Microsoft/TypeScript
在 GitHub 查看Empty rest parameter type inferred from candidate function with no rest parameters when "best match" contains a contextually typed argument
Open
#52,227 创建于 2023年1月13日
Experience EnhancementHelp WantedSuggestion
仓库指标
- Star
- (48,455 star)
- PR 合并指标
- (平均合并 6天 17小时) (30 天内合并 9 个 PR)
描述
Bug Report
🔎 Search Terms
Rest parameter inference contextual
🕗 Version & Regression Information
- This is the behavior in every version I tried, and I reviewed the FAQ for entries about type inference
⏯ Playground Link
Playground link with relevant code
💻 Code
const doSomething = <Args extends unknown[]>(
fn1: (aNumber: number, ...rest: Args) => void,
fn2: (aNumber: number, ...rest: Args) => void,
) => {}
// OK, no contextual types
doSomething(
(explicit: number, rest: string) => {}, // Args = [string]
() => {},
)
// OK (both contain contextually typed arg)
doSomething(
(contextual, rest: string) => {}, // Args = [string]
(contextual) => {},
)
// Contextually type only fn1 - Not ok
doSomething(
(contextual, rest: string) => {}, // ERROR
() => {}, // Args = []
)
doSomething(
(contextual, rest: string) => {}, // ERROR
(explicit: number) => {}, // Args = []
)
🙁 Actual behavior
When fn1 (and only fn1) contains a contextually typed argument, it is ignored in favour of fn2
🙂 Expected behavior
In all of the examples, fn2 specifies no rest parameters at all.
I would expect functions that do not specify any rest parameters to always be the least preferable candidate (lowest weight?) for rest parameter inference, since "no rest parameters" can always be assigned to any rest parameter type.