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I am working on my first npm module. I briefly worked with TypeScript before and a big problem was that for many modules there were no definition files available. So I thought it would be a good idea to write my module in TypeScript.

However, I can't find any information on the best way to do that. I found this related question "Can I write npm package in CoffeeScript?" where people suggest only publishing the JavaScript files. But in contrast to the CoffeeScript files, the TypeScript files might actually be useful if they are used within a TypeScript application.

Should I include TypeScript files when publishing an npm module, or should I only publish the JavaScript files and provide the generated .d.ts files to DefinitelyTyped?

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  • 2
    Helpful Notes: I wrote the project, copee, along with a blog post to walk you through setting up a TS project to emit type definitions along with CJS and ESM targets before publishing to npm. This will maximize usage with node.js and browsers going forward.
    – styfle
    Commented Oct 20, 2017 at 21:10

6 Answers 6

91

With TypeScript 5.x, TypeScript 4.x, TypeScript 3.x or TypeScript 2.x, the following steps describe what you have to do to create a library (npm package) with TypeScript:

  • Create your project as you normally would (with tests and everything)
  • Add declaration: true to tsconfig.json to generate typings.
  • Export the API through an index.ts
  • In the package.json, point to your generated typings. For example if your outDir is dist, then add "types": "dist/index.d.ts" to your package json.
  • In the package.json, point to your main entry file. For example if your outDir is dist and the main entry file is index.js, then add "main": "dist/index.js" to your package.json.
  • In the package.json, whitelist the files you'd like to ship to npm: files: ["/dist"]. An alternative approach is blacklisting with .npmignore, but it's harder to keep up to date.
  • Publish to npm with npm publish. Use semver specifications for updates (patch / bug fix npm version patch, non-breaking additions npm version minor, breaking api changes npm version major)

Since it got me a while to sift through all the outdated resources on this topic on the internet (like the one on this page...) I decided to wrap it up in how-to-write-a-typescript-library with an up-to-date working minimal example.

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  • 1
    Will i have to check the js in to source control? Or does npm keep its own version of the code?
    – Olian04
    Commented Sep 14, 2017 at 14:06
  • 1
    @Olian04 You tell create an .npmignore file to tell npm which files to ignore when publishing (the .ts files) and a .gitignore to tell git which files to ignore (dist/)
    – Purag
    Commented Sep 23, 2017 at 9:46
  • 1
    @Olian04 no, you do not need to (and IMO shouldn't) commit the generated JS file/s. Those are not part of the project's source.
    – Josh M.
    Commented Jan 25, 2019 at 15:56
87

Here is a sample Node module written in TypeScript : https://github.com/basarat/ts-npm-module

Here is a sample TypeScript project that uses this sample module https://github.com/basarat/ts-npm-module-consume

Basically you need to :

  • compile with commonjs and declaration:true
  • generate a .d.ts file

And then

  • Have your ide read the generated .d.ts.

Atom-TypeScript just provides a nice workflow around this : https://github.com/TypeStrong/atom-typescript#packagejson-support

6
  • Atom-TypeScript anchor link needs to be updated (anchor not valid anymore). Commented Feb 7, 2016 at 9:55
  • @basarat, in ts-npm-module you're using "version": "1.5.0-alpha". I assume this is the version of Typescript you're transpiling with. Does it matter to leave this out? (it's not done automatically by the Atom plugin). If a version is used, will this require other users to use the exact version to transpile (or only newer ones)? (or maybe it's the version of tsconfig.json?)
    – justin
    Commented Jun 16, 2016 at 18:52
  • Do you have any use case with modules depending on other libraries? To avoid the duplicate definition problem you need to configure tsconfig.json, but this seems too manual in my opinion.
    – user800014
    Commented Aug 12, 2016 at 12:51
  • 1
    would you still advocate this approach in q4 2016? Commented Dec 29, 2016 at 15:08
  • 9
    This was a nice how-to - tsmean.com/articles/how-to-write-a-typescript-library
    – chrismarx
    Commented Jul 18, 2017 at 18:42
60

This is a more recent answer using TypeScript 1.8.10:

My project structure is:

|
|--- src
|--- test
|--- dist     <= My gulp file compiles and places the js, sourcemaps and .d.ts files here
|      |--- src
|      |--- test
|--- typings
.gitignore
.npmignore
gulpfile.js
package.json
README.md
tsconfig.json
tslint.json
typings.json

I added the following in .npmignore to avoid including extraneous files and keep the bare minimum to have the package imported and working:

node_modules/
*.log
*.tgz

src/
test/
gulpfile.js
tsconfig.json
tslint.json
typings.json
typings
dist/test

My .gitignore has:

typings

# ignore .js.map files
*.js.map
*.js
dist

My package.json has:

"main": "dist/src/index.js",
"typings":  "dist/src/index.d.ts",

Now I run: npm pack

The resultant file (when unzipped) has the following structure:

|
|--- dist
|       |--- src
|              |
|              index.js
|              index.js.map
|              index.d.ts
|
package.json
README.md

Now I go to the project where I want to use this as a library and type: npm install ./project-1.0.0.tgz

It successfully installs.

Now I create a file index.ts in my project where I just installed the npm import Project = require("project");

Typing Project. gives me the Intellisense options which was the point of this whole exercise.

Hope this helps someone else in using their TypeScript npm projects as internal libraries in their bigger projects.

PS: I believe that this approach of compiling projects to npm modules which can be used in other projects is reminiscent of the .dll in the .NET world. I could well imagine projects being organised in a Solution in VS Code where each project produces a an npm package which can then be used in another project in the solution as a dependency.

Since it took a fair amount of time for me to figure this out, I have posted it in case someone is stuck here.

I also posted it for a closed bug at: https://github.com/npm/npm/issues/11546


This example has been uploaded to Github: vchatterji/tsc-seed

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  • could you upload an example on github? That would help a lot! :)
    – Han Che
    Commented Aug 23, 2016 at 9:31
  • 3
    Example has been uploaded to Github: github.com/vchatterji/tsc-seed Commented Sep 3, 2016 at 16:49
  • How can it also be used in non typescript projects? Commented Dec 29, 2016 at 15:12
6

You should publish the original typescript sources instead of the type definition. In package.json let the 'types' property point to the *.ts file.

*.d.ts are good to annotate existing JS libs, but as a consumer I'd rather read the typescript code than switching between type definitions and down-leveled, generated JS code.

2
5

I mainly follow the suggestion by Varun Chatterji

But, I would like to show a complete example with unit testing and code coverage and publishing it into npm and importing them using javascript or typescript

This module is written using typescript 2.2 and it is important to configure the prepublish hook to compile the code using tsc before publish it to npm

https://github.com/sweetim/haversine-position

https://www.npmjs.com/package/haversine-position

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  • 1
    That's a very useful example, thanks for sharing! I'm currently also trying to get the hang of creating packages in this fashion. Commented Apr 2, 2017 at 11:14
  • 1
    As of July 2017, this is the best project structure I have come across. Thanks to Tim and Varun Chatterji
    – adgang
    Commented Jul 11, 2017 at 12:17
3

You can use autodts to handle distributing and using .d.ts files from npm also without support from the Atom IDE.

autodts generate will bundle all your own .d.ts files together for publishing on npm, and autodts link handles references to other installed packages, which may not always be directly under node_modules in a larger project split into several subpackages.

Both commands read their settings from package.json and tsconfig.json in "convention over configuration" style.

There's another answer on stackoverflow and a blog post with more details.

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