Comment by tgv
Typescript has another way of dealing with null/undefined: it's in the type definition, and you can't use a value that's potentially null/undefined. Using Optional<T> in Typescript is, IMO, weird. Typescript also has exceptions...
I think they only work if the language is built around it. In Rust, it works, because you just can't deref an Optional type without matching it, and the matching mechanism is much more general than that. But in other languages, it just becomes a wart.
As I said, some kind of type annotation would be most go-like, e.g.
func f(ptr PtrToData?) int { ... }
You would only be allowed to touch *ptr inside a if ptr != nil { ... }. There's a linter from uber (nilaway) that works like that, except for the type annotation. That proposal would break existing code, so perhaps something an explicit marker for non-nil pointers is needed instead (but that's not very ergonomic, alas).