c228924543
* Index signatures contribute properties to unions This means that in a union like this: ```ts type T = { foo: number } | { [s: string]: string } ``` `foo` is now a property of `T` with type `number | string`. Previously it was not. Two points of interest: 1. A readonly index signature makes the resulting union property readonly. 2. A numeric index signature only contributes number-named properties. Fixes #21141 * Correctly handle numeric and symbol property names 1. Symbol-named properties don't contribute to unions. 2. Number-named properties should use the numeric index signature type, if present, and fall back to the string index signature type, not the other way round.
28 lines
851 B
TypeScript
28 lines
851 B
TypeScript
// @target: esnext
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// @strict: true
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type Two = { foo: { bar: true }, baz: true } | { [s: string]: string };
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declare var u: Two
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u.foo = 'bye'
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u.baz = 'hi'
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type Three = { foo: number } | { [s: string]: string } | { [s: string]: boolean };
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declare var v: Three
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v.foo = false
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type Missing = { foo: number, bar: true } | { [s: string]: string } | { foo: boolean }
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declare var m: Missing
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m.foo = 'hi'
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m.bar
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type RO = { foo: number } | { readonly [s: string]: string }
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declare var ro: RO
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ro.foo = 'not allowed'
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type Num = { '0': string } | { [n: number]: number }
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declare var num: Num
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num[0] = 1
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num['0'] = 'ok'
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const sym = Symbol()
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type Both = { s: number, '0': number, [sym]: boolean } | { [n: number]: number, [s: string]: string | number }
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declare var both: Both
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both['s'] = 'ok'
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both[0] = 1
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both[1] = 0 // not ok
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both[0] = 'not ok'
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both[sym] = 'not ok'
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