dts-dom
is a library for programatically generating TypeScript declaration files.
It is based mostly on the same CodeDOM provided for C# and other .NET languages.
dts-dom
automatically handles indentation, formatting, and proper placement of declare
and export
keywords.
As with other CodeDOM libraries, this is overkill for small projects, but is useful in more complex code generation scenarios.
PRs gladly accepted as this is mostly implemented on an as-needed basis for another project.
npm install --save dts-dom
import * as dom from 'dts-dom';
const intf = dom.create.interface('MyInterface');
intf.jsDocComment = 'This is my nice interface';
intf.members.push(dom.create.method(
'getThing',
[dom.create.parameter('x', dom.type.number)],
dom.type.void,
dom.DeclarationFlags.Optional));
const ns = dom.create.namespace('SomeNamespace');
ns.members.push(intf);
console.log(dom.emit(ns));
This writes out the block:
declare namespace SomeNamespace {
/**
* This is my nice interface
*/
interface MyInterface {
getThing?(x: number): void;
}
}
- New Functionality: Namespaces may now contain enums
- New Functionality: Type arguments for type references
- New Functionality: Generic function declarations
- New Functionality: Generic defaults
- New Functionality: Single-line JSDoc Comment option
- Bugfix: Enum members with falsy values like
0
are now correctly printed
- New Functionality: Added the ability to emit intersection types
- Breaking change: generic type parameters on methods were incorrectly not being emitted; see #42
-
New Functionality: Added the ability to emit
export default
assignmentsconst module = create.module('my-module'); const constDeclaration = create.const('test', 'string'); const exportDefault = create.exportDefault('test'); module.members.push(constDeclaration, exportDefault); const s = emit(module);
Produces:
declare module 'my-module' { const test: string; export default test; }
-
Non-breaking Change: Superfluous
declare
keywords are no longer emitted insidemodule
declarations
-
New Functionality: Added the ability to emit triple-slash directives #39
const tripleSlashDirectives = [create.tripleSlashReferenceTypesDirective("react")]; const returnType = create.namedTypeReference('JSX.Element'); const component = create.function('Component', [], returnType, DeclarationFlags.Export); const s = emit(component, { tripleSlashDirectives });
Produces:
/// <reference types="react" /> export function Component(): JSX.Element;
-
Breaking Change: Changed the second parameter of
emit
fromContextFlags
toEmitOptions
#39// 1.0 const s = emit(tree, ContextFlags.Module); // 2.0 const s = emit(tree, { rootFlags: ContextFlags.Module });
The same as 0.1.25
The major version will be bumped if:
- The semantics of emitted code changes, unless the prior emit was clearly a bug (e.g. members being simply skipped or printed with incorrect semantics)
- The API surface changes in a way that could break the runtime behavior of extant working code
The major version will not be bumped if:
- New API surface is added
- The formatting of emitted code changes
The following people have contributed features and/or bug fixes. Thank you!