When you don’t want to repeat yourself, sometimes a type needs to be based on another type.
Mapped types build on the syntax for index signatures, which are used to declare the types of properties which have not been declared ahead of time:
tsTrytypeOnlyBoolsAndHorses = {[key : string]: boolean |Horse ;};constconforms :OnlyBoolsAndHorses = {del : true,rodney : false,};
A mapped type is a generic type which uses a union of PropertyKeys (frequently created via a keyof) to iterate through keys to create a type:
tsTrytypeOptionsFlags <Type > = {[Property in keyofType ]: boolean;};
In this example, OptionsFlags will take all the properties from the type Type and change their values to be a boolean.
tsTrytypeFeatures = {darkMode : () => void;newUserProfile : () => void;};typeFeatureOptions =OptionsFlags <Features >;
Mapping Modifiers
There are two additional modifiers which can be applied during mapping: readonly and ? which affect mutability and optionality respectively.
You can remove or add these modifiers by prefixing with - or +. If you don’t add a prefix, then + is assumed.
tsTry// Removes 'readonly' attributes from a type's propertiestypeCreateMutable <Type > = {-readonly [Property in keyofType ]:Type [Property ];};typeLockedAccount = {readonlyid : string;readonlyname : string;};typeUnlockedAccount =CreateMutable <LockedAccount >;
tsTry// Removes 'optional' attributes from a type's propertiestypeConcrete <Type > = {[Property in keyofType ]-?:Type [Property ];};typeMaybeUser = {id : string;name ?: string;age ?: number;};typeUser =Concrete <MaybeUser >;
Key Remapping via as
In TypeScript 4.1 and onwards, you can re-map keys in mapped types with an as clause in a mapped type:
tstype MappedTypeWithNewProperties<Type> = {[Properties in keyof Type as NewKeyType]: Type[Properties]}
You can leverage features like template literal types to create new property names from prior ones:
tsTrytypeGetters <Type > = {[Property in keyofType as `get${Capitalize <string &Property >}`]: () =>Type [Property ]};interfacePerson {name : string;age : number;location : string;}typeLazyPerson =Getters <Person >;
You can filter out keys by producing never via a conditional type:
tsTry// Remove the 'kind' propertytypeRemoveKindField <Type > = {[Property in keyofType asExclude <Property , "kind">]:Type [Property ]};interfaceCircle {kind : "circle";radius : number;}typeKindlessCircle =RemoveKindField <Circle >;
You can map over arbitrary unions, not just unions of string | number | symbol, but unions of any type:
tsTrytypeEventConfig <Events extends {kind : string }> = {[E inEvents asE ["kind"]]: (event :E ) => void;}typeSquareEvent = {kind : "square",x : number,y : number };typeCircleEvent = {kind : "circle",radius : number };typeConfig =EventConfig <SquareEvent |CircleEvent >
Further Exploration
Mapped types work well with other features in this type manipulation section, for example here is a mapped type using a conditional type which returns either a true or false depending on whether an object has the property pii set to the literal true:
tsTrytypeExtractPII <Type > = {[Property in keyofType ]:Type [Property ] extends {pii : true } ? true : false;};typeDBFields = {id : {format : "incrementing" };name : {type : string;pii : true };};typeObjectsNeedingGDPRDeletion =ExtractPII <DBFields >;