@1.21gigawatts Please don't post unformatted code - use the up arrow to edit your post, then hit Ctrl + K to format the code in that post. See the faq. You have 25 seconds to edit and format your message properly before it will be removed. Please separate code blocks from your actual question. Put your question in 1 message and then your code in a 2nd and format it.
@Wietlol it's a challenge to pay for anything from Russia now (what with the invasion and Visa and MasterCard closing up shop in the country). That trial period requires your credit card information
@MarySmithJames .forEach() is when you have an array and want to execute something for each item. You don't have an array here. Unless 96 is supposed to be the length of one but it's not evident. If you just want to create an array of 96 items, you can use Array.from({ length: 96 }, (_, i) => ".playSingle" + (i +1)) However, this is not fully equivalent, as it creates, doesn't add to an already existing array with data.
@MarySmithJames Please don't post unformatted code - use the up arrow to edit your post, then hit Ctrl + K to format the code in that post. See the faq. You have 25 seconds to edit and format your message properly before it will be removed. Please separate code blocks from your actual question. Put your question in 1 message and then your code in a 2nd and format it.
If you really need "different" you can use a generator:
function* seq(from, to) {
for (let i = from; i < to; i++)
yield i;
}
function forEach(iterator, fn) {
for (const item of iterator)
fn(item);
}
forEach(seq(1, 96), i => players.add(".playSingle" + i));
Note that seq is also very simplistic. Doesn't do reverse generation like seq(10, 1) which should probably count 10 to 1. It's just an illustrative example.
The fact that you'd have to re-invent a for loop as a generator is kind of annoying. If you already have a seq helper, then it's trivial to use it. But if you don't and you don't have the forEach helper, either, then it's probably not worth inventing them just for this trivial problem.
when software is in a gitlab repo, and, the specific repo is of type monorepo (and not publicly available on npm) - how do you add specific dependency of the monorepo to your project? For e.g. Say there is a monorepo foo which exposes multiple npm modules...say one of them is called bar. How can I install bar as dependency of my nodejs project, but reference it from my gitlap repo?
I have a request that contains a property that contains the form that also contains a property. See code below. VSCode is giving me an error on the form properties that I have.
Here is my code:
async respond(request: Request, response: Response, next: any) {
var form = request.body;
var nam...
@1.21gigawatts TS doesn't downcast like that. You'd be calling the run method on the current instance whatever its current type is. The type assertion only changes how the compiler type checks it. Not what it is.
OK, my bad. I didn't check the question, I was just going off chat. ^ Oleg is right. Essentially object is not what you think it is. It doesn't allow arbitrary properties.
@1.21gigawatts No. as is type assertion. Different thing - as I said, it only tells the compiler to verify this differently. There is no actual difference at runtime. a = "hello" as unknown as number will allow you to call a.toFixed() but then error out at runtime, as it's still a string, not a number. It's just type checked as if it was a number.
the main thing here, @1.21gigawatts, is that your problem is not with variance (well, not entirely), you are just asserting body to be of type that doesn't have an index signature. Remember - TypeScript checks by shape
just check out how basic types are defined in terms of shape. Thinking that object is a dictionary is a common misunderstanding. If you want to type a dictionary, the type you are looking for is Record
@1.21gigawatts github.com/microsoft/TypeScript/wiki/FAQ#what-is-type-erasure the type system is only a compiletime artefact. It does not get transpiled into anything, it's just removed. The compiler uses it to verify if your code handles the correct things. If you need a number in a function, do you pass a number to a function. That sort of things. But after checking all this, it removes the typing and gives you JS code that is not verified to work without mismatching types.
Well, except if you have any or any type assertions that will mislead the compiler to what's really happening.
you can tell it your incoming request contains type x object all you want, but when it actually comes in the code interpreting it isn't going to check that it does
well, not exactly - it gets the type of Request from lib.dom.d.ts, which is a built-in set of type declarations. What you are actually getting is the type of Request from Fetch API, @1.21gigawatts
object just means "not a primitive". But that's about it. While {} has different semantics. Which make it pretty much useless, honestly. It describes an object but no properties for it. Due to structural integrity, everything is assignable, since extra properties are ignored. In practice {} is pretty much always a problem.
And object I may have used once or twice but isn't really useful, either. It's rare I want "non-primitive" vs something a lot more specific.
to add to @VLAZ, {} in terms of type system is, indeed, the most wide type possible (anything goes, no shape). However, there is another meaning to {}: completely empty object type (invoked when, for example, you do = {}).
@OlegValteriswithUkraine Nah, it doesn't enforce the object to be empty. let x: {}; x = {a: 1, b: true, c: "hello" } It requires at least an empty object. It only enforces the emptyness with excess property checks but at that point - why are you even declaring something that will only ever be one thing anyway?
@1.21gigawatts Record<string, any> will be the least of what I'd expect to see there.
But you might also consider a proper type for it { success: boolean, message: string }
@OlegValteriswithUkraine Yeah. But the let x = {} just gets {} as a type implicitly. Which still is useless, as it doesn't allow you adding more things as x.foo = "bar". Still a useless type, even if implicit. Ergo, pretty much always it's an error.
@OlegValteriswithUkraine Well, less horrible than using any, I guess. It should also provide somewhat useful compiler errors if it turns out you try to use a specific thing off T.
It's not great but it can be worse.
Well, and it's leveraging the thing I said that it's almost always an error - you'd get an error if you don't supply the generic.
Typescript in vscode sometimes shows code hinting, auto complete and so on. i know that i've sometimes had to include a "typings" download. does vscode typescript NOT do code complete if it doesn't have types download?
ofc. VSC has a TypeScript language service built-in. It comes with 2 standard libs: DOM and Node (unless they got excluded by your project, but that's a different story). How do you expect the compiler to know types it doesn't have? :)
@Maybe Please don't post unformatted code - use the up arrow to edit your post, then hit Ctrl + K to format the code in that post. See the faq. You have 25 seconds to edit and format your message properly before it will be removed. Please separate code blocks from your actual question. Put your question in 1 message and then your code in a 2nd and format it.
@Maybe Please don't post unformatted code - use the up arrow to edit your post, then hit Ctrl + K to format the code in that post. See the faq. You have 25 seconds to edit and format your message properly before it will be removed. Please separate code blocks from your actual question. Put your question in 1 message and then your code in a 2nd and format it.
:) So so clear. Basically we are telling split to leave lines with a single new line alone and only focus on places with 2 new lines appearing consecutively
I'm reading a post that Typescript uses d.ts files to get type information
"Intellisense for JavaScript libraries and frameworks is powered by TypeScript type declaration files (with the .d.ts extension). These files have the data types of parameters and functions, allowing VS Code to provide a rich intellisense experience."
But a few years ago I wrote a library that used reflection to get this information manually
What I'm saying is it should be possible to get this information to provide some intellisense even if d.ts isn't provided
Even is no type data is available you can infer the types just by parsing the javascript
If I create a class:
class Person {
constructor() { name = ""; age = 0 }
run() { }
}
I should still be able to use reflection to assist with code completion
@1.21gigawatts Please don't post unformatted code - use the up arrow to edit your post, then hit Ctrl + K to format the code in that post. See the faq. You have 25 seconds to edit and format your message properly before it will be removed. Please separate code blocks from your actual question. Put your question in 1 message and then your code in a 2nd and format it.
var type = Person.constructor.name;
var properties = [];
var intellisenseInfo:
for (var property in Person) {
properties.push(property);
}
intellisenseInfo.type = type
intellisenseInfo.properties = properties