Issue
Title says it all - why doesn't Object.keys(x) in TypeScript return the type Array<keyof typeof x>? That's what Object.keys does, so it seems like an obvious oversight on the part of the TypeScript definition file authors to not make the return type simply be keyof T.
Should I log a bug on their GitHub repo, or just go ahead and send a PR to fix it for them?
Solution
The current return type (string[]) is intentional. Why?
Consider some type like this:
interface Point {
    x: number;
    y: number;
}
You write some code like this:
function fn(k: keyof Point) {
    if (k === "x") {
        console.log("X axis");
    } else if (k === "y") {
        console.log("Y axis");
    } else {
        throw new Error("This is impossible");
    }
}
Let's ask a question:
In a well-typed program, can a legal call to
fnhit the error case?
The desired answer is, of course, "No". But what does this have to do with Object.keys?
Now consider this other code:
interface NamedPoint extends Point {
    name: string;
}
const origin: NamedPoint = { name: "origin", x: 0, y: 0 };
Note that according to TypeScript's type system, all NamedPoints are valid Points.
Now let's write a little more code:
function doSomething(pt: Point) {
    for (const k of Object.keys(pt)) {
        // A valid call iff Object.keys(pt) returns (keyof Point)[]
        fn(k);
    }
}
// Throws an exception
doSomething(origin);
Our well-typed program just threw an exception!
Something went wrong here!
By returning keyof T from Object.keys, we've violated the assumption that keyof T forms an exhaustive list, because having a reference to an object doesn't mean that the type of the reference isn't a supertype of the type of the value.
Basically, (at least) one of the following four things can't be true:
- keyof Tis an exhaustive list of the keys of- T
- A type with additional properties is always a subtype of its base type
- It is legal to alias a subtype value by a supertype reference
- Object.keysreturns- keyof T
Throwing away point 1 makes keyof nearly useless, because it implies that keyof Point might be some value that isn't "x" or "y".
Throwing away point 2 completely destroys TypeScript's type system. Not an option.
Throwing away point 3 also completely destroys TypeScript's type system.
Throwing away point 4 is fine and makes you, the programmer, think about whether or not the object you're dealing with is possibly an alias for a subtype of the thing you think you have.
The "missing feature" to make this legal but not contradictory is Exact Types, which would allow you to declare a new kind of type that wasn't subject to point #2. If this feature existed, it would presumably be possible to make Object.keys return keyof T only for Ts which were declared as exact.
Addendum: Surely generics, though?
Commentors have implied that Object.keys could safely return keyof T if the argument was a generic value. This is still wrong. Consider:
class Holder<T> {
    value: T;
    constructor(arg: T) {
        this.value = arg;
    }
    getKeys(): (keyof T)[] {
        // Proposed: This should be OK
        return Object.keys(this.value);
    }
}
const MyPoint = { name: "origin", x: 0, y: 0 };
const h = new Holder<{ x: number, y: number }>(MyPoint);
// Value 'name' inhabits variable of type 'x' | 'y'
const v: "x" | "y" = (h.getKeys())[0];
or this example, which doesn't even need any explicit type arguments:
function getKey<T>(x: T, y: T): keyof T {
    // Proposed: This should be OK
    return Object.keys(x)[0];
}
const obj1 = { name: "", x: 0, y: 0 };
const obj2 = { x: 0, y: 0 };
// Value "name" inhabits variable with type "x" | "y"
const s: "x" | "y" = getKey(obj1, obj2);
Answered By - Ryan Cavanaugh
 
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