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As part of my work as a TypeScript educator, I get asked a lot about the TypeScript utility types - especially about how to use them in application code. So, I'm starting a series on them - built around real-world examples.
Let's start with the Exclude
type helper.
type Fruit = "apple" | "banana" | "orange";
type Result = Exclude <Fruit , "orange">;
We can use Exclude
to remove a single member of a union. The first argument represents the full union, and the second argument represents the member to remove.
Technically, the second argument can be any type - TypeScript won't warn you if you try to remove a member that doesn't exist. It'll just return the original union.
type Result = Exclude <Fruit , "pear">;
type Event = "click" | "focus" | "change" | "abort";
type ClickAndFocusEvent = Exclude < Event ,
"change" | "abort"
>;
We can also use Exclude
to remove multiple members from a union. By passing a union to the second argument, we can remove multiple members at once.
Just like above, not all of those members need to exist in the original union:
type ClickAndFocusEvent = Exclude < Event ,
"change" | "abort" | "blur"
>;
type Event =
| {
type : "click";
}
| {
type : "focus";
}
| {
type : "change";
};
A discriminated union is a union, usually of objects, which have a common property that can be used to discriminate between them. In the example above, the type
property is used to discriminate between the different events.
We can extract a subset of the union by using Exclude
to remove all members that don't have a specific value for the type
property.
type Event =
| {
type : "click";
}
| {
type : "focus";
}
| {
type : "change";
};
type ClickAndFocusEvent = Exclude < Event ,
{ type : "change" }
>;
This works even if the members of the union have other properties attached to them.
type Event =
| {
type : "click";
x : number;
y : number;
}
| {
type : "focus";
}
| {
type : "change";
value : string;
};
type ClickAndFocusEvent = Exclude <Event , { type : "click" }>; // { type: 'focus' } | { type: 'change', value: string }
In the example above, the x
and y
properties don't need to be passed to Exclude
in order to remove the click
event.
type Event =
| {
type : "click";
}
| {
type : "focus";
}
| {
type : "change";
}
| {
type : "abort";
};
type ClickAndFocusEvent = Exclude < Event ,
{ type : "change" } | { type : "abort" }
>;
You can also remove multiple members of a discriminated union by passing a union to the second argument. This can either be a union of the members of the union, or a union of the type
property:
type ClickAndFocusEvent = Exclude < Event ,
{ type : "change" | "abort" }
>;
type Routes =
| {
route : "/user";
search : {
id : string;
};
}
| {
route : "/user/create";
}
| {
route : "/user/edit";
search : {
id : string;
};
};
type RoutesWithoutSearch = Exclude < Routes ,
{
search : any;
}
>;
You don't need to include the 'discriminator' (in this case, route
) in the second argument to Exclude
. You can just pass the shape of the members you want to remove.
In the example above, we're removing all members of the Routes
union that have a search
property.
type PossibleTypes = "admin" | "user" | 0 | 1 | 2;
type StringTypes = Exclude <PossibleTypes , number>;
Exclude also works on basic types. In the example above, we're removing all literals that match number
from the PossibleTypes
union.
This can be useful if you want to remove all strings from a union, or all numbers, or all booleans.
type ObjectKey =
| "userId"
| "postId"
| "userName"
| "postName";
type PostKey = Exclude < ObjectKey ,
`${string}${"user"}${string}`
>;
You can use Exclude
to remove all strings from a union that contain a specific substring.
In the example above, we're removing all strings that contain the substring user
from the ObjectKey
union.
We use a template literal to represent the string we want to remove - in this case, user
. We then use the ${string}
syntax to represent any string that comes before or after the substring we want to remove.
type ObjectKey =
| "userId"
| "postId"
| "id"
| "userName"
| "postName";
type NonIdKey = Exclude < ObjectKey ,
`${string}${"id" | "Id"}${string}`
>;
You can also use Exclude
to remove all strings from a union that contain one of several possible substrings.
In the example above, we're removing all strings that contain either id
or Id
from the ObjectKey
union. By passing a union to the template literal, we can remove multiple substrings at once.
type ObjectKey =
| "userId"
| "postId"
| "id"
| "userName"
| "postName";
type NonNameKey = Exclude <ObjectKey , `${string}Name`>;
You can use Exclude
to remove all strings from a union that have a certain prefix or suffix.
In the example above, we're removing all strings that end with Name
from the ObjectKey
union.
Here, ${string}
is used to represent a string of any length that comes before the substring we want to remove.
To switch this over to match a certain prefix, we can move ${string}
to the end of the template literal instead.
Exclude
is a very powerful utility type that can be used in a variety of ways. If you have other examples of how you've used Exclude
, let me know on my TypeScript Wizards Discord!
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It's a massive ship day. We're launching a free TypeScript book, new course, giveaway, price cut, and sale.
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