I have googled this and even got to the second page, and there does not seem to be any kind of consensus.
As far as I can tell, it’s a bad idea because it creates code you don’t see and accepts inputs that you wouldn’t want. And yet, many people seem to like them more than, say, const unions due to being easier to refactor in bulk.
So what gives? Is this a case of IT people having very strong opinions on stuff that doesn’t matter? Or is there a technical reason for or against it?
At work, when I was helping with some frontend stuff, we used object literals.
const DIRECTIONS = { UP: "UP", DOWN: "DOWN" } as const; type DIRECTIONS = typeof DIRECTIONS[keyof typeof DIRECTIONS];
Taken from option 2 in this blog post. https://maxheiber.medium.com/alternatives-to-typescript-enums-50e4c16600b1`___`
This is, in my opinion, the absolute best way to do it
That’s what the typescript official docs recommend as an alternative too
https://www.typescriptlang.org/docs/handbook/enums.html#objects-vs-enums
The const keyword was added after enums. I doubt enums would exist if the feature was added earlier.