183

I'm getting error in my Vs Code terminal and command prompt that 'ts-node' is not recognized as an internal or external command, operable program or batch file. while i'm trying the start command in the terminal npm run dev and i have added my package.json file also.

{
"name": "tsnode",
"version": "1.0.0",
"description": "ts-node experiment.",
"scripts": {
    "dev": "nodemon --exec 'ts-node --cache-directory .tscache' ./server.ts",
    "start": "ts-node --fast ./server.ts"
},
"author": "Mugesh",
"license": "ISC",
"dependencies": {
    "@types/body-parser": "^1.16.3",
    "@types/chalk": "^0.4.31",
    "@types/express": "^4.0.35",
    "@types/node": "^7.0.18",
    "body-parser": "^1.17.1",
    "chalk": "^1.1.3",
    "express": "^4.15.2",
    "nodemon": "^1.11.0",
    "ts-node": "^3.0.4",
    "typescript": "^2.3.4"
}

}

3
  • 4
    It's really simple - if you installed it locally in your project then you need to access it trough symlinks in .bin of node_modules ie: ./node_modules/.bin/ts-node or install globally (the less robust solution, as versions will differ based on projects)
    – Damian
    May 27, 2021 at 22:19
  • I have encountered the same issue in windows machine and removed the single codes in scripts > dev command and it worked.
    – thomson
    Apr 13, 2022 at 6:37
  • Be sure to not to have a package-lock.json and a yarn.lock at the same time in your project. Did you try to reinstall your dependencies? Apr 18, 2022 at 11:26

31 Answers 31

277

You need to install ts-node as global

npm install -g ts-node

More information

https://github.com/TypeStrong/ts-node

Update 2023

If you have installed npm > 5.2.0 version than you have npx automatically installed.

npx ts-node src/seeds/initPermission.ts

Or you can add script in your package.json
In dev

"seed:init": "ts-node ./src/seeds/init.ts"

In production after making build

"seed:prod": "NODE_ENV=production node ./build/src/seeds/init.js"

And run npm run seed:init

5
  • you are correct, If i try for a particular file in my root directory(ie., ts-node app.ts) its working, but its not working in my package.json run-scripts(dev)
    – Mugesh
    Jun 26, 2017 at 16:37
  • 42
    This is not a great answer because it relies on other devs to install the same module globally. See rsp's answer below Aug 1, 2018 at 16:04
  • 8
    No need to install globally. Aug 11, 2020 at 4:23
  • This did not fix the problem. Trying to use Code Runner in VS Code. Typescript added successfully beforehand.
    – Adamantus
    Oct 9, 2021 at 15:52
  • 1
    I think the issue is with the newer versions of npm on Windows. For more info: github.com/remy/nodemon/issues/1951. Installing it globally fixed the PATHs and the issue. I would make sure the pack is in the project as well tho. I look at this as an OS dependency. Jan 9, 2022 at 13:29
159

I wouldn't recommend relying on globally installed ts-node in your own module as some of the answers here suggest.

If you do that then anyone who installs your module would need to install ts-node globally as well (just a usual npm install would not be enough) and then you will have a problem if two modules need things like ts-node globally installed but with different versions etc.

To avoid that, all your dependencies should be defined in your package.json and installed locally in node_modules.

There is a little-known command npx that is used to run binaries from modules that are installed locally in node_modules.

For example, see what happens when I install (locally) ts-node and typescript:

rsp@mn-r:~/node/test/ts-test-1$ npm i ts-node typescript
npm WARN [email protected] No description
npm WARN [email protected] No repository field.

+ [email protected]
+ [email protected]
added 19 packages from 44 contributors in 2.157s
[+] no known vulnerabilities found [19 packages audited]

and then I try to run ts-node:

rsp@mn-r:~/node/test/ts-test-1$ ts-node -v
-bash: /Users/rsp/opt/node/bin/ts-node: No such file or directory

I can run it with npx:

127!rsp@mn-r:~/node/test/ts-test-1$ npx ts-node -v
ts-node v6.0.3
node v10.1.0
typescript v2.8.3

or I could give the path explicitly:

rsp@mn-r:~/node/test/ts-test-1$ ./node_modules/.bin/ts-node -v
ts-node v6.0.3
node v10.1.0
typescript v2.8.3

In any case, I don't need to install anything globally.

5
  • so the solution is to add ./node_modules/.bin to the PATH? why isn't it mentioned at npmjs.com/package/ts-node?
    – morpheus
    Nov 29, 2018 at 18:32
  • 14
    bottom line, your answer is: npm i ts-node typescript
    – OhadR
    Apr 24, 2020 at 11:55
  • 1
    Read through every single one. This is by far the best solution. I am using the AWS CDK and encountered a build process where I can delegate TS compilation to build and test phases. This was a fantastic way for me to maintain that leverage and not rely on a global package. Sep 16, 2021 at 6:43
  • 3
    This is simply brilliant. Feb 2, 2022 at 12:45
  • So how do you run your project from there? nodemon src/index.ts would still make 'ts-node' is not recognized as an internal or external command, operable program or batch file.
    – m3.b
    May 20, 2022 at 18:23
48

The only solution that worked for me:

"start": "nodemon --exec npx ts-node ./index.ts",
4
  • 2
    try all of the answers, finally works this.
    – d-feverx
    Jun 24, 2021 at 6:52
  • 1
    Worked for me. I created a dev: instead of start: script, and I run it using npm run dev Oct 23, 2021 at 9:01
  • 2
    This is great, but why did everyone skip your answer?
    – Spring
    Oct 29, 2021 at 15:49
  • This worked so well, in my case I changed it to: "dev:watch": "nodemon --exec npx ts-node ./index.ts" thank you so much for the help!
    – Ashley
    Sep 10, 2023 at 23:49
47

I just encountered a similar issue: on Mac OS --exec ts-node works, on Windows it doesn't.

My workaround is to create a nodemon.json like this:

{
  "watch": "src/**/*.ts",
  "execMap": {
    "ts": "ts-node"
  }
}

and change the package.json scripts section to

"scripts": {
  "start": "nodemon src/index.ts"
},
5
  • 4
    Documentation for nodemon.json can be found from github.com/remy/nodemon#config-files and then keep reading into the next section
    – mtpultz
    Jul 18, 2017 at 5:22
  • Thanks, I didn't know I could do that with nodemon Sep 26, 2017 at 18:43
  • 1
    Excellent for the very reason we can keep my global small, making it easy to pass along to other people
    – Dorival
    Feb 19, 2018 at 20:38
  • Thanks. Solved it for me.
    – Robert S.
    Oct 9, 2019 at 19:21
  • This works for me. Nodemon local config is much better in my case.
    – Jur P
    Dec 12, 2021 at 11:18
36

I ran into the same problem and found that it works by using double quotes instead of single.

"dev": "nodemon --exec \"ts-node\" --cache-directory .tscache ./server.ts"

P.S. This is 1 year after the problem. Not sure if package versions are a factor. Will confirm if needed.

3
  • 5
    This is mainly if you are on windows, otherwise you can use single quotes.
    – ArcX
    Feb 20, 2019 at 13:42
  • Had single quotes on my Mac. Brought to Windows machine, and double quotes OR no quotes worked... not sure if that's meaningful.
    – TJBlackman
    Mar 11, 2020 at 13:42
  • This was the real fix for me! Aug 11, 2020 at 4:22
23

If you work under Windows you can't use single quote in the json file. That is why you have to replace all single quote symbols(') by the double quote symbols("). But between two double quotes(") you have to use escaped double quote(\"). For the current case you have to change the row in the file package.json:

"dev": "nodemon --exec 'ts-node --cache-directory .tscache' ./server.ts",

into the row:

"dev": "nodemon --exec \"ts-node --cache-directory .tscache\" ./server.ts",

14

Nodemon is for watching and rerunning node processes when files change. The local ts-node installed in the node_modules directory is not recognized in the scope of the --exec argument. To get around this, some people have recommended installing ts-node globally. As a user pointed out, that's not a good solution because it relies on packages external to your project and makes the ts-node in our node_modules pointless.

Edit:

With newer versions of nodemon, you can simplify this even further (note: you still need ts-node installed as a devDependency).

"start": "nodemon src/index.ts"

Previous:

To fix your solution, prefix ts-node with the npx helper, which will use your local node_module executables.

package.json, inside the scripts block:

"start": "nodemon --watch './src/**/*' -e ts --exec 'npx ts-node src/index.ts'"

An alternative approach could be to use the typescript watcher with the existing node command and the concurrently package.

"start": "concurrently \"tsc --watch\" \"node ./dist/index.js\""

Same principle. One package watches for changes (nodemon & tsc) and restarts the second process (the node/ts-node server).

Edit 11/17/2021: I returned this post to use it as a reference for setting up a prototype build and found the nodemon approach above was no longer working, it was now throwing the error:

''npx' is not recognized as an internal or external command,
operable program or batch file.

I found a fix was to convert all single quotes to escaped double quotes.

"start": "nodemon --watch \"./src/**/*\" -e ts --exec \"npx ts-node src/index.ts\""

Guess something changed since I my original post. Hope that helps!

1
10

For me deleting node_modules and installing it again using npm i was enough.

6

I had the similar problem, but I have resolved by replacing

"dev": "nodemon --exec 'ts-node --cache-directory .tscache' ./server.ts",

to

"dev": "nodemon --exec ts-node --cache-directory .tscache ./server.ts",

Just remove the single quote(') and install ts-node globally

5

I had a similar problem while using nodemon:

  • I had nodemon installed globally, AND ts-node only installed locally.

Solution:

  • I installed ts-node globally (still keeping the local dependency).
5

I fixed the issue by removing single quorts around ts-node. as per below "dev": "nodemon --watch 'src/**/*.ts' --exec 'ts-node' src/index.ts"

updated as "dev": "nodemon --watch 'src/**/*.ts' --exec ts-node src/index.ts"

please note. my environment is windows 10 and npm version6.14.4

1
  • My original project was built on Ubuntu 18, and worked without issues. Moved to win10, had this error, and this worked for me.
    – RockyK
    Aug 2, 2020 at 19:10
3

Like suggested in some answers, you should install ts-node locally and not globally. npx makes it easy to use CLI tools and other executables hosted on the registry as explained here. Hence, can be used to run ts-node on your terminal and even scripts from your package.json file. For example;

Take this to be my package.json file

{
...
 "scripts": {
   "start": "npx nodemon path/to/file"
  }
}

Now running npm run start would not give any more issues.

2

You can try the following command

"dev": "nodemon --watch './**/*.ts' --exec \"ts-node\" src/index.ts"

This worked for me .

2

Sometimes you just need to re-install the package or packages. Example npm install -D ts-node or npm install

1

If your ts-node isn't working, as an alternative you can do the following:

1) Install nodemon locally --> npm i nodemon

2) In your package.json 'scripts' add the following:

"scripts": {
    "start": "nodemon index.ts",
    "test": "echo \"Error: no test specified\" && exit 1"
  },

3) Now run npm start (this will automatically run node for you, but this WILL NOT COMPILE TS )

4) Open a new tab in the terminal/command line, cd the folder your working in and run tsc index.tsc --watch
This will compile your typescript. The only downside is you will just have to have both tabs open, one for running node automatically and the other for compiling automatically, but this works.

1

I was having the same issue on windows. I found the solution for my issue was resolved when I corrected some misplaced '

Originally:

"scripts": {
    "dev": "nodemon --watch 'src/**/*.ts' --exec 'ts-node' src/index.ts",
    "build": "tsc",
    "start": "node dist/index.js"
}

Fixed:

"scripts": {
    "dev": "nodemon --watch 'src/**/*.ts' --exec \"ts-node\" src/index.ts",
    "build": "tsc",
    "start": "node dist/index.js"
}

The difference in case it isn't clear is that I no longer wrap ts-node in '

* EDIT * I changed this based on the answer from @RoutesMaps.com above. This solved my problem as well as removing the ' but @RoutesMaps.com actually explains the issue resolution

1

I ran this command after npm install ts-node. This fixed my problem:

npm install -D tslib @types/node
1

yarn add -D ts-node

"scripts": {
    "start": "ts-node src/index.ts"
}

'yarn start' now works

1

Found the answer. Without installing ts-node globally, just create inside your project nodemon.json file and put it there :

{
    "execMap": {
        "ts": "node --loader ts-node/esm"
    }
}

So now, you can keep type:"module" in your package.json and module:"ESNEXT(or smth that supports ES Modules)" in your tsconfig.json. However, you are going to get constant warning from nodemon that it's, I mean loader type, experimental feature but it's not critical.

In your package.json, in dev command for example just run nodemon path/filename.ts

0

If you are using a mac these are the steps I came up with in order to fix this in the terminal.

  1. Install globaly and use the returned file path with the symlink ‘ts-node’ and move this file into /usr/local/bin
  2. Install locally without saving to package.json
  3. copy folder in /node_modules into /usr/local/lib/node_modules/
  4. Make sure the file is executable by opening /ts-node/dist and using the command chmod +x bin.js
  5. run npm i in ts-node folder
  6. Make sure that dist folder still exsists, if not copy it back over.
  7. Test running ts-node in terminal, if it does not work it will return an error of which module needs to be moved over to ../
  8. After ts-node runs be sure to delete the folder /usr/local/lib/node_modules/ts-node/node_modules
0

I was having the same issue. I found the solution for my issue was resolved when i do simply run this command first "npm run build" and than try it nodemon and also add in package.json

"scripts": {
"test": "echo \"Error: no test specified\" && exit 1",
"build": "tsc",
"dev": "ts-node ./lib/server.ts",
"start": "nodemon ./dist/server.js",
"prod": "npm run build && npm run start"}
0

If you are using code-runner in vs-code then edit setting.json file

"typescript": "tsc $fileName && node $fileNameWithoutExt.js "

0

Write the the script like this inside your package.json file

"scripts": {

"test": "echo \"Error: no test specified\" && exit 1",

"build": "rimraf ./build && tsc",

"start": "node build/index.js",

"tsc": "tsc",

"watch-node": "nodemon build/index.js",

"postinstall": "npm run tsc"

},

Then, npm run build

and finally npm run start

0

I encountered the same error when trying to run nodemon from a Git Bash but it seems to be working just fine when running nodemon from PowerShell. So, you should consider giving some other terminals a chance.

0

Me helped this command

npm i -D typescript

More specifically written there https://nodejs.dev/learn/nodejs-with-typescript

0

Please use TSC --init, instead of TS --init

0

this error can occur if you have one version of ts-node installed in your project and another version globally. To solve the problem - install the same version of the package

0

Just had this same problem and came up with a hybrid solution, using npx to execute but via nodemon config (rather than package.json).

nodemon.json...

{
  "watch": ["src"],
  "ext": "ts",
  "exec": "npx ts-node ./src/server.ts"
}
0

Actually if you install nodemon as globally then install ts-node also globally. If you install nodemon as -D (dev dependency) then install ts-node as dev dependency. It will work.

0

A bit late to the party, but my issue was that I had set the NODE_ENV=Production environment variable on my CI. When NODE_ENV is set the dev dependencies(where the ts-node was listed) won't be installed.

Removing NODE_ENV fixed the issue.

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