Symbols
Starting with ECMAScript 2015, symbol
is a primitive data type, just like number
and string
.
symbol
values are created by calling the Symbol
constructor.
let sym1 = Symbol(); let sym2 = Symbol("key"); // optional string key
Symbols are immutable, and unique.
let sym2 = Symbol("key"); let sym3 = Symbol("key"); sym2 === sym3; // false, symbols are unique
Just like strings, symbols can be used as keys for object properties.
const sym = Symbol(); let obj = { [sym]: "value", }; console.log(obj[sym]); // "value"
Symbols can also be combined with computed property declarations to declare object properties and class members.
const getClassNameSymbol = Symbol(); class C { [getClassNameSymbol]() { return "C"; } } let c = new C(); let className = c[getClassNameSymbol](); // "C"
unique symbol
To enable treating symbols as unique literals a special type unique symbol
is available. unique symbol
is a subtype of symbol
, and are produced only from calling Symbol()
or Symbol.for()
, or from explicit type annotations. This type is only allowed on const
declarations and readonly static
properties, and in order to reference a specific unique symbol, you’ll have to use the typeof
operator. Each reference to a unique symbol implies a completely unique identity that’s tied to a given declaration.
declare const sym1: unique symbol; // sym2 can only be a constant reference. let sym2: unique symbol = Symbol(); // Works - refers to a unique symbol, but its identity is tied to 'sym1'. let sym3: typeof sym1 = sym1; // Also works. class C { static readonly StaticSymbol: unique symbol = Symbol(); }
Because each unique symbol
has a completely separate identity, no two unique symbol
types are assignable or comparable to each other.
const sym2 = Symbol(); const sym3 = Symbol(); if (sym2 === sym3) { // ... }
Well-known Symbols
In addition to user-defined symbols, there are well-known built-in symbols. Built-in symbols are used to represent internal language behaviors.
Here is a list of well-known symbols:
Symbol.hasInstance
A method that determines if a constructor object recognizes an object as one of the constructor’s instances. Called by the semantics of the instanceof operator.
Symbol.isConcatSpreadable
A Boolean value indicating that an object should be flattened to its array elements by Array.prototype.concat.
Symbol.iterator
A method that returns the default iterator for an object. Called by the semantics of the for-of statement.
Symbol.match
A regular expression method that matches the regular expression against a string. Called by the String.prototype.match
method.
Symbol.replace
A regular expression method that replaces matched substrings of a string. Called by the String.prototype.replace
method.
Symbol.search
A regular expression method that returns the index within a string that matches the regular expression. Called by the String.prototype.search
method.
Symbol.species
A function valued property that is the constructor function that is used to create derived objects.
Symbol.split
A regular expression method that splits a string at the indices that match the regular expression. Called by the String.prototype.split
method.
Symbol.toPrimitive
A method that converts an object to a corresponding primitive value. Called by the ToPrimitive
abstract operation.
Symbol.toStringTag
A String value that is used in the creation of the default string description of an object. Called by the built-in method Object.prototype.toString
.
Symbol.unscopables
An Object whose own property names are property names that are excluded from the ‘with’ environment bindings of the associated objects.
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Licensed under the Apache License, Version 2.0.
https://www.typescriptlang.org/docs/handbook/symbols.html