I can't use bracket notation, since the method is meant to be able to handle negative numbers. I've tried lots of things, including setting the target
in the tsconfig.json
file to ESNext, ES2021, and ES6 but to no avail. The lib
option doesn't help either.
json
// tsconfig.json
{
"compilerOptions": {
"target": "ES2021",
"outDir": "./dist",
"declaration": true,
"declarationDir": "./typings",
"lib": ["ES2021", "ESNext"]
}
}
What can I do? Am I doing something wrong?
CodePudding user response:
According to MDN Web Docs
Array.prototype#at
, is a valid method.
MDN does not get to decide what is part of TypeScript and what isn't. The TypeScript developers do that.
Whether or not MDN says something is a "valid method" is relevant to Mozilla, and only Mozilla, but has no bearing on TypeScript.
But for some reasons, TypeScript refuses to compile, stating that it does not exist.
That's because the method doesn't exist in any ECMAScript version supported by TypeScript.
I've tried lots of things, including setting the
target
in thetsconfig.json
file to ESNext, ES2021, and ES6 but to no avail.
That's because the method doesn't exist in either ECMAScript 6 or ECMAScript 2021. It does exist in ES2022 (which is what ESNext is at the moment), but it was only added eight weeks ago, and thus after TypeScript 4.4 was finalized (and possibly also too late for TypeScript 4.5).
The
lib
option doesn't help either.
Again, that's because the method does not exist in any library version supported by TypeScript at the moment.
Even in the current main branch, which is going to become TypeScript 4.6, lib/lib.esnext.d.ts
only corresponds to ECMAScript 2021 the latest Internationalization extensions.
What can I do? Am I doing something wrong?
You can wait until the method actually becomes part of a released version of ECMAScript and/or TypeScript.