DEV Community

TK
TK

Posted on • Originally published at leandrotk.github.io

Typescript Learnings 002: Type System

This is part of my series on Typescript Learning, where I share micro-posts about everything I'm learning related to Typescript.

And it was originally published at TK's blog.

One of the main Typescript features is the Type System. We are going to play around with the type system and see how it works.

Basic Types

The basic types are:

  • number
  • string
  • boolean

We define these type by using this nomenclature: variableName: typeName, where the variableName you choose and the typeName can a number, a string, or a boolean. Let's try it out.

const age: number = 25;
const name: string = 'TK';
const isLearning: boolean = true;
Enter fullscreen mode Exit fullscreen mode

What is the power of the Typescript type system? We define a type for a given variable or constant, it doesn't change across the whole system. A string will be a string forever. A number too. And so on.

let age: number = 25;
age = 'TK'; // Type '"TK"' is not assignable to type 'number'.
Enter fullscreen mode Exit fullscreen mode

It fails on compile-time and raises a "Type Error". This helps us with immutable types and prevent possible bugs.

Collections

Here we have Arrays, Tuples, and Objects. They are collection, data structures to store, well, data.

There are two ways to define a Array type. The type followed by a []:

const bookshelf: string[] = [
  'The Compound Effect',
  'Leonardo Da Vinci',
  'Enlightenment Now'
];
Enter fullscreen mode Exit fullscreen mode

The string is the type followed by [].

Another way is to use the Array type:

const bookshelf: Array<string> = [
  'The Compound Effect',
  'Leonardo Da Vinci',
  'Enlightenment Now'
];
Enter fullscreen mode Exit fullscreen mode

Tuples are a little different from the array. It has a fixed number of elements, so we define the type for each index.

const thoughts: [string, number] = ['Programming', 42];
Enter fullscreen mode Exit fullscreen mode

By the way, the order of the elements and types is relevant:

let thoughts: [string, number];

thoughts = ['Programming', 42]; // Succeeds!
thoughts = [42, 'Programming']; // Fails!
Enter fullscreen mode Exit fullscreen mode

For objects, we can use the object type that represents the non-primitive type (number, string, boolean, bigint, symbol, null, or undefined).

const printObj = (obj: object): void => {
  console.log(obj);
};

printObj({ name: 'TK' }); // it compiles and prints!

printObj(42); // Argument of type '42' is not assignable to parameter of type 'object'.
printObj('TK'); // Argument of type '"TK"' is not assignable to parameter of type 'object'.
printObj(null); // Argument of type 'null' is not assignable to parameter of type 'object'.
printObj(undefined); // Argument of type 'undefined' is not assignable to parameter of type 'object'.
printObj(true); // Argument of type 'true' is not assignable to parameter of type 'object'.
Enter fullscreen mode Exit fullscreen mode

Another way to define types for the object is to use Interfaces and Types.

Interfaces give the shape of the object. We define the types for the object structure. For the printObj function we defined before, we just need an interface to handle the object structure.

interface Person {
  name: string;
};

const printObj = (obj: Person): void => {
  console.log(obj);
};

printObj({ name: 'TK' }); // it compiles and prints!
Enter fullscreen mode Exit fullscreen mode

The Type looks the same way:

type Person = {
  name: string;
};

const printObj = (obj: Person): void => {
  console.log(obj);
}

printObj({ name: 'TK' }); // it compiles and prints!
Enter fullscreen mode Exit fullscreen mode

Resources

Oldest comments (0)