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Leer Exhaustive Handling and never Checks | Discriminated Unions and Exhaustive Handling
Error Handling and Type Guards in TypeScript

bookExhaustive Handling and never Checks

Exhaustive handling is a crucial concept when working with discriminated unions in TypeScript. Discriminated unions allow you to model data that can take on several related shapes, each distinguished by a common property called the discriminant. This discriminant property—often named something like kind, type, or status—lets you write code that checks for each possible case in a safe and predictable way. By using exhaustive handling, you ensure that every possible variant of your union type is accounted for, which prevents runtime errors if new cases are added in the future.

When you use a switch statement or a series of if checks on the discriminant property, TypeScript can verify that you have covered all possible cases. If you miss a case, TypeScript can warn you—especially when you use the never type as a safety net. This connection between discriminated unions and the need for never checks is what makes TypeScript's type system so powerful for modeling and maintaining complex codebases. By enforcing exhaustive handling, you make your code more robust and future-proof, catching mistakes at compile time rather than at runtime.

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Which of the following is most commonly used as the discriminant property in a discriminated union?

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Sectie 2. Hoofdstuk 4

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bookExhaustive Handling and never Checks

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Exhaustive handling is a crucial concept when working with discriminated unions in TypeScript. Discriminated unions allow you to model data that can take on several related shapes, each distinguished by a common property called the discriminant. This discriminant property—often named something like kind, type, or status—lets you write code that checks for each possible case in a safe and predictable way. By using exhaustive handling, you ensure that every possible variant of your union type is accounted for, which prevents runtime errors if new cases are added in the future.

When you use a switch statement or a series of if checks on the discriminant property, TypeScript can verify that you have covered all possible cases. If you miss a case, TypeScript can warn you—especially when you use the never type as a safety net. This connection between discriminated unions and the need for never checks is what makes TypeScript's type system so powerful for modeling and maintaining complex codebases. By enforcing exhaustive handling, you make your code more robust and future-proof, catching mistakes at compile time rather than at runtime.

question mark

Which of the following is most commonly used as the discriminant property in a discriminated union?

Select the correct answer

Was alles duidelijk?

Hoe kunnen we het verbeteren?

Bedankt voor je feedback!

Sectie 2. Hoofdstuk 4
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