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Improved checkJS #285
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Improved checkJS #285
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Also simplify and modify type aliases where necessary. Note that I haven't fixed any implicit any errors. I also kept the balance between d.ts and jsdoc about the same. In lib/formats.ts, stricter call is unable to handle the multiple overloads of String.prototype.replace, so I had to manually type it to the one I wanted. In lib/q.d.ts, ObjectCoercible and ObjectIndexable were effectively the same, so I removed ObjectIndexable. Also, `{}` subsumes primitive, so I changed it to `object`: ```ts type ObjectCoercible = object | NonNullishPrimitive; ``` I changed some similar types that were almost right: `Concatable<object>` needs to be `Concatable<{}>` because of the way it's used in utility.compact, and `object | Primitive` is the same as `unknown`, so I changed `Value` to `Concatable<unknown>`. In lib/utils.js, I had to edit `merge` in a few places. At least a couple of the edits looked like they were fixing potential bugs, but I had trouble visualising the execution of `merge` so I can't be sure. 1. When `typeof source !== "object"`, it could still be `"boolean"`, but booleans can't be used to index into Object.prototype, so I added an additional guard. 2. `typeof target !== "object"` is always false, so I deleted the branch that used it; the code inside was a type error because the compiler thinks it can't be reached. I couldn't convince myself that it was wrong. 3. Narrowing by element access failed, so I had to create a `const tmp = target[i]` before checking that `typeof tmp === "object"`. 4. In `compact`, and I had to add a type annotation to `queue` and then a cast when pushing into it. The former isn't that surprising, considering that it's supposed to have a complex type that we can't infer. The latter is a result of checks that prove that the object structure has a recursive level that needs to be compacted, but the compiler can't follow the checks and needs to be told explicitly about the type. In tsconfig.json, I had to manually set `"target": "esnext"` to avoid some bogus errors. Breakdown of the changes: * 4 cases where the compiler failed and needed a workaround * 2 possible bugs * 3 cases where the type system is full of confusing, similar types
Note that qs.d.ts remains. The other d.ts files were actually confusing the compiler's module resolution such that `var x = require('./x')` would assign the type `any` to `x` when both `x.js` and `x.d.ts` existed. With better typings, I had to fix a number of discrepancies, mainly in the types: In parse.js, the options initialisation pattern is not well-understood by the compiler and requires a type annotation for the initial assignment, then an temp variable with a cast once all the values have been filled in: ```js var internalOptions = /** @type {ParseOptionsInternal} */(options); ``` The Typescript-like pattern would be more like: ```js /** @type {ParseOptions} */ var options = opts ? utils.assign({}, opts) : {}; var internalOptions = { ignoreQueryPrefix: options.ignoreQueryPrefix === true, // ... } ``` In q.d.ts, I had to unsimplify `type Value = Concatable<object | Primitive>`. Turns out `unknown` doesn't narrow correctly. util.compact's type is actually `object => object` not `ObjectCoercible => ObjectCoercible`, since it doesn't appear to ever return a primitive. The rest of the type changes were just correcting discrepencies in the options types since the checker wasn't really checking those because of the duplicate d.ts files. In stringify, the filter can be an array of string or number. However, in this case, elements of the filter array end up used in places where only a string is expected. I inserted a couple of conversions to string where required. In the parse tests, a few tests rely on the fact that a previous test asserts that a field exists, but the type system doesn't know this to be true. I just annotated these instances with `any` because the type checking isn't adding value here.
Global aliases like Nullish are now global so they don't need to be imported. I also introduced `type NonPrimitive = object` to work around the way Typescript treats `object` as `any` in JS. The move required hardly any changes; in fact, I basically restored the annotations from commit 856582e with updates for the fixes in my previous commits. Introducing NonPrimitive required a few changes since `object` is stricter than `any`. The most annoying is a cast on ```js /** @type {any} */([]).concat(leaf); ``` Because with strictNullChecks on, the type of `[]` is `never[]`, which is technically correct but usually annoying. (strictNullChecks is usually not a good fit for JS codebases that don't want to adopt Typescript idioms completely, and `[].concat` is the best example of this.)
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Moves most types back to JSDoc and fixes a few remaining type errors. Each commit has a discussion of what changed, and the commits are organised so that their diffs should individually be readable. I'm happy to discuss the hows and whys, since I want to understand what it's like to adopt checkJS for a JS expert.