That's what I couldn't get working. The above code was not accepted by the TS compiler, complaining that there is no such property entries.
edit: when I say not accepted, it does compile because it's TypeScript. It flags the line with an error, and the code block simply does not execute. Nothing gets logged to the console.
Interesting - thank you for the issue link, I'll give it a whirl when I get back to my computer. I missed that one when searching it myself.
In that conversation, though, they mention needing to use a target < es2015 - I did try doing that instead to no avail. If Array.from() solves the issue, though, it's a small price to pay, I don't think it's any less readable.
That's what I couldn't get working. The above code was not accepted by the TS compiler, complaining that there is no such property
entries
.edit: when I say not accepted, it does compile because it's TypeScript. It flags the line with an error, and the code block simply does not execute. Nothing gets logged to the console.
Hmm, that is odd. I saw a TS issue related to this, github.com/Microsoft/TypeScript/is.... Someone suggested using
Array.from()
to mitigate this.e.g.
Interesting - thank you for the issue link, I'll give it a whirl when I get back to my computer. I missed that one when searching it myself.
In that conversation, though, they mention needing to use a target < es2015 - I did try doing that instead to no avail. If
Array.from()
solves the issue, though, it's a small price to pay, I don't think it's any less readable.Ah - another comment in that thread had the fix. You need to add "dom.iterable" to your libs in tsconfig - I'll update the post. Thank you thank you!
My pleasure! Glad it's fixed 😀