TypeScript Deep Dive
  • README
  • Getting Started
    • Why TypeScript
  • JavaScript
    • Equality
    • References
    • Null vs. Undefined
    • this
    • Closure
    • Number
    • Truthy
  • Future JavaScript Now
    • Classes
      • Classes Emit
    • Arrow Functions
    • Rest Parameters
    • let
    • const
    • Destructuring
    • Spread Operator
    • for...of
    • Iterators
    • Template Strings
    • Promise
    • Generators
    • Async Await
  • Project
    • Compilation Context
      • tsconfig.json
      • Which Files?
    • Declaration Spaces
    • Modules
      • File Module Details
      • global.d.ts
    • Namespaces
    • Dynamic Import Expressions
  • Node.js QuickStart
  • Browser QuickStart
  • Library QuickStart
  • TypeScript's Type System
    • JS Migration Guide
    • @types
    • Ambient Declarations
      • Declaration Files
      • Variables
    • Interfaces
    • Enums
    • lib.d.ts
    • Functions
    • Callable
    • Type Assertion
    • Freshness
    • Type Guard
    • Literal Types
    • Readonly
    • Generics
    • Type Inference
    • Type Compatibility
    • Never Type
    • Discriminated Unions
    • Index Signatures
    • Moving Types
    • Exception Handling
    • Mixins
  • JSX
    • React
    • Non React JSX
  • Options
    • noImplicitAny
    • strictNullChecks
  • Errors in TypeScript
    • Interpreting Errors
    • Common Errors
  • NPM
  • Testing
    • Jest
    • Cypress
  • Tools
    • Prettier
    • Husky
    • ESLint
    • Changelog
  • TIPs
    • String Based Enums
    • Nominal Typing
    • Stateful Functions
    • Currying
    • Type Instantiation
    • Lazy Object Literal Initialization
    • Classes are Useful
    • Avoid Export Default
    • Limit Property Setters
    • outFile caution
    • JQuery tips
    • static constructors
    • singleton pattern
    • Function parameters
    • Build Toggles
    • Barrel
    • Create Arrays
    • Typesafe Event Emitter
  • StyleGuide
  • TypeScript Compiler Internals
    • Program
    • AST
      • TIP: Visit Children
      • TIP: SyntaxKind enum
      • Trivia
    • Scanner
    • Parser
      • Parser Functions
    • Binder
      • Binder Functions
      • Binder Declarations
      • Binder Container
      • Binder SymbolTable
      • Binder Error Reporting
    • Checker
      • Checker Diagnostics
      • Checker Error Reporting
    • Emitter
      • Emitter Functions
      • Emitter SourceMaps
    • Contributing
Powered by GitBook
On this page
  1. Options

noImplicitAny

There are some things that cannot be inferred or inferring them might result in unexpected errors. A fine example is function arguments. If you don't annotate them, its unclear what should and shouldn't be valid e.g.

function log(someArg) {
  sendDataToServer(someArg);
}

// What arg is valid and what isn't?
log(123);
log('hello world');

So if you don't annotate some function argument, TypeScript assumes any and moves on. This essentially turns off type checking for such cases, which is what a JavaScript dev would expect. But this can catch people that want high safety off guard. Hence there is an option, noImplicitAny, that when switched on will flag the cases where the type cannot be inferred e.g.

function log(someArg) { // Error : someArg has an implicit `any` type
  sendDataToServer(someArg);
}

Of course you can then go ahead and annotate:

function log(someArg: number) {
  sendDataToServer(someArg);
}

And if you truly want zero safety you can mark it explicitly as any:

function log(someArg: any) {
  sendDataToServer(someArg);
}
PreviousOptionsNextstrictNullChecks

Last updated 5 years ago