This is a sandbox fork of the repo for the book Effective Typescript for personal testing and learning.
This is the code sample repo for Effective TypeScript: 62 Specific Ways to Improve Your TypeScript. The book is available through:
and others.
You can get the latest updates on the book at https://effectivetypescript.com.
Below you'll find a complete table of contents with links to standalone code samples for each item. All code samples should produce the expected errors (and no others) and expected types.
Unless otherwise noted in a comment at the top of the code sample, the samples are run with TypeScript's strict
setting. These were produced and checked using literate-ts and TypeScript 3.7.0-beta. You may want to copy/paste them into the TypeScript playground.
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Chapter 1: Getting to Know TypeScript
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Chapter 2: TypeScript’s Type System
- 📝 Item 6: Use Your Editor to Interrogate and Explore the Type System
- 📝 Item 7: Think of Types as Sets of Values
- 📝 Item 8: Know How to Tell Whether a Symbol Is in the Type Space or Value Space
- 📝 Item 9: Prefer Type Declarations to Type Assertions
- 📝 Item 10: Avoid Object Wrapper Types (String, Number, Boolean, Symbol, BigInt)
- 📝 Item 11: Recognize the Limits of Excess Property Checking
- 📝 Item 12: Apply Types to Entire Function Expressions When Possible
- 📝 Item 13: Know the Differences Between type and interface
- 📝 Item 14: Use Type Operations and Generics to Avoid Repeating Yourself
- 📝 Item 15: Use Index Signatures for Dynamic Data
- 📝 Item 16: Prefer Arrays, Tuples, and ArrayLike to number Index Signatures
- 📝 Item 17: Use readonly to Avoid Errors Associated with Mutation
- 📝 Item 18: Use Mapped Types to Keep Values in Sync
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Chapter 3: Type Inference
- 📝 Item 19: Avoid Cluttering Your Code with Inferable Types
- 📝 Item 20: Use Different Variables for Different Types
- 📝 Item 21: Understand Type Widening
- 📝 Item 22: Understand Type Narrowing
- 📝 Item 23: Create Objects All at Once
- 📝 Item 24: Be Consistent in Your Use of Aliases
- 📝 Item 25: Use async Functions Instead of Callbacks for Asynchronous Code
- 📝 Item 26: Understand How Context Is Used in Type Inference
- 📝 Item 27: Use Functional Constructs and Libraries to Help Types Flow
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Chapter 4: Type Design
- 📝 Item 28: Prefer Types That Always Represent Valid States
- 📝 Item 29: Be Liberal in What You Accept and Strict in What You Produce
- 📝 Item 30: Don’t Repeat Type Information in Documentation
- 📝 Item 31: Push Null Values to the Perimeter of Your Types
- 📝 Item 32: Prefer Unions of Interfaces to Interfaces of Unions
- 📝 Item 33: Prefer More Precise Alternatives to String Types
- 📝 Item 34: Prefer Incomplete Types to Inaccurate Types
- 📝 Item 35: Generate Types from APIs and Specs, Not Data
- 📝 Item 36: Name Types Using the Language of Your Problem Domain
- 📝 Item 37: Consider “Brands” for Nominal Typing
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Chapter 5: Working with any
- 📝 Item 38: Use the Narrowest Possible Scope for any Types
- 📝 Item 39: Prefer More Precise Variants of any to Plain any
- 📝 Item 40: Hide Unsafe Type Assertions in Well-Typed Functions
- 📝 Item 41: Understand Evolving any
- 📝 Item 42: Use unknown Instead of any for Values with an Unknown Type
- 📝 Item 43: Prefer Type-Safe Approaches to Monkey Patching
- 📝 Item 44: Track Your Type Coverage to Prevent Regressions in Type Safety
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Chapter 6: Types Declarations and @types
- 📝 Item 45: Put TypeScript and @types in devDependencies
- 📝 Item 46: Understand the Three Versions Involved in Type Declarations
- 📝 Item 47: Export All Types That Appear in Public APIs
- 📝 Item 48: Use TSDoc for API Comments
- 📝 Item 49: Provide a Type for this in Callbacks
- 📝 Item 50: Prefer Conditional Types to Overloaded Declarations
- 📝 Item 51: Mirror Types to Sever Dependencies
- 📝 Item 52: Be Aware of the Pitfalls of Testing Types
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Chapter 7: Writing and Running Your Code
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Chapter 8. Migrating to TypeScript