TypeScript: casting HTMLElement

TypeScript uses '<>' to surround casts, so the above becomes:

var script = <HTMLScriptElement>document.getElementsByName("script")[0];

However, unfortunately you cannot do:

var script = (<HTMLScriptElement[]>document.getElementsByName(id))[0];

You get the error

Cannot convert 'NodeList' to 'HTMLScriptElement[]'

But you can do :

(<HTMLScriptElement[]><any>document.getElementsByName(id))[0];

As of TypeScript 0.9 the lib.d.ts file uses specialized overload signatures that return the correct types for calls to getElementsByTagName.

This means you no longer need to use type assertions to change the type:

// No type assertions needed
var script: HTMLScriptElement = document.getElementsByTagName('script')[0];
alert(script.type);

Do not type cast. Never. Use type guards:

const e = document.getElementsByName("script")[0];
if (!(e instanceof HTMLScriptElement)) 
  throw new Error(`Expected e to be an HTMLScriptElement, was ${e && e.constructor && e.constructor.name || e}`);
// locally TypeScript now types e as an HTMLScriptElement, same as if you casted it.

Let the compiler do the work for you and get errors when your assumptions turn out wrong.

It may look overkill in this case, but it will help you a lot if you come back later and change the selector, like adding a class that is missing in the dom, for example.

Tags:

Typescript