2024-07-23
2415
#typescript
Paul Cowan
2066
Jul 23, 2024 ⋅ 8 min read

A complete guide to const assertions in TypeScript

Paul Cowan Contract software developer.

Recent posts:

lewis angular signal forms

Signal Forms: Angular’s best quality of life update in years

Signal Forms in Angular 21 replace FormGroup pain and ControlValueAccessor complexity with a cleaner, reactive model built on signals.

Lewis Cianci
Feb 25, 2026 ⋅ 10 min read
replay 2 25 26

The Replay (2/25/26): Signal Forms, Ralph to the rescue, and more

Discover what’s new in The Replay, LogRocket’s newsletter for dev and engineering leaders, in the February 25th issue.

Matt MacCormack
Feb 25, 2026 ⋅ 32 sec read

Google & Shopify’s UCP: How AI agents sell online

Explore how the Universal Commerce Protocol (UCP) allows AI agents to connect with merchants, handle checkout sessions, and securely process payments in real-world e-commerce flows.

Emmanuel John
Feb 24, 2026 ⋅ 8 min read
6 React Server Component performance pitfalls in Next.js

6 React Server Component performance pitfalls in Next.js

React Server Components and the Next.js App Router enable streaming and smaller client bundles, but only when used correctly. This article explores six common mistakes that block streaming, bloat hydration, and create stale UI in production.

Temitope Oyedele
Feb 23, 2026 ⋅ 13 min read
View all posts

5 Replies to "A complete guide to <code>const</code> assertions in TypeScript"

  1. The example in your conclusion is wrong: z and a would not be read-only since those are the keys for nested object. This is currently the behavior of “as const” syntax.

  2. that isn’t true, this is the resultant type:

    “`
    let obj: {
    readonly x: 10;
    readonly y: readonly [20, 30];
    readonly z: {
    readonly a: {
    readonly b: 42;
    };
    };
    }
    “`
    and this error happens when you try to modify z o a
    “`
    Cannot assign to ‘z’ because it is a read-only property.(2540)
    “`

  3. The example with redux actions is striking. With interfaces it’s clear and reads nicely, with ‘const’ assertion, it becomes more…implicit and easier to overlook. IMO interfaces are better for this purpose. The goal is not to write maintainable code, not as little code as possible.
    But the purpose of the assertion is clear when it comes to literals.
    Nice article, thanks!

Leave a Reply

Hey there, want to help make our blog better?

Join LogRocket’s Content Advisory Board. You’ll help inform the type of content we create and get access to exclusive meetups, social accreditation, and swag.

Sign up now