Never ever ever (joke)
Programming language design does have a concept of bottom type that is a natural outcome as soon as you do code flow analysis. TypeScript does code flow analysis (😎) and so it needs to reliably represent stuff that might never happen.
The never
type is used in TypeScript to denote this bottom type. Cases when it occurs naturally:
- A function never returns (e.g. if the function body has
while(true){}
) - A function always throws (e.g. in
function foo(){throw new Error('Not Implemented')}
the return type offoo
isnever
.
Of course you can use this annotation your self as well
let foo: never; // Okay
However never
can only ever be assigned to another never. e.g.
let foo: never = 123; // Error: Type number is not assignable to number
// Okay as the function's return type is `never`
let bar: never = (() => { throw new Error('Throw my hands in the air like I just dont care') })();
Great. Now lets just jump into its key use case :)
You can call never functions in a never context
function foo(x: string | number): boolean {
if (typeof x === "string") {
return true;
} else if (typeof x === "number") {
return false;
}
// Without a never type we would error :
// - Not all code paths return a value (strict null checks)
// - Or Unreachable code detected
// But because typescript understands that `fail` function returns `never`
// It can allow you to call it as you might be using it for runtime safety / exhaustive checks.
fail("Unexhaustive!");
}
function fail(message: string) { throw new Error(message); }
And because never
is only assignable to another never
you can use it for compile time exhaustive checks as well. This is covered in the discriminated union section.
As soon as someone tells you that never
is returned when a function never exits gracefully you intutively want to think of it as the same as void
However void
is a Unit. never
is a falsum.
A function that returns nothing returns a Unit void
. However a function that never returns (or always throws) returns never
. void
is something that can be assigned (without strictNullChecking
) but never
can never
be assigned to anything other than never
.