We have the following TestComponent.ts
TypeScript class:
01: import TestVectorLayer from './TestVectorLayer'
02:
03: export class TestComponent implements OnInit {
04: private foo: any;
05:
06: constructor() { }
07:
08: const layer = new TestVectorLayer("foo");
09: }
And the following TestVectorLayer.ts
function:
Keep in mind that OpenLayer's 3 is using the Google Closure Library, that's why TestVectorLayer
is not a TypeScript class.
01: declare let ol: any;
02:
03: const TestVectorLayer = function (layerName: string) {
04: ...
05: console.log(layerName);
06:
07: ol.layer.Image.call(this, opts);
08: }
09:
10: ol.inherits(TestVectorLayer as any, ol.layer.Image as any);
11:
12: export default TestVectorLayer;
We're getting the following error:
Error on Line 08 in TestComponent.ts class:
[ts] 'new' expression, whose target lacks a construct signature, implicitly has an 'any' type. import TestVectorLayer
The package.json
versions of TypeScript:
devDependencies:
"typescript": "~2.2.1"
new
it why can'tTestVectorLayer
be a class?TestVectorLayer
is using OpenLayer 3, which is uses Google Closure Library.--allowJs
? I'm still slightly confused because if it's a third-party library, why are you consuming it's from a relative path instead of from its package with its package.json and license files?