How do you get inferred type from a typescript AST?
Asked Answered
U

2

9

I'm using the built-in parser to generate the AST from source code:

const ts = require('typescript')
//...
const ast = ts.createSourceFile(filename, fs.readFileSync(filename).toString(), ts.ScriptTarget.ES6, true)

Is there a way to get the inferred type of a variable from the AST? For example, in the code below, bar is of type IBar. The compiler knows about that type---bar.foo() doesn't compile---how can I programmatically get the type?

interface IBar { bar() } 
const foo : IBar = //...
export const bar = foo
Undue answered 12/1, 2016 at 5:19 Comment(0)
A
5

The compiler knows about that type---bar.foo() doesn't compile---how can I programmatically get the type?

The AST is not the complete story for TypeChecking. You need a TypeChecker.

The simplest solution is to create a program (some docs https://basarat.gitbooks.io/typescript/content/docs/compiler/program.html) and then use program.getTypeChecker (more docs https://basarat.gitbooks.io/typescript/content/docs/compiler/checker.html) 🌹

Aphotic answered 12/1, 2016 at 5:46 Comment(2)
added details in my answer. Care to add anything?Undue
Sadly, this answer is why link-type answers are recommended against :(Panpipe
U
4

As far as I can tell this does the trick:

// load typechecker for file
const program = ts.createProgram([filename], {});
const typeChecker = program.getTypeChecker()
// now get ast
const ast = ts.createSourceFile(filename, filecontents, ts.ScriptTarget.ES6, true))
// get node under question using ts.forEachChild (not shown here)
const node = // ...

const type = typeChecker.getTypeAtLocation(node);

The only weird part is that in a variable declaration, the "node" must be the value (aka FirstLiteralToken) and not the label (aka Identifier)---otherwise, the type is undefined. For example, if the file contents are const foo = 123, passing the node for "foo" to typeChecker#getTypeAtLocation won't work. You must pass the node for "123"

Undue answered 15/1, 2016 at 3:54 Comment(1)
This doens't solve the problem posed in the question...almostUndue

© 2022 - 2024 — McMap. All rights reserved.