@bingsjs/tsc-prog

Build your TypeScript projects programmatically.

Usage no npm install needed!

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README

tsc-prog

Build your TypeScript projects programmatically.

tsc-prog offers flexiblity and convenient options for your more complex production builds (less suited for development builds).

Getting started

npm i -D tsc-prog
yarn add -D tsc-prog

tsc-prog has no dependency. You just need typescript as a peer dependency.

You simply need to build ๐Ÿ‘ทโ€

Use tsc.build. Specify the basePath first, and either inherit from a tsconfig file or create a config from scratch.

const tsc = require('tsc-prog')

tsc.build({
    basePath: __dirname, // always required, used for relative paths
    configFilePath: 'tsconfig.json', // config to inherit from (optional)
    compilerOptions: {
        rootDir: 'src',
        outDir: 'dist',
        declaration: true,
        skipLibCheck: true,
    },
    include: ['src/**/*'],
    exclude: ['**/*.test.ts', '**/*.spec.ts'],
})

You can have a look at all the parameters here.

You need more access ๐Ÿ‘จโ€๐Ÿญ

The tsc.build function is made of the two following steps, which you can have access to :

  • Program creation with tsc.createProgramFromConfig.
  • Emitting files from program with tsc.emit.
const tsc = require('tsc-prog')

// Create the program
const program = tsc.createProgramFromConfig({
    basePath: process.cwd(),
    configFilePath: 'tsconfig.json',
})

// Do what you want with the program

// Actually compile typescript files
tsc.emit(program, { copyOtherToOutDir: true })

Addons

Clean ๐Ÿงน

Helps to address this issue.

We frequently need to delete the emitted files from a previous build, so a clean option recursively removes folders and files :

tsc.build({
    basePath: __dirname,
    configFilePath: 'tsconfig.json',
    clean: ['dist'], // accepts relative paths to `basePath` or absolute paths
})

You can also directly specify common targets from your compiler options :

tsc.build({
    basePath: __dirname,
    configFilePath: 'tsconfig.json',
    clean: { outDir: true, declarationDir: true },
})
Protections

The clean option protects you against deleting the following folders :

  • the specified basePath and all its parents (up to the root folder).
  • the current working directory and all its parents (up to the root folder).
  • the rootDir path if specified in the compiler options and all its parents (up to the root folder).

Copy non-typescript files ๐Ÿ—‚๏ธ

Helps to address this issue.

The copyOtherToOutDir option allows you to copy other files to outDir (well it says so) :

tsc.build({
    basePath: __dirname,
    configFilePath: 'tsconfig.json',
    compilerOptions: {
        outDir: 'dist', // must be set
    },
    copyOtherToOutDir: true,
    exclude: ['**/somedir'], // taken into account
})

This option is protected against overwriting files emitted by the compiler, like same name .js files (could happen).

Bundle type definitions ๐Ÿ›๏ธ

Helps to address this issue.

Rollup your emitted .d.ts files into a single one with bundleDeclaration option.

tsc.build({
    basePath: __dirname,
    configFilePath: 'tsconfig.json',
    compilerOptions: {
        rootDir: 'src',
        outDir: 'dist',
        declaration: true // must be set
    },
    bundleDeclaration: {
        entryPoint: 'index.d.ts', // relative to the OUTPUT directory ('dist' here)
    },
})

Bundling options

tsc.build({
    // ...
    bundleDeclaration: {
        entryPoint: 'index.d.ts',
        fallbackOnError: false, // default: true
        globals: false // default: true
        augmentations: false // default: true
    }
})
  • fallbackOnError option is a safety mecanism that generates the original unbundled definition files if any error happens during the bundling process.

  • globals option can be switched to false to discard global declarations.

  • augmentations option can be switched to false to discard external library augmentations.

Notes on bundling ๐Ÿ—ฃ๏ธ

I recommend you still check the final .d.ts output, declaration bundling being very complex, with a lot of edge cases and issues such as name conflict and handling of external libraries.

tsc-prog does its best to acknowledge every edge case. It covers ones that similar tools don't and probably vice versa. Don't hesitate to review API Extractor to see if it works better with your program.