObj { title: string; content: string; }
const myObj: IMyObj = { title: 'Hi', content: 'Hope all is well' };
const myKey: string = 'content';
myObj[myKey as keyof IMyObj] = 'All is great now!';
This explicitly tells Typescript that your custom string (myKey) belongs to the group of properties from an interface/type you used for declaring your object (myObj).
P.S.: another way to get the property's value is shown on a closed Typescript's issue on Github through extends:
interface IMyObj {
title: string;
content: string;
}
const myObj: IMyObj = { title: 'Hi', content: 'Hope all is well' };
const myKey: string = 'content';
const getKeyValue = <T extends object, U extends keyof T>(obj: T) => (key: U) =>
obj[key];
console.log(getKeyValue(myObj)(myKey));
Upvotes: 58
Reputation: 1731
I used this to get around it so I could use the window object.
//in js code somewhere
window.DataManager = "My Data Manager";
//in strict typescript file
let test = (window as { [key: string]: any })["DataManager"] as string;
console.log(test); //output= My Data Manager
Upvotes: 78
Reputation: 164129
If you want a key/value data structure then don't use an array.
You can use a regular object:
private applicationsByState: { [key: string]: any[] } = {};
getApplicationCount(state: string) {
return this.applicationsByState[state] ? this.applicationsByState[state].length : 0;
}
Or you can use a Map:
private applicationsByState: Map<string, any[]> = new Map<string, any[]>();
getApplicationCount(state: string) {
return this.applicationsByState.has(state) ? this.applicationsByState.get(state).length : 0;
}
Upvotes: 168