I would like to iterate a TypeScript enum object and get each enumerated symbol name, for example: enum myEnum { entry1, entry2 }
for (var entry in myEnum) {
// use entry's name here, e.g., "entry1"
}
for (const [name, value] of MyEnum) {
to Typescript. Hopefully this will be easier one day!
EnumType.name()
method.
Though the answer is already provided, Almost no one pointed to the docs
Here's a snippet
enum Enum {
A
}
let nameOfA = Enum[Enum.A]; // "A"
Keep in mind that string enum members do not get a reverse mapping generated at all.
The code you posted will work; it will print out all the members of the enum, including the values of the enum members. For example, the following code:
enum myEnum { bar, foo }
for (var enumMember in myEnum) {
console.log("enum member: ", enumMember);
}
Will print the following:
Enum member: 0
Enum member: 1
Enum member: bar
Enum member: foo
If you instead want only the member names, and not the values, you could do something like this:
for (var enumMember in myEnum) {
var isValueProperty = Number(enumMember) >= 0
if (isValueProperty) {
console.log("enum member: ", myEnum[enumMember]);
}
}
That will print out just the names:
Enum member: bar
Enum member: foo
Caveat: this slightly relies on an implementation detail: TypeScript compiles enums to a JS object with the enum values being members of the object. If TS decided to implement them different in the future, the above technique could break.
+enumMember >= 0
should be isFinite(+enumMember)
because negative or floating point values get reverse mapped too. (Playground)
00111
, you need to exclude these too
For me an easier, practical and direct way to understand what is going on, is that the following enumeration:
enum colors { red, green, blue };
Will be converted essentially to this:
var colors = { red: 0, green: 1, blue: 2,
[0]: "red", [1]: "green", [2]: "blue" }
Because of this, the following will be true:
colors.red === 0
colors[colors.red] === "red"
colors["red"] === 0
This creates a easy way to get the name of an enumerated as follows:
var color: colors = colors.red;
console.log("The color selected is " + colors[color]);
It also creates a nice way to convert a string to an enumerated value.
var colorName: string = "green";
var color: colors = colors.red;
if (colorName in colors) color = colors[colorName];
The two situations above are far more common situation, because usually you are far more interested in the name of a specific value and serializing values in a generic way.
If you only search for the names and iterate later use:
Object.keys(myEnum).map(key => myEnum[key]).filter(value => typeof value === 'string') as string[];
Object.values(myEnum).filter(value => typeof value === 'string') as string[];
Object.values(myEnum).filter(value => typeof value === 'string').map(key => { return {id: myEnum[key], type: key }; });
Object.keys(myEnum)
enough to get an array with of key names in an enum object?
Object.entries(temp1).splice(Object.keys(temp1).length/2)
so we get the entries
Assuming you stick to the rules and only produce enums with numeric values, you can use this code. This correctly handles the case where you have a name that is coincidentally a valid number
enum Color {
Red,
Green,
Blue,
"10" // wat
}
var names: string[] = [];
for(var n in Color) {
if(typeof Color[n] === 'number') names.push(n);
}
console.log(names); // ['Red', 'Green', 'Blue', '10']
With current TypeScript Version 1.8.9 I use typed Enums:
export enum Option {
OPTION1 = <any>'this is option 1',
OPTION2 = <any>'this is option 2'
}
with results in this Javascript object:
Option = {
"OPTION1": "this is option 1",
"OPTION2": "this is option 2",
"this is option 1": "OPTION1",
"this is option 2": "OPTION2"
}
so I have to query through keys and values and only return values:
let optionNames: Array<any> = [];
for (let enumValue in Option) {
let optionNameLength = optionNames.length;
if (optionNameLength === 0) {
this.optionNames.push([enumValue, Option[enumValue]]);
} else {
if (this.optionNames[optionNameLength - 1][1] !== enumValue) {
this.optionNames.push([enumValue, Option[enumValue]]);
}
}
}
And I receive the option keys in an Array:
optionNames = [ "OPTION1", "OPTION2" ];
optionNames = [["OPTION1", "this is option 1"], ["OPTION2", "this is option 2"]]
, but overall I appreciate your idea of removing double reversed entries, everyone else here considers that value is always a number
As of TypeScript 2.4, enums can contain string intializers https://www.typescriptlang.org/docs/handbook/release-notes/typescript-2-4.html
This allows you to write:
enum Order {
ONE = "First",
TWO = "Second"
}
console.log(`One is ${Order.ONE.toString()}`);
and get this output:
One is First
It seems that none of the answers here will work with string-enums in strict
-mode.
Consider enum as:
enum AnimalEnum {
dog = "dog", cat = "cat", mouse = "mouse"
}
Accessing this with AnimalEnum["dog"]
may result in an error like:
Element implicitly has an 'any' type because expression of type 'any' can't be used to index type 'typeof AnimalEnum'.ts(7053)
.
Proper solution for that case, write it as:
AnimalEnum["dog" as keyof typeof AnimalEnum]
keyof
with typeof
! Other solution seems pretty opaque, but after all I think Typescript needs to keep improve on DX - Developer Experience for Enum
This solution work too.
enum ScreenType {
Edit = 1,
New = 2,
View = 4
}
var type: ScreenType = ScreenType.Edit;
console.log(ScreenType[type]); //Edit
In a nutshell
if your enums
is as below:
export enum Colors1 {
Red = 1,
Green = 2,
Blue = 3
}
to get specific text and value:
console.log(Colors1.Red); // 1
console.log(Colors1[Colors1.Red]); // Red
to get list of value and text:
public getTextAndValues(e: { [s: number]: string }) {
for (const enumMember in e) {
if (parseInt(enumMember, 10) >= 0) {
console.log(e[enumMember]) // Value, such as 1,2,3
console.log(parseInt(enumMember, 10)) // Text, such as Red,Green,Blue
}
}
}
this.getTextAndValues(Colors1)
if your enums
is as below:
export enum Colors2 {
Red = "Red",
Green = "Green",
Blue = "Blue"
}
to get specific text and value:
console.log(Colors2.Red); // Red
console.log(Colors2["Red"]); // Red
to get list of value and text:
public getTextAndValues(e: { [s: string]: string }) {
for (const enumMember in e) {
console.log(e[enumMember]);// Value, such as Red,Green,Blue
console.log(enumMember); // Text, such as Red,Green,Blue
}
}
this.getTextAndValues(Colors2)
thsi
it's easy to imply the code wasn't ever compiled.
enum A { B = -1 }
is perfectly valid.
Let ts-enum-util
(github, npm) do the work for you and provide a lot of additional type-safe utilities. Works with both string and numeric enums, properly ignoring the numeric index reverse lookup entries for numeric enums:
String enum:
import {$enum} from "ts-enum-util";
enum Option {
OPTION1 = 'this is option 1',
OPTION2 = 'this is option 2'
}
// type: ("OPTION1" | "OPTION2")[]
// value: ["OPTION1", "OPTION2"]
const keys= $enum(Option).getKeys();
// type: Option[]
// value: ["this is option 1", "this is option 2"]
const values = $enum(Option).getValues();
Numeric enum:
enum Option {
OPTION1,
OPTION2
}
// type: ("OPTION1" | "OPTION2")[]
// value: ["OPTION1", "OPTION2"]
const keys= $enum(Option).getKeys();
// type: Option[]
// value: [0, 1]
const values = $enum(Option).getValues();
"0"
and 0
. Also, size of the library is ridiculous.
"0"
and 0
? And about the size of the library, are you just looking at the total size of the NPM package? The size of the raw code itself is pretty small. Most of the package size is documentation (code comments and markdown files), and the fully documented source code is included with source maps for debugging.
Another interesting solution found here is using ES6 Map:
export enum Type {
low,
mid,
high
}
export const TypeLabel = new Map<number, string>([
[Type.low, 'Low Season'],
[Type.mid, 'Mid Season'],
[Type.high, 'High Season']
]);
USE
console.log(TypeLabel.get(Type.low)); // Low Season
I got tired looking through incorrect answers, and did it myself.
THIS ONE HAS TESTS.
Works with all types of enumerations.
Correctly typed.
type EnumKeys<Enum> = Exclude<keyof Enum, number>
const enumObject = <Enum extends Record<string, number | string>>(e: Enum) => {
const copy = {...e} as { [K in EnumKeys<Enum>]: Enum[K] };
Object.values(e).forEach(value => typeof value === 'number' && delete copy[value]);
return copy;
};
const enumKeys = <Enum extends Record<string, number | string>>(e: Enum) => {
return Object.keys(enumObject(e)) as EnumKeys<Enum>[];
};
const enumValues = <Enum extends Record<string, number | string>>(e: Enum) => {
return [...new Set(Object.values(enumObject(e)))] as Enum[EnumKeys<Enum>][];
};
enum Test1 { A = "C", B = "D"}
enum Test2 { A, B }
enum Test3 { A = 0, B = "C" }
enum Test4 { A = "0", B = "C" }
enum Test5 { undefined = "A" }
enum Test6 { A = "undefined" }
enum Test7 { A, B = "A" }
enum Test8 { A = "A", B = "A" }
enum Test9 { A = "B", B = "A" }
console.log(enumObject(Test1)); // {A: "C", B: "D"}
console.log(enumObject(Test2)); // {A: 0, B: 1}
console.log(enumObject(Test3)); // {A: 0, B: "C"}
console.log(enumObject(Test4)); // {A: "0", B: "C"}
console.log(enumObject(Test5)); // {undefined: "A"}
console.log(enumObject(Test6)); // {A: "undefined"}
console.log(enumObject(Test7)); // {A: 0,B: "A"}
console.log(enumObject(Test8)); // {A: "A", B: "A"}
console.log(enumObject(Test9)); // {A: "B", B: "A"}
console.log(enumKeys(Test1)); // ["A", "B"]
console.log(enumKeys(Test2)); // ["A", "B"]
console.log(enumKeys(Test3)); // ["A", "B"]
console.log(enumKeys(Test4)); // ["A", "B"]
console.log(enumKeys(Test5)); // ["undefined"]
console.log(enumKeys(Test6)); // ["A"]
console.log(enumKeys(Test7)); // ["A", "B"]
console.log(enumKeys(Test8)); // ["A", "B"]
console.log(enumKeys(Test9)); // ["A", "B"]
console.log(enumValues(Test1)); // ["C", "D"]
console.log(enumValues(Test2)); // [0, 1]
console.log(enumValues(Test3)); // [0, "C"]
console.log(enumValues(Test4)); // ["0", "C"]
console.log(enumValues(Test5)); // ["A"]
console.log(enumValues(Test6)); // ["undefined"]
console.log(enumValues(Test7)); // [0, "A"]
console.log(enumValues(Test8)); // ["A"]
console.log(enumValues(Test9)); // ["B", "A"]
Assume you have an enum
export enum SCROLL_LABEL_OFFSET {
SMALL = 48,
REGULAR = 60,
LARGE = 112
}
and you want to create a type based on enum but not just copy and paste. You could use an enum
to create your type
like this:
export type ScrollLabelOffset = keyof typeof SCROLL_LABEL_OFFSET;
In result you will receive a type
with possible values as 'SMALL' | 'REGULAR' | 'LARGE'
Starting from TypeScript 2.4, the enum would not contain the key as a member anymore. source from TypeScript readme
The caveat is that string-initialized enums can't be reverse-mapped to get the original enum member name. In other words, you can't write Colors["RED"] to get the string "Red".
My solution:
export const getColourKey = (value: string ) => {
let colourKey = '';
for (const key in ColourEnum) {
if (value === ColourEnum[key]) {
colourKey = key;
break;
}
}
return colourKey;
};
In TypeScript, an enum is compiled to a map (to get the value from the key) in javascript:
enum MyEnum {
entry0,
entry1,
}
console.log(MyEnum['entry0']); // 0
console.log(MyEnum['entry1']); // 1
It also creates a reversed map (to get the key from the value):
console.log(MyEnum[0]); // 'entry0'
console.log(MyEnum[0]); // 'entry1'
So you can access the name of an entry by doing:
console.log(MyEnum[MyEnum.entry0]); // 'entry0'
console.log(MyEnum[MyEnum.entry1]); // 'entry1'
However, string enum has no reverse map by design (see comment and pull request) because this could lead to conflict between keys and values in the map object.
enum MyEnum {
entry0 = 'value0',
entry1 = 'value1',
}
console.log(MyEnum['value0']); // undefined
console.log(MyEnum['value1']); // undefined
If you want to force your string enum to compile a reversed map (you then have to make sure all the keys and values are different), you can use this trick:
enum MyEnum {
entry0 = <any>'value0',
entry1 = <any>'value1',
}
console.log(MyEnum['value0']); // 'entry0'
console.log(MyEnum['value1']); // 'entry1'
console.log(MyEnum[MyEnum.entry0]); // 'entry0'
console.log(MyEnum[MyEnum.entry1]); // 'entry1'
Based on some answers above I came up with this type-safe function signature:
export function getStringValuesFromEnum<T>(myEnum: T): (keyof T)[] {
return Object.keys(myEnum).filter(k => typeof (myEnum as any)[k] === 'number') as any;
}
Usage:
enum myEnum { entry1, entry2 };
const stringVals = getStringValuesFromEnum(myEnum);
the type of stringVals
is 'entry1' | 'entry2'
(keyof T)[]
instead of keyof T
. Also, the export
stops your playground from working.
You can use the enum-values
package I wrote when I had the same problem:
var names = EnumValues.getNames(myEnum);
Object.keys(e).filter(key => isNaN(+key))
, which will not work with string enums, etc, right?
The only solution that works for me in all cases (even if values are strings) is the following :
var enumToString = function(enumType, enumValue) {
for (var enumMember in enumType) {
if (enumType[enumMember]==enumValue) return enumMember
}
}
According to TypeScript documentation, we can do this via Enum with static functions.
Get Enum Name with static functions
enum myEnum {
entry1,
entry2
}
namespace myEnum {
export function GetmyEnumName(m: myEnum) {
return myEnum[m];
}
}
now we can call it like below
myEnum.GetmyEnumName(myEnum.entry1);
// result entry1
for reading more about Enum with static function follow the below link https://basarat.gitbooks.io/typescript/docs/enums.html
I wrote an EnumUtil class which is making a type check by the enum value:
export class EnumUtils {
/**
* Returns the enum keys
* @param enumObj enum object
* @param enumType the enum type
*/
static getEnumKeys(enumObj: any, enumType: EnumType): any[] {
return EnumUtils.getEnumValues(enumObj, enumType).map(value => enumObj[value]);
}
/**
* Returns the enum values
* @param enumObj enum object
* @param enumType the enum type
*/
static getEnumValues(enumObj: any, enumType: EnumType): any[] {
return Object.keys(enumObj).filter(key => typeof enumObj[key] === enumType);
}
}
export enum EnumType {
Number = 'number',
String = 'string'
}
How to use it:
enum NumberValueEnum{
A= 0,
B= 1
}
enum StringValueEnum{
A= 'A',
B= 'B'
}
EnumUtils.getEnumKeys(NumberValueEnum, EnumType.Number);
EnumUtils.getEnumValues(NumberValueEnum, EnumType.Number);
EnumUtils.getEnumKeys(StringValueEnum, EnumType.String);
EnumUtils.getEnumValues(StringValueEnum, EnumType.String);
Result for NumberValueEnum keys: ["A", "B"]
Result for NumberValueEnum values: [0, 1]
Result for StringValueEnumkeys: ["A", "B"]
Result for StringValueEnumvalues: ["A", "B"]
They have provided a concept called 'reverse-mapping' in their official documentation. It helped me:
https://www.typescriptlang.org/docs/handbook/enums.html#reverse-mappings
The solution is quite straight forward:
enum Enum {
A,
}
let a = Enum.A;
let nameOfA = Enum[a]; // "A"
enum
s.
I found this question by searching "TypeScript iterate over enum keys". So I just want to post solution which works for me in my case. Maybe it'll help to someone too.
My case is the following: I want to iterate over each enum key, then filter some keys, then access some object which has keys as computed values from enum. So this is how I do it without having any TS error.
enum MyEnum = { ONE = 'ONE', TWO = 'TWO' }
const LABELS = {
[MyEnum.ONE]: 'Label one',
[MyEnum.TWO]: 'Label two'
}
// to declare type is important - otherwise TS complains on LABELS[type]
// also, if replace Object.values with Object.keys -
// - TS blames wrong types here: "string[] is not assignable to MyEnum[]"
const allKeys: Array<MyEnum> = Object.values(MyEnum)
const allowedKeys = allKeys.filter(
(type) => type !== MyEnum.ONE
)
const allowedLabels = allowedKeys.map((type) => ({
label: LABELS[type]
}))
Old question, but, why do not use a const
object map?
Instead of doing this:
enum Foo {
BAR = 60,
EVERYTHING_IS_TERRIBLE = 80
}
console.log(Object.keys(Foo))
// -> ["60", "80", "BAR", "EVERYTHING_IS_TERRIBLE"]
console.log(Object.values(Foo))
// -> ["BAR", "EVERYTHING_IS_TERRIBLE", 60, 80]
Do this (pay attention to the as const
cast):
const Foo = {
BAR: 60,
EVERYTHING_IS_TERRIBLE: 80
} as const
console.log(Object.keys(Foo))
// -> ["BAR", "EVERYTHING_IS_TERRIBLE"]
console.log(Object.values(Foo))
// -> [60, 80]
console.log(Object.keys(Foo))
in the first example only returns ["BAR", "EVERYTHING_IS_TERRIBLE"]
..
["60", "80", "BAR", "EVERYTHING_IS_TERRIBLE"]
If you have enum
enum Diet {
KETO = "Ketogenic",
ATKINS = "Atkins",
PALEO = "Paleo",
DGAF = "Whatever"
}
Then you can get key and values like:
Object.keys(Diet).forEach((d: Diet) => {
console.log(d); // KETO
console.log(Diet[d]) // Ketogenic
});
Argument of type '(d: Diet) => void' is not assignable to parameter of type '(value: string, index: number, array: string[]) => void'. Types of parameters 'd' and 'value' are incompatible. Type 'string' is not assignable to type 'MyEnum'.(2345)
You can get an array of names from Enum in this way:
const enumNames: string[] = Object.keys(YourEnum).filter(key => isNaN(Number(key)));
Having numeric enum:
enum MyNumericEnum {
First = 1,
Second = 2
}
You need to convert it to array first:
const values = Object.values(MyNumericEnum);
// ['First', 'Second', 1, 2]
As you see, it contains both keys and values. Keys go first.
After that, you can retrieve its keys:
values.slice(0, values.length / 2);
// ['First', 'Second']
And values:
values.slice(values.length / 2);
// [1, 2]
For string enums, you can use Object.keys(MyStringEnum)
in order to get keys and Object.values(MyStringEnum)
in order to get values respectively.
Though it's somewhat challenging to extract keys and values of mixed enum.
I find that solution more elegant:
for (let val in myEnum ) {
if ( isNaN( parseInt( val )) )
console.log( val );
}
It displays:
bar
foo
Can be short and simple:
enum AnimalEnum {
DOG = "dog",
CAT = "cat",
MOUSE = "mouse"
}
Object.keys(AnimalEnum).filter(v => typeof v == 'string' && isNaN(v))
My Enum is like this:
export enum UserSorting {
SortByFullName = "Sort by FullName",
SortByLastname = "Sort by Lastame",
SortByEmail = "Sort by Email",
SortByRoleName = "Sort by Role",
SortByCreatedAt = "Sort by Creation date",
SortByCreatedBy = "Sort by Author",
SortByUpdatedAt = "Sort by Edit date",
SortByUpdatedBy = "Sort by Editor",
}
so doing this return undefined:
UserSorting[UserSorting.SortByUpdatedAt]
To resolve this issue, I choose another way to do it using a Pipe:
import { Pipe, PipeTransform } from '@angular/core';
@Pipe({
name: 'enumKey'
})
export class EnumKeyPipe implements PipeTransform {
transform(value, args: string[] = null): any {
let enumValue = args[0];
var keys = Object.keys(value);
var values = Object.values(value);
for (var i = 0; i < keys.length; i++) {
if (values[i] == enumValue) {
return keys[i];
}
}
return null;
}
}
And to use it:
return this.enumKeyPipe.transform(UserSorting, [UserSorting.SortByUpdatedAt]);
Success story sharing
0
or1
from this enum ?export enum Octave { ZERO = 0, ONE = 1 }
enum Enum {"A"}; let nameOfA = Enum[Enum.A];
? As of typescript@2.9.2 it works fine for me...[value]: name
so you can get all values like thatObject.keys(enum)
, all namesObject.values(enum)
and iterate in one go usingfor(const [value, name] of Object.entries(enum)) { ... }
. Beware that when you get values they will be strings, not numbers as you would expect (since in JS keys of object are strings).