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Reference Checker Widening Narrowing

Nathan Shively-Sanders edited this page Sep 2, 2022 · 1 revision

Widening and Narrowing in Typescript

Typescript has a number of related concepts in which a type gets treated temporarily as a similar type. Most of these concepts are internal-only. None of them are documented very well. For the internal concepts, we expect nobody needs to know about them to use the language. For the external concepts, we hope that they work well enough that most people still don't need to think about them. This document explains them all, aiming to help two audiences: (1) advanced users of Typescript who do need to understand the quirks of the language (2) contributors to the Typescript compiler.

The concepts covered in this document are as follows:

  1. Widening: treat an internal type as a normal one.
  2. Literal widening: treat a literal type as a primitive one.
  3. Narrowing: remove constituents from a union type.
  4. Instanceof narrowing: treat a type as a subclass.
  5. Apparent type: treat a non-object type as an object type.

Widening

Widening is the simplest operation of the bunch. The types null and undefined are converted to any. This happens recursively in object types, union types, and array types (including tuples).

Why widening? Well, historically, null and undefined were internal types that needed to be converted to any for downstream consumers and for display. With --strictNullChecks, widening doesn't happen any more. But without it, widening happens a lot, generally when obtaining a type from another object. Here are some examples:

// @strict: false
let x = null;

Here, null has the type null, but x has the type any because of widening on assignment. undefined works the same way. However, with --strict, null is preserved, so no widening will happen.

Literal widening

Literal widening is significantly more complex than "classic" widening. Basically, when literal widening happens, a literal type like "foo" or SomeEnum.Member gets treated as its base type: string or SomeEnum, respectively. The places where literals widen, however, cause the behaviour to be hard to understand. Literal widening is described fully at the literal widening PR and its followup.

When does literal widening happen?

There are two key points to understand about literal widening.

  1. Literal widening only happens to literal types that originate from expressions. These are called fresh literal types.
  2. Literal widening happens whenever a fresh literal type reaches a "mutable" location.

For example,

const one = 1; // 'one' has type: 1
let num = 1;   // 'num' has type: number

Let's break the first line down:

  1. 1 has the fresh literal type 1.
  2. 1 is assigned to const one, so one: 1. But the type 1 is still fresh! Remember that for later.

Meanwhile, on the second line:

  1. 1 has the fresh literal type 1.
  2. 1 is assigned to let num, a mutable location, so num: number.

Here's where it gets confusing. Look at this:

const one = 1;
let wat = one; // 'wat' has type: number

The first two steps are the same as the first example. The third step

  1. 1 has the fresh literal type 1.
  2. 1 is assigned to const one, so one: 1.
  3. one is assigned to wat, a mutable location, so wat: number.

This is pretty confusing! The fresh literal type 1 makes its way through the assignment to one down to the assignment to wat. But if you think about it, this is what you want in a real program:

const start = 1001;
const max = 100000;
// many (thousands?) of lines later ...
for (let i = start; i < max; i = i + 1) {
  // did I just write a for loop?
  // is this a C program?
}

If the type of i were 1001 then you couldn't write a for loop based on constants.

There are other places that widen besides assignment. Basically it's anywhere that mutation could happen:

const nums = [1, 2, 3]; // 'nums' has type: number[]
nums[0] = 101; // because Javascript arrays are always mutable

const doom = { e: 1, m: 1 }
doom.e = 2 // Mutable objects! We're doomed!

// Dooomed!
// Doomed!
// -gasp- Dooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooo-

What literal types widen?

  • Number literal types like 1 widen to number.
  • String literal types like 'hi' widen to string.
  • Boolean literal types like true widen to boolean.
  • Enum members widen to their containing enum.

An example of the last is:

enum State {
  Start,
  Expression,
  Term,
  End
}
const start = State.Start;
let state = start;
let ch = '';
while (ch = nextChar()) {
  switch (state) {
    // ... imagine your favourite tokeniser here
  }
}

Narrowing

Narrowing is essentially the removal of types from a union. It's happening all the time as you write code, especially if you use --strictNullChecks. To understand narrowing, you first need to understand the difference between "declared type" and "computed type".

The declared type of a variable is the one it's declared with. For let x: number | undefined, that's number | undefined. The computed type of a variable is the type of the variable as it's used in context. Here's an example:

// @strict: true
type Thing = { name: 'one' | 'two' };
function process(origin: Thing, extra?: Thing | undefined): void {
  preprocess(origin, extra);
  if (extra) {
    console.log(extra.name);
    if (extra.name === 'one') {
      // ...

extra's declared type is Thing | undefined, since it's an optional parameter. However, its computed type varies based on context. On the first line, in preprocess(origin, extra), its computed type is still Thing | undefined. However, inside the if (extra) block, extra's computed type is now just Thing because it can't possibly be undefined due to the if (extra) check. Narrowing has removed undefined from its type.

Similarly, the declared type of extra.name is 'one' | 'two', but inside the true branch of if (extra.name === 'one'), its computed type is just 'one'.

Narrowing mostly commonly removes all but one type from a union, but doesn't necessarily need to:

type Type = Anonymous | Class | Interface
function f(thing: string | number | boolean | object) {
  if (typeof thing === 'string' || typeof thing === 'number') {
    return lookup[thing];
  }
  else if (typeof thing === 'boolean' && thing) {
    return globalCachedThing;
  }
  else {
    return thing;
  }
}

Here, in the first if-block, thing narrows to string | number because the check allows it to be either string or number.

Instanceof Narrowing

Instanceof narrowing looks similar to normal narrowing, and behaves similarly, but its rules are somewhat different. It only applies to certain instanceof checks and type predicates.

Here's a use of instanceof that follows the normal narrowing rules:

class C { c: any }
function f(x: C | string) {
  if (x instanceof C) {
    // x is C here
  }
  else {
    // x is string here
  }
}

So far this follows the normal narrowing rules. But instanceof applies to subclasses too:

class D extends C { d: any }
function f(x: C) {
  if (x instanceof D) {
    // x is D here
  }
  else {
    // x is still just C here
  }
}

Unlike narrowing, instanceof narrowing doesn't remove any types to get x's computed type. It just notices that D is a subclass of C and changes the computed type to D inside the if (x instanceof D) block. In the else block x is still C.

If you mess up the class relationship, the compiler does its best to make sense of things:

class E { e: any } // doesn't extend C!
function f(x: C) {
  if (x instanceof E) {
    // x is C & E here
  }
  else {
    // x is still just C here
  }
}

The compiler thinks that something of type C can't also be instanceof E, but just in case, it sets the computed type of x to C & E, so that you can use the properties of E in the block — just be aware that the block will probably never execute!

Type predicates

Type predicates follow the same rules as instanceof when narrowing, and are just as subject to misuse. So this example is equivalent to the previous wonky one:

function isE(e: any): e is E {
  return e.e;
}
function f(x: C) {
  if (isE(x)) {
    // x is C & E here
  }
  else {
    // nope, still just C
  }
}

Apparent Type

In some situations you need to get the properties on a variable, even when it technically doesn't have properties. One example is primitives:

let n = 12
let s = n.toFixed()

12 doesn't technically have properties; Number does. In order to map number to Number, we define Number as the apparent type of number. Whenever the compiler needs to get properties of some type, it asks for the apparent type of that type first. This applies to other non-object types like type parameters:

interface Node {
  parent: Node;
  pos: number;
  kind: number;
}
function setParent<T extends Node>(node: T, parent: Node): T {
  node.parent = parent;
  return node;
}

T is a type parameter, which is just a placeholder. But its constraint is Node, so when the compiler checks node.parent, it gets the apparent type of T, which is Node. Then it sees that Node has a parent property.

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