...T:
type Foo<T extends any[]> = [boolean, ...T, boolean]
In previous typescript version, you can only put '...T' to the last element of array. Put now you can also put it in the middle.
Labeld types in array:
type Address = [
streetNumber: number,
city: string,
state: string,
postal: number
]
function printAddress(...address: Address) {}
Recursive type alias:
Old way to do it, for example:
type JSONValue = | string | number | boolean | null | JSONArray | JSONObject; interface JSONObject { [k: string]: JSONValue } interface JSONArray extends Array<JSONValue> {}
We have to define JSONValue first as type, then use it inside interface of JSONObject.
In typescript v4, we can do:
type JSONValue = | string | number | boolean | null | JSONValue[] | { [k: string]: JSONValue }; interface JSONArray extends Array<JSONValue> {}