Safe way to extract property names
In TS 2.1 the keyof
keyword was introduced which made this possible:
function propertyOf<TObj>(name: keyof TObj) {
return name;
}
or
function propertiesOf<TObj>(_obj: (TObj | undefined) = undefined) {
return function result<T extends keyof TObj>(name: T) {
return name;
}
}
or using Proxy
export function proxiedPropertiesOf<TObj>(obj?: TObj) {
return new Proxy({}, {
get: (_, prop) => prop,
set: () => {
throw Error('Set not supported');
},
}) as {
[P in keyof TObj]?: P;
};
}
These can then be used like this:
propertyOf<MyInterface>("myProperty");
or
const myInterfaceProperties = propertiesOf<MyInterface>();
myInterfaceProperties("myProperty");
or
const myInterfaceProperties = propertiesOf(myObj);
myInterfaceProperties("myProperty");
or
const myInterfaceProperties = proxiedPropertiesOf<MyInterface>();
myInterfaceProperties.myProperty;
or
const myInterfaceProperties = proxiedPropertiesOf(myObj);
myInterfaceProperties.myProperty;
Right now there's not really a great way of doing this, but there are currently some open suggestions on github (See #1579, #394, and #1003).
What you can do, is what's shown in this answer—wrap referencing the property in a function, convert the function to a string, then extract the property name out of the string.
Here's a function to do that:
function getPropertyName(propertyFunction: Function) {
return /\.([^\.;]+);?\s*\}$/.exec(propertyFunction.toString())[1];
}
Then use it like so:
// nameProperty will hold "name"
const nameProperty = getPropertyName(() => this.state.name);
This might not work depending on how the code is minified so just watch out for that.
Update
It's safer to do this at compile time. I wrote ts-nameof so this is possible:
nameof<User>(s => s.name);
Compiles to:
"name";