2020-03-17
1611
#typescript
Aaron Powell
15368
Mar 17, 2020 ⋅ 5 min read

Why TypeScript enums suck

Aaron Powell I’m a Developer Advocate at Microsoft. My area of specialty is frontend web development focusing on architecture around SPA and other UI-heavy web applications.

Recent posts:

Fix over-caching with dynamic IO caching in Next.js 15

Next.js 15 caching overhaul: Fix overcaching with Dynamic IO and the use cache directive.

David Omotayo
Aug 6, 2025 ⋅ 10 min read
LLMs are facing a QA crisis here’s how we could solve it

LLMs are facing a QA crisis: Here’s how we could solve it

LLM QA isn’t just a tooling gap — it’s a fundamental shift in how we think about software reliability.

Rosario De Chiara
Aug 4, 2025 ⋅ 7 min read

Windsurf vs. Cursor: When to choose the challenger

Windsurf AI brings agentic coding and terminal control right into your IDE. We compare it to Cursor, explore its features, and build a real frontend project.

Chizaram Ken
Jul 31, 2025 ⋅ 9 min read

The CSS if() function: Conditional styling will never be the same

The CSS Working Group has approved the if() function for development, a feature that promises to bring true conditional styling directly to our stylesheets.

Ikeh Akinyemi
Jul 30, 2025 ⋅ 12 min read
View all posts

2 Replies to "Why TypeScript enums suck"

  1. I’d prefer them over enums every single time. They cover all the regular cases for enums, and the ones they don’t cover, there you shouldn’t use enums either. I’m talking about doing math with enums.
    Wether it’s bit-flags or stuff like `if(day < DaysOfWeek.Saturday)…`.

    Additionally they are nice and readable when I have to deal with JSON or a Database. When I'm greeted by the day "Monday", "Tuesday", "Wednesday" instead of 1,2,3.

    And if someone now thinks, counting down the days of the week is trivial, tell me: what's the first value in your enum? 1? Or did you start at 0 so that the values double as indices over an array of localized strings? And what is the first Entry? Sunday or Monday? You wrote Sunday, in my area that's the last day of the week. And all that just with something as "trivial" as days of week. Now imagine a somewhat more abstract collection of options and you tell me which numeric value translates to what readable option in that enum.

Leave a Reply