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require-exactly-one.d.ts
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require-exactly-one.d.ts
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// TODO: Remove this when we target TypeScript >=3.5.
type _Omit<T, K extends keyof any> = Pick<T, Exclude<keyof T, K>>;
/**
Create a type that requires exactly one of the given keys and disallows more. The remaining keys are kept as is.
Use-cases:
- Creating interfaces for components that only need one of the keys to display properly.
- Declaring generic keys in a single place for a single use-case that gets narrowed down via `RequireExactlyOne`.
The caveat with `RequireExactlyOne` is that TypeScript doesn't always know at compile time every key that will exist at runtime. Therefore `RequireExactlyOne` can't do anything to prevent extra keys it doesn't know about.
@example
```
import {RequireExactlyOne} from 'type-fest';
type Responder = {
text: () => string;
json: () => string;
secure: boolean;
};
const responder: RequireExactlyOne<Responder, 'text' | 'json'> = {
// Adding a `text` key here would cause a compile error.
json: () => '{"message": "ok"}',
secure: true
};
```
*/
export type RequireExactlyOne<ObjectType, KeysType extends keyof ObjectType = keyof ObjectType> =
{[Key in KeysType]: (
Required<Pick<ObjectType, Key>> &
Partial<Record<Exclude<KeysType, Key>, never>>
)}[KeysType] & _Omit<ObjectType, KeysType>;