I have a function that builds an object, like this:
function toast() {
return {
a: \"a\",
b: \"b\"
}
}
I can define the type of the
Yes it's possible. The trick is to have some value somewhere which is declared with the type you need (return type of toast()
), without actually calling toast()
. You can do that by introducing another function that returns a value of appropriate type (the actual value is null), then creating a variable and assigning it the value returned by that function, then getting typeof
of that.
I could not find a way without adding unused variable, but since the variable is initialized by null
that's immediately returned from the function, I suppose that runtime overhead is negligible. Here is the code:
function toast() {
return {
a: "a",
b: "b"
}
}
function getReturnType (f: (...args: any[]) => R): {returnType: R} {
return null!;
}
// dummy variable, used for retrieving toast return type only
let toastType = getReturnType(toast);
export type ToastReturnType = typeof toastType.returnType;
UPDATE Feb 2018
In the upcoming 2.8 release, there are some new language features that make it possible without involving dummy variables and functions.
This example compiles with typescript@next:
export function z() {
return {a: 1, b: '2'}
}
export function v() {
}
type ReturnType any> =
T extends (...args: any[]) => infer R ? R : never;
export type RZ = ReturnType; // { a: number; b: string; }
export type RV = ReturnType; // void