Microsoft/TypeScript
在 GitHub 查看Generic type comparison results in incorrect error when inferring from undefined type
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#57,203 建立於 2024年1月28日
Domain: Error MessagesHelp WantedPossible Improvement
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描述
🔎 Search Terms
"generics", "infer undefined type", "not assignable"
🕗 Version & Regression Information
- This changed between versions 3.6.3 and 3.7.5
⏯ Playground Link
💻 Code
type Generic<T> = {
// In this scenario, "InvalidType" is not defined
x: T extends InvalidType<infer S> ? S : 0
}
// Correct behaviour:
// Exactly matching generic type works correctly
const correct1: Generic<number> = {} as Generic<number>
// Non-matching generic type results in error (expected)
const correct2: Generic<number> = {} as Generic<string>
// Unexpected behavior
// More specific generic type results in a weird error:
// Type 'Generic<42>' is not assignable to type 'Generic<number>'.
// Type 'number' is not assignable to type '42'.
const invalid: Generic<number> = {} as Generic<42>
🙁 Actual behavior
TS error:
Type 'Generic<42>' is not assignable to type 'Generic<number>'.
Type 'number' is not assignable to type '42'.
🙂 Expected behavior
There should be no TypeScript error, or at least not a confusing error message like that.
It is not clear where the actual error comes from (undefined type InvalidType), and the current
error message does not really make sense - to a user it looks like the type comparison (42 -> number) was inverted (number -> 42).
Additional information about the issue
This also seems to happen in more complex scenarios where all involved types are correctly defined but another TS error like Type instantiation is excessively deep and possibly infinite occurs somewhere in the chain.