Typescript: difference between String and string

Here is an example that shows the differences, which will help with the explanation.

var s1 = new String("Avoid newing things where possible");
var s2 = "A string, in TypeScript of type 'string'";
var s3: string;

String is the JavaScript String type, which you could use to create new strings. Nobody does this as in JavaScript the literals are considered better, so s2 in the example above creates a new string without the use of the new keyword and without explicitly using the String object.

string is the TypeScript string type, which you can use to type variables, parameters and return values.

Additional notes...

Currently (Feb 2013) Both s1 and s2 are valid JavaScript. s3 is valid TypeScript.

Use of String. You probably never need to use it, string literals are universally accepted as being the correct way to initialise a string. In JavaScript, it is also considered better to use object literals and array literals too:

var arr = []; // not var arr = new Array();
var obj = {}; // not var obj = new Object();

If you really had a penchant for the string, you could use it in TypeScript in one of two ways...

var str: String = new String("Hello world"); // Uses the JavaScript String object
var str: string = String("Hello World"); // Uses the TypeScript string type

The two types are distinct in JavaScript as well as TypeScript - TypeScript just gives us syntax to annotate and check types as we go along.

String refers to an object instance that has String.prototype in its prototype chain. You can get such an instance in various ways e.g. new String('foo') and Object('foo'). You can test for an instance of the String type with the instanceof operator, e.g. myString instanceof String.

string is one of JavaScript's primitive types, and string values are primarily created with literals e.g. 'foo' and "bar", and as the result type of various functions and operators. You can test for string type using typeof myString === 'string'.

The vast majority of the time, string is the type you should be using - almost all API interfaces that take or return strings will use it. All JS primitive types will be wrapped (boxed) with their corresponding object types when using them as objects, e.g. accessing properties or calling methods. Since String is currently declared as an interface rather than a class in TypeScript's core library, structural typing means that string is considered a subtype of String which is why your first line passes compilation type checks.


In JavaScript strings can be either string primitive type or string objects. The following code shows the distinction:

var a: string = 'test'; // string literal
var b: String = new String('another test'); // string wrapper object

console.log(typeof a); // string
console.log(typeof b); // object

Your error:

Type 'String' is not assignable to type 'string'. 'string' is a primitive, but 'String' is a wrapper object. Prefer using 'string' when possible.

Is thrown by the TS compiler because you tried to assign the type string to a string object type (created via new keyword). The compiler is telling you that you should use the type string only for strings primitive types and you can't use this type to describe string object types.

Tags:

Typescript