The short answer is no, a bundler is not necessarily needed.
A bundler is a handy tool that can do a lot of the gruntwork of transpiling and moving files around for you. In your case, if you have a simple group of ts or tsx files, and you simply want to transpile them to js on a 1 to 1 basis (1 new js file for every ts file, with the same name), you can absolutely just use tsc
to transpile your files, output them to some build
directory, and publish that. That's a totally valid way to create a react component library with typescript.
On the other hand, if things are more complicated than just a 1-to-1 ts-to-js conversion, then a bundler may come in handy. For example, if your library includes other resources like stylesheets, images, web worker files, etc., tsc won't help you there. You would need to manually copy the files to where you want in your build directory. Or you can use a bundler to bundle them together file you. Or, as another answer mentioned, you may want to use specific babel transformations for specific compatibilities, which can be easily configured with bundlers. You may want to do more involved things like codesplitting, or the opposite (many entry files into a single output) - the bundler can help with that, where tsc
cant.
I recently found myself using a bundler to make a react component library, but I switched over the use tsc
because it was a simple scenario and I liked typescript's output better.