Overview
ts-poet is a TypeScript code generator that is a small wrapper around template literals.
It lets you generate code as "just strings" (no need to tediously create a low-level AST), but then also:
-
"Auto imports" only the types/symbols that are actually used in the output
I.e. you use const Foo = imp("Foo@foo")
to define the imports you need in your generated code, use them like function printFoo(foo: ${Foo}): void
in your code
template strings, and then ts-poet creates the entire import stanza of import { Foo } from foo
at the top of your generated output.
This freedom, to not worry about what symbols you do/do not need make "import ..." lines for, lets you break up/decompose your code generation logic, so that you can have multiple levels of helper methods/etc. that can return code
template literals that embed both the code itself and the necessary type imports.
And when the final file is generated, ts-poet will collect and emit the necessary imports.
-
Automatically avoids import symbol collisions.
If you're generating types from an external schema, you'll occassionally run into naming conflicts where the external schema has a name that conflicts with your library's own internal name.
Like the external schema has a Message
table/resource, so we want to generate a class Message { ... }
type, but Message
is also the name of a symbol used by our library itself, i.e. import { Message } from runtime-library
for doing like Message.encode
or Message.decode
calls as part of our implementation.
With ts-poet, if you declare the symbols in your generated output as class ${def("Message")}
, ts-poet will give namespace preference to those definitions, and automatically rewrite the Message
import to import { Message as Message1 } from runtime-library
, both at the declaration site, as well as the usage sites, i.e. ${Message}.encode(...)
in the generated output will automatically become Message1.encode(...)
to reflect the rewritten symbol name.
-
Includes any other conditional output (see later), as/if needed.
Example
Here's some example HelloWorld
output generated by ts-poet:
import { Observable } from "rxjs/Observable";
export class Greeter {
private name: string;
constructor(private name: string) {}
greet(): Observable<string> {
return Observable.from(`Hello $name`);
}
}
And this is the code to generate it with ts-poet:
import { code, imp } from "ts-poet";
const Observable = imp("Observable@rxjs");
const greetMethod = code`
greet(): ${Observable}<string> {
return ${Observable}.from(\`Hello \${this.name}\`);
}
`;
const greeter = code`
export class Greeter {
private name: string;
constructor(name: string) {
this.name = name;
}
${greetMethod}
}
`;
const output = greeter.toString();
Import Specs
Given the primary goal of ts-poet is managing imports, there are several ways of specifying imports via the imp
function:
imp("Observable@rxjs")
--> import { Observable } from "rxjs"
(named import)imp("Observable@./Api")
--> import { Observable } from "./Api"
imp("Observable:Obs@rxjs")
--> import { Observable as Obs } from "rxjs"
(renamed import)imp("t:Observable@rxjs")
--> import type { Observable } from "rxjs"
(type import)imp("t:Observable:Obs@rxjs")
--> import type { Observable as Obs } from "rxjs"
imp("api*./Api")
--> import * as api from "./Api"
(namespace import)imp("api=./Api")
--> import api from "./Api"
(default import)imp("describe+mocha")
--> import "mocha"
(implicit import)
Avoiding Import Conflicts
Sometimes code generation output may declare a symbol that conflicts with an imported type (usually for generic names like Error
).
ts-poet will automatically detect and avoid conflicts if you tell it which symbols you're declaring, i.e.:
const bar = imp('Bar@./bar');
const output = code`
class ${def("Bar")} extends ${bar} {
...
}
`;
Will result in the imported Bar
symbol being remapped to Bar1
in the output:
import { Bar as Bar1 } from "./bar";
class Bar extends Bar1 {}
This is an admittedly contrived example for documentation purposes, but can be really useful when generating code against arbitrary / user-defined input (i.e. a schema that happens to uses a really common term).
saveFiles
If you're generating multiple files, ts-poet provides a saveFiles
command that can help with conditional output, i.e.:
const author = {
name: "Author.ts",
contents: "class Author extends AuthorCodegen {}",
overwrite: false,
};
const authorCodegen = {
name: "AuthorCodegen.ts",
contents: "class AuthorCodegen {}",
overwrite: true,
};
await saveFiles({
directory: "./src/entities",
files: [author, authorCodegen]
});
Conditional Output
Sometimes when generating larger, intricate output, you want to conditionally include helper methods. I.e. have a convertTimestamps
function declared at the top of your module, but only actually include that function if some other part of the output actually uses timestamps (which might depend on the specific input/schema you're generating code against).
ts-poet supports this with a conditionalOutput
method:
const convertTimestamps = conditionalOutput(
"convertTimestamps",
code`function convertTimestamps() { ...impl... }`,
);
const output = code`
${someSchema.map(f => {
if (f.type === "timestamp") {
// Using the convertTimestamps const marks it as used in our output
return code`${convertTimestamps}(f)`;
}
})}
// The .ifUsed result will be empty unless `convertTimestamps` has been marked has used
${convertTimestamps.ifUsed}
`;
And your output will have the convertTimestamps
declaration only if one of the schema fields had a timestamp
type.
This helps cut down on unnecessary output in the code, and compiler/IDE warnings like unused functions.
Literals
If you want to add a literal value, you can use literalOf
and arrayOf
:
code | output |
---|
let a = ${literalOf('foo')} | let a = 'foo'; |
let a = ${arrayOf(1, 2, 3)} | let a = [1, 2, 3]; |
let a = ${{foo: 'bar'}} | let a = { foo: 'bar' }; |
let a = ${{foo: code`bar`}} | let a = { foo: bar }; |
esModuleInterop Support
Unfortunately some dependencies need different imports based on your project's esModuleInterop
setting.
For example, with protobufjs, the Reader
symbol is imported differently:
const r1 = imp("Reader@protobufjs")
const r2 = imp("Reader@protobufjs")
For these scenarios, you can use forceDefaultImport
or forceModuleImport
:
const Reader = imp("Reader@protobufjs")
const c = code`let r1: ${Reader} = ...`
const esModuleInterop = fromYourConfig();
console.log(c.toString(
esModuleInterop
? { forceDefaultImport: ["protobufjs"] }
: { forceModuleImport: ["protobufjs"] }
));
This is most useful for frameworks that generate code, and have to support downstream projects that might have either esModuleInterop
setting.
Similarly, you can force the import require syntax, to support projects that use the pre-default exports export =
typing syntax, to export a single symbol:
const Long = imp("Long=long")
console.log(c.toString({ forceRequireImport: ["long"] }));
History
ts-poet was originally inspired by Square's JavaPoet code generation DSL, which has a very "Java-esque" builder API of addFunction
/addProperty
/etc. that ts-poet copied in it's original v1/v2 releases.
JavaPoet's approach worked very well for the Java ecosystem, as it was providing three features:
- nice formatting (historically code generation output has looked terrible; bad formatting, bad indentation, etc.)
- nice multi-line string support, via
appendLine(...).appendLine(...)
style methods. - "auto organize imports", of collecting imported symbols across the entire compilation unit of output, and organizing/formatting them at the top of the output file.
However, in the JavaScript/TypeScript world we have prettier for formatting, and nice multi-line string support via template literals, so really the only value add that ts-poet needs to provide is the "auto organize imports", which is what the post-v2/3.0 API has been rewritten (and dramatically simplified as a result) to provide.