install-nix-action/node_modules/ts-node/README.md
Domen Kožar 08403cd828
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2019-11-13 17:14:48 +01:00

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# ![TypeScript Node](logo.svg)
[![NPM version][npm-image]][npm-url]
[![NPM downloads][downloads-image]][downloads-url]
[![Build status][travis-image]][travis-url]
[![Test coverage][coveralls-image]][coveralls-url]
> TypeScript execution and REPL for node.js, with source map support. **Works with `typescript@>=2.0`**.
## Installation
```sh
# Locally in your project.
npm install -D ts-node
npm install -D typescript
# Or globally with TypeScript.
npm install -g ts-node
npm install -g typescript
```
**Tip:** Installing modules locally allows you to control and share the versions through `package.json`. TS Node will always resolve the compiler from `cwd` before checking relative to its own installation.
## Usage
```sh
# Execute a script as `node` + `tsc`.
ts-node script.ts
# Starts a TypeScript REPL.
ts-node
# Execute code with TypeScript.
ts-node -e 'console.log("Hello, world!")'
# Execute, and print, code with TypeScript.
ts-node -p -e '"Hello, world!"'
# Pipe scripts to execute with TypeScript.
echo "console.log('Hello, world!')" | ts-node
```
![TypeScript REPL](https://github.com/TypeStrong/ts-node/raw/master/screenshot.png)
### Programmatic
You can require `ts-node` and register the loader for future requires by using `require('ts-node').register({ /* options */ })`. You can also use file shortcuts - `node -r ts-node/register` or `node -r ts-node/register/transpile-only` - depending on your preferences.
**Note:** If you need to use advanced node.js CLI arguments (e.g. `--inspect`), use them with `node -r ts-node/register` instead of the `ts-node` CLI.
### Mocha
```sh
mocha --require ts-node/register --watch-extensions ts,tsx "test/**/*.{ts,tsx}" [...args]
```
**Note:** `--watch-extensions` is only used in `--watch` mode.
### Tape
```sh
ts-node node_modules/tape/bin/tape [...args]
```
### Gulp
```sh
# Create a `gulpfile.ts` and run `gulp`.
gulp
```
### Visual Studio Code
Create a new node.js configuration, add `-r ts-node/register` to node args and move the `program` to the `args` list (so VS Code doesn't look for `outFiles`).
```json
{
"type": "node",
"request": "launch",
"name": "Launch Program",
"runtimeArgs": [
"-r",
"ts-node/register"
],
"args": [
"${workspaceFolder}/index.ts"
]
}
```
**Note:** If you are using the `--project <tsconfig.json>` command line argument as per the [Configuration Options](#configuration-options), and want to apply this same behavior when launching in VS Code, add an "env" key into the launch configuration: `"env": { "TS_NODE_PROJECT": "<tsconfig.json>" }`.
## How It Works
**TypeScript Node** works by registering the TypeScript compiler for `.tsx?` and `.jsx?` (when `allowJs == true`) extensions. When node.js has an extension registered (via `require.extensions`), it will use the extension internally for module resolution. When an extension is unknown to node.js, it handles the file as `.js` (JavaScript). By default, **TypeScript Node** avoids compiling files in `/node_modules/` for three reasons:
1. Modules should always be published in a format node.js can consume
2. Transpiling the entire dependency tree will make your project slower
3. Differing behaviours between TypeScript and node.js (e.g. ES2015 modules) can result in a project that works until you decide to support a feature natively from node.js
**P.S.** This means if you don't register an extension, it is compiled as JavaScript. When `ts-node` is used with `allowJs`, JavaScript files are transpiled using the TypeScript compiler.
## Loading `tsconfig.json`
**Typescript Node** loads `tsconfig.json` automatically. Use `--skip-project` to skip loading the `tsconfig.json`.
**Tip**: You can use `ts-node` together with [tsconfig-paths](https://www.npmjs.com/package/tsconfig-paths) to load modules according to the `paths` section in `tsconfig.json`.
## Configuration Options
You can set options by passing them before the script path, via programmatic usage or via environment variables.
```sh
ts-node --compiler ntypescript --project src/tsconfig.json hello-world.ts
```
**Note:** [`ntypescript`](https://github.com/TypeStrong/ntypescript#readme) is an example of a TypeScript compatible `compiler`.
### CLI Options
Supports `--print`, `--eval` and `--require` from [node.js CLI options](https://nodejs.org/api/cli.html).
* `--help` Prints help text
* `--version` Prints version information
### CLI and Programmatic Options
_Environment variable denoted in parentheses._
* `-T, --transpile-only` Use TypeScript's faster `transpileModule` (`TS_NODE_TRANSPILE_ONLY`, default: `false`)
* `-I, --ignore [pattern]` Override the path patterns to skip compilation (`TS_NODE_IGNORE`, default: `/node_modules/`)
* `-P, --project [path]` Path to TypeScript JSON project file (`TS_NODE_PROJECT`)
* `-C, --compiler [name]` Specify a custom TypeScript compiler (`TS_NODE_COMPILER`, default: `typescript`)
* `-D, --ignore-diagnostics [code]` Ignore TypeScript warnings by diagnostic code (`TS_NODE_IGNORE_DIAGNOSTICS`)
* `-O, --compiler-options [opts]` JSON object to merge with compiler options (`TS_NODE_COMPILER_OPTIONS`)
* `--files` Load files from `tsconfig.json` on startup (`TS_NODE_FILES`, default: `false`)
* `--pretty` Use pretty diagnostic formatter (`TS_NODE_PRETTY`, default: `false`)
* `--skip-project` Skip project config resolution and loading (`TS_NODE_SKIP_PROJECT`, default: `false`)
* `--skip-ignore` Skip ignore checks (`TS_NODE_SKIP_IGNORE`, default: `false`)
* `--log-error` Logs errors of types instead of exit the process (`TS_NODE_LOG_ERROR`, default: `false`)
* `--prefer-ts-exts` Re-order file extensions so that TypeScript imports are preferred (`TS_NODE_PREFER_TS_EXTS`, default: `false`)
### Programmatic Only Options
* `transformers` `_ts.CustomTransformers | ((p: _ts.Program) => _ts.CustomTransformers)` An object with transformers or a function that accepts a program and returns an transformers object to pass to TypeScript. Function isn't available with `transpileOnly` flag
* `readFile` Custom TypeScript-compatible file reading function
* `fileExists` Custom TypeScript-compatible file existence function
## Help! My Types Are Missing!
**TypeScript Node** does _not_ use `files`, `include` or `exclude`, by default. This is because a large majority projects do not use all of the files in a project directory (e.g. `Gulpfile.ts`, runtime vs tests) and parsing every file for types slows startup time. Instead, `ts-node` starts with the script file (e.g. `ts-node index.ts`) and TypeScript resolves dependencies based on imports and references.
For global definitions, you can use the `typeRoots` compiler option. This requires that your type definitions be structured as type packages (not loose TypeScript definition files). More details on how this works can be found in the [TypeScript Handbook](https://www.typescriptlang.org/docs/handbook/tsconfig-json.html#types-typeroots-and-types).
Example `tsconfig.json`:
```
{
"compilerOptions": {
"typeRoots" : ["./node_modules/@types", "./typings"]
}
}
```
Example project structure:
```
<project_root>/
-- tsconfig.json
-- typings/
-- <module_name>/
-- index.d.ts
```
Example module declaration file:
```
declare module '<module_name>' {
// module definitions go here
}
```
For module definitions, you can use [`paths`](https://www.typescriptlang.org/docs/handbook/module-resolution.html#path-mapping):
```json
{
"compilerOptions": {
"baseUrl": ".",
"paths": {
"custom-module-type": ["types/custom-module-type"]
}
}
}
```
An alternative approach for definitions of third-party libraries are [triple-slash directives](https://www.typescriptlang.org/docs/handbook/triple-slash-directives.html). This may be helpful if you prefer not to change your TypeScript `compilerOptions` or structure your custom type definitions when using `typeRoots`. Below is an example of the triple-slash directive as a relative path within your project:
```typescript
/// <reference types="./types/untyped_js_lib" />
import UntypedJsLib from "untyped_js_lib"
```
**Tip:** If you _must_ use `files`, enable `--files` flags or set `TS_NODE_FILES=true`.
## Watching and Restarting
**TypeScript Node** compiles source code via `require()`, watching files and code reloads are out of scope for the project. If you want to restart the `ts-node` process on file change, existing node.js tools such as [nodemon](https://github.com/remy/nodemon), [onchange](https://github.com/Qard/onchange) and [node-dev](https://github.com/fgnass/node-dev) work.
There's also [`ts-node-dev`](https://github.com/whitecolor/ts-node-dev), a modified version of [`node-dev`](https://github.com/fgnass/node-dev) using `ts-node` for compilation and won't restart the process on file change.
## License
MIT
[npm-image]: https://img.shields.io/npm/v/ts-node.svg?style=flat
[npm-url]: https://npmjs.org/package/ts-node
[downloads-image]: https://img.shields.io/npm/dm/ts-node.svg?style=flat
[downloads-url]: https://npmjs.org/package/ts-node
[travis-image]: https://img.shields.io/travis/TypeStrong/ts-node.svg?style=flat
[travis-url]: https://travis-ci.org/TypeStrong/ts-node
[coveralls-image]: https://img.shields.io/coveralls/TypeStrong/ts-node.svg?style=flat
[coveralls-url]: https://coveralls.io/r/TypeStrong/ts-node?branch=master