I partially agree with you @jaspeling
. We can return a class/interface. But at the same time it is type introduced in Typescript. And it is very common while writing custom hooks to return an array as I explained in my example. In React useState uses same kind of pattern.
Thanks for your valuable insight.
I partially agree with you @jaspeling . We can return a class/interface. But at the same time it is type introduced in Typescript. And it is very common while writing custom hooks to return an array as I explained in my example. In React
useState
uses same kind of pattern.Ah, see I have no react knowledge. If that is a pattern used in a very well known framework, I guess I can see the value in a post like this.
I see. Yes, it can be bit confusing at first. When I switched to react and saw this pattern I had the same feeling 😊