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We can use an indexed access type to look up a specific property on another type:

ts
type 
Person
= {
age
: number;
name
: string;
alive
: boolean };
type
Age
=
Person
["age"];

The indexing type is itself a type, so we can use unions, keyof, or other types entirely:

ts
type 
I1
=
Person
["age" | "name"];
type
I2
=
Person
[keyof
Person
];
type
AliveOrName
= "alive" | "name";
type
I3
=
Person
[
AliveOrName
];

You'll even see an error if you try to index a property that doesn't exist:

ts
type 
I1
=
Person
["alve"];
Property 'alve' does not exist on type 'Person'.

Another example of indexing with an arbitrary type is using number to get the type of an array's elements. We can combine this with typeof to conveniently capture the element type of an array literal:

ts
const 
MyArray
= [
{
name
: "Alice",
age
: 15 },
{
name
: "Bob",
age
: 23 },
{
name
: "Eve",
age
: 38 },
]; type
Person
= (typeof
MyArray
)[number];
type
Age
= (typeof
MyArray
)[number]["age"];
// Or type
Age2
=
Person
["age"];

You can only use types when indexing, meaning you can't use a const to make a variable reference:

ts
const 
key
= "age";
type
Age
=
Person
[key];
'key' refers to a value, but is being used as a type here. Did you mean 'typeof key'?
Type 'key' cannot be used as an index type.

However, you can use a type alias for a similar style of refactor:

ts
type 
key
= "age";
type
Age
=
Person
[
key
];