
A few months ago, I published You're a Real JavaScript Developer Only If...
It was just a post for fun, and honestly, I didn't expect it to resonate with so many developers 😅
But judging by the comments, we’ve all been through the same chaos:
Then recently, I came across the fun post You're a Real Software Developer Only If... by @sylwia-lask
And I loved it.
Not just because it was funny, but because it reminded me of one of my favorite things about the developer community:
We all have different tech stacks, different jobs, different levels of experience...
Yet somehow we keep collecting the exact same stories 😄
So after JavaScript...
and after Sylwia's Software Developer edition...
I thought it was only fair to continue the tradition.
This time, let's talk about the language that spends half its time protecting us from ourselves.
TypeScript.
So, you're a real TypeScript developer only if...
You've converted a JavaScript project to TypeScript and thought:
"This should only take an hour"
Three days later, you're still fixing type errors.
You've added any just to make the error go away.
And immediately promised yourself you'd come back later.
You never came back.
You've fixed one TypeScript error...
and unlocked twelve new ones.
Like some kind of achievement system.
You've stared at a type error for 20 minutes and thought:
"I know what I mean. Why doesn't TypeScript know what I mean?"
You've written:
as any
and felt slightly ashamed.
You've complained about TypeScript all day...
then felt completely lost when working in plain JavaScript.
You've removed a type annotation to "simplify things".
TypeScript strongly disagreed.
You've spent more time designing types than writing actual business logic.
You've looked at a generic type and thought:
"Who wrote this masterpiece?"
Then discovered it was you six months ago.
You've looked at another generic type and thought:
"Who wrote this nightmare?"
Also you.
You've typed something as string | number | null | undefined
because life is complicated.
You've opened a file and found:
type Result<T extends keyof U, U extends object>
Then immediately closed the file.
You've spent an hour fighting TypeScript.
Only to realize it was right the entire time.
You've celebrated when the IDE finally stopped showing red squiggly lines.
You've renamed a property in one place...
and watched TypeScript save you from breaking twenty files.
For one brief moment, you felt genuine gratitude.
You've added strict mode to a project.
And discovered things you wish you hadn't discovered.
You've used autocomplete so much that typing full property names now feels weird.
You've written:
// @ts-ignore
and hoped nobody would notice.
You've written a type so complicated that future you needed documentation to understand it.
You've copied a TypeScript error into Google.
The answer contained even more TypeScript than the original error.
You've said:
"The types are correct. The code is wrong."
and
"The code is correct. The types are wrong."
during the same debugging session.
You've finally fixed a bug...
before realizing TypeScript warned you about it two days ago.
If you've read this list and caught yourself nodding every few lines...
Congratulations! 🥳
You're officially a TypeScript developer.
You've probably:
any when nobody was lookingAnd despite all the complaining...
you secretly love TypeScript.
Because after enough projects, you realize that:
TypeScript isn't trying to ruin your day.
It's trying to stop future-you from ruining it 😄
What's the most "TypeScript developer" thing you've ever done?
My vote goes to spending 30 minutes creating a beautiful type...
for an object that had exactly two properties 😅
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