tsify
Browserify plugin for compiling TypeScript
Example Usage
Browserify API:
var browserify = require('browserify');
var tsify = require('tsify');
browserify()
.add('main.ts')
.plugin(tsify, { noImplicitAny: true })
.bundle()
.on('error', function (error) { console.error(error.toString()); })
.pipe(process.stdout);
Command line:
$ browserify main.ts -p [ tsify --noImplicitAny ] > bundle.js
Note that when using the Browserify CLI, compilation will always halt on the first error encountered, unlike the regular TypeScript CLI. This behavior can be overridden in the API, as shown in the API example.
Also note that the square brackets [ ]
in the example above are required if you want to pass parameters to tsify; they don't denote an optional part of the command.
Installation
Just plain ol' npm installation:
1. Install browserify
npm install browserify
2. Install typescript
npm install typescript
3. Install tsify
npm install tsify
For use on the command line, use the flag npm install -g
.
Options
- tsify will generate sourcemaps if the
--debug
option is set on Browserify. - tsify supports almost all options from the TypeScript compiler. Notable exceptions:
-d, --declaration
- See tsify#15--out, --outDir
- Use Browserify's file output options instead. These options are overridden because tsify writes to an internal memory store before bundling, instead of to the filesystem.
- tsify supports the TypeScript compiler's
-p, --project
option which allows you to specify the path that will be used when searching for the tsconfig.json
file. You can pass either the path to a directory or to the tsconfig.json
file itself. - tsify supports the following extra options:
--global
- This will set up tsify as a global transform. See the Browserify docs for the implications of this flag.--typescript
- By default we just do require('typescript')
to pickup whichever version you installed. However, this option allows you to pass in a different TypeScript compiler, such as NTypeScript. Note that when using the API, you can pass either the name of the alternative compiler or a reference to it:
{ typescript: 'ntypescript' }
{ typescript: require('ntypescript') }
Does this work with...
tsconfig.json?
tsify will automatically read options from tsconfig.json
. However, some options from this file will be ignored:
compilerOptions.declaration
- See tsify#15compilerOptions.out
, compilerOptions.outDir
, and compilerOptions.noEmit
- Use Browserify's file output options instead. These options are overridden because tsify writes its intermediate JavaScript output to an internal memory store instead of to the filesystem.files
- Use Browserify's file input options instead. This is necessary because Browserify needs to know which file(s) are the entry points to your program.
Watchify?
Yes! tsify can do incremental compilation using watchify, resulting in much faster incremental build times. Just follow the Watchify documentation, and add tsify as a plugin as indicated in the documentation above.
Gulp?
No problem. See the Gulp recipes on using browserify and watchify, and add tsify as a plugin as indicated in the documentation above.
Grunt?
Use grunt-browserify and you should be good! Just add tsify as a plugin in your Grunt configuration.
IE 11?
The inlined sourcemaps that Browserify generates may not be readable by IE 11 for debugging purposes. This is easy to fix by adding exorcist to your build workflow after Browserify.
ES2015? (formerly known as ES6)
TypeScript's ES2015 output mode should work without too much additional setup. Browserify does not support ES2015 modules, so if you want to use ES2015 you still need some transpilation step. Make sure to add babelify to your list of transforms. Note that if you are using the API, you need to set up tsify before babelify:
browserify()
.plugin(tsify, { target: 'es6' })
.transform(babelify, { extensions: [ '.tsx', '.ts' ] })
FAQ / Common issues
SyntaxError: 'import' and 'export' may appear only with 'sourceType: module'
This error occurs when a TypeScript file is not compiled to JavaScript before being run through the Browserify bundler. There are a couple known reasons you might run into this.
- If you are trying to output in ES6 mode, then you have to use an additional transpilation step such as babelify because Browserify does not support bundling ES6 modules.
- Make sure that if you're using the API, your setup
.plugin('tsify')
is done before any transforms such as .transform('babelify')
. tsify needs to run first! - There is a known issue in Browserify regarding including files with
expose
set to the name of the included file. More details and a workaround are available in #60.
Why a plugin?
There are several TypeScript compilation transforms available on npm, all with various issues. The TypeScript compiler automatically performs dependency resolution on module imports, much like Browserify itself. Browserify transforms are not flexible enough to deal with multiple file outputs given a single file input, which means that any working TypeScript compilation transform either skips the resolution step (which is necessary for complete type checking) or performs multiple compilations of source files further down the dependency graph.
tsify avoids this problem by using the power of plugins to perform a single compilation of the TypeScript source up-front, using Browserify to glue together the resulting files.
License
MIT
Changelog
- 1.0.7 - Replaced
Object.assign
with object-assign
for Node 0.12 compatibility. - 1.0.6 - Fixed a bug in which TypeScript 2 libraries (specified using the
lib
option) were left out of the compilation when bundling on Windows. - 1.0.5 - Fixed a bug where empty output resulted in an error.
- 1.0.4 - Fixed numerous bugs:
- Refactored to use canonical file names, fixing #122, #135, #148, #150 and #161.
- Refactored to avoid having to infer the TypeScript root, fixing #152.
- Misconfiguration of
tsify
as a transform now results in an explicit error. - Internal errors that previously went unreported are now emitted to Browserify.
- 1.0.3 - Fixed a bug introduced in 1.0.2 (that resulted in the
target
being set to ES3
). - 1.0.2 - Added support for the TypeScript compiler's short-name, command-line options (e.g.
-p
). - 1.0.1 - On Windows, sometimes, the Browserify
basedir
contains backslashes that need normalization for findConfigFile to work correctly. - 1.0.0 - Breaking: TypeScript is now a
devDependency
so we don't install one for you. Please run npm install typescript --save-dev
in your project to use whatever version you want. - 0.16.0 - Reinstated changes from 0.15.5.
- 0.15.6 - Reverted 0.15.5 because of breaking changes.
- 0.15.5 - Used
TypeStrong/tsconfig
for parsing tsconfig.json
to add support for exclude
and more. - 0.15.4 - Fixed some compilation failures introduced by v0.14.3.
- 0.15.3 - Added support for the
--global
flag to use tsify as a global transform. - 0.15.2 - Added support for the
files
property of tsconfig.json
. - 0.15.1 - Added support for
--project
flag to use a custom location for tsconfig.json
. - 0.15.0 - Removed
debuglog
dependency. - 0.14.8 - Reverted removal of
debuglog
dependency for compatibility with old versions of Node 0.12. - 0.14.7 - Only generate sourcemap information in the compiler when
--debug
is set, for potential speed improvements when not using sourcemaps. - 0.14.6 - Fixed output when
--jsx=preserve
is set. - 0.14.5 - Removed
lodash
and debuglog
dependencies. - 0.14.4 - Fixed sourcemap paths when using Browserify's
basedir
option. - 0.14.3 - Fixed
allowJs
option to enable transpiling ES6+ JS to ES5 or lower. - 0.14.2 - Fixed
findConfigFile
for TypeScript 1.9 dev. - 0.14.1 - Removed module mode override for ES6 mode (because CommonJS mode is now supported by TS 1.8).
- 0.14.0 - Updated to TypeScript 1.8 (thanks @joelday!)
- 0.13.2 - Fixed
findConfigFile
for use with the TypeScript 1.8 dev version. - 0.13.1 - Fixed bug where
*.tsx
was not included in Browserify's list of extensions if the jsx
option was set via tsconfig.json
. - 0.13.0 - Updated to TypeScript 1.7.
- 0.12.2 - Fixed resolution of entries outside of
process.cwd()
(thanks @pnlybubbles!) - 0.12.1 - Updated
typescript
dependency to lock it down to version 1.6.x - 0.12.0 - Updated to TypeScript 1.6.
- 0.11.16 - Updated
typescript
dependency to lock it down to version 1.5.x - 0.11.15 - Added
*.tsx
to Browserify's list of extensions if --jsx
is set (with priority *.ts > *.tsx > *.js). - 0.11.14 - Override sourcemap settings with
--inlineSourceMap
and --inlineSources
(because that's what Browserify expects). - 0.11.13 - Fixed bug introduced in last change where non-entry point files were erroneously being excluded from the build.
- 0.11.12 - Fixed compilation when the current working directory is a symlink.
- 0.11.11 - Updated compiler host to support current TypeScript nightly.
- 0.11.10 - Updated resolution of
lib.d.ts
to support TypeScript 1.6 and to work with the --typescript
option. - 0.11.9 - Fixed dumb error.
- 0.11.8 - Handled JSX output from the TypeScript compiler to support
preserve
. - 0.11.7 - Added
*.tsx
to the regex determining whether to run a file through the TypeScript compiler. - 0.11.6 - Updated dependencies and devDependencies to latest.
- 0.11.5 - Fixed emit of
file
event to trigger watchify even when there are fatal compilation errors. - 0.11.4 - Added
--typescript
option. - 0.11.3 - Updated to TypeScript 1.5.
- 0.11.2 - Blacklisted
--out
and --outDir
compiler options. - 0.11.1 - Added
tsconfig.json
support. - 0.11.0 - Altered behavior to pass through all compiler options to tsc by default.
- 0.10.2 - Fixed output of global error messages. Fixed code generation in ES6 mode.
- 0.10.1 - Fixed display of nested error messages, e.g. many typing errors.
- 0.10.0 - Added
stopOnError
option and changed default behavior to continue building when there are typing errors. - 0.9.0 - Updated to use TypeScript from npm (thanks @hexaglow!)
- 0.8.2 - Updated peerDependency for Browserify to allow any version >= 6.x.
- 0.8.1 - Updated peerDependency for Browserify 9.x.
- 0.8.0 - Updated to TypeScript 1.4.1.
- 0.7.1 - Updated peerDependency for Browserify 8.x.
- 0.7.0 - Updated error handling for compatibility with Watchify.
- 0.6.5 - Updated peerDependency for Browserify 7.x.
- 0.6.4 - Included richer file position information in syntax error messages.
- 0.6.3 - Updated to TypeScript 1.3.
- 0.6.2 - Included empty *.d.ts compiled files in bundle for Karma compatibility.
- 0.6.1 - Fixed compilation cache miss when given absolute filenames.
- 0.6.0 - Updated to TypeScript 1.1.
- 0.5.2 - Bugfix for 0.5.1 for files not included with expose.
- 0.5.1 - Handled *.d.ts files passed as entries. Fix for files included with expose.
- 0.5.0 - Updated to Browserify 6.x.
- 0.4.1 - Added npmignore to clean up published package.
- 0.4.0 - Dropped Browserify 4.x support. Fixed race condition causing pathological performance with some usage patterns, e.g. when used with karma-browserify.
- 0.3.1 - Supported adding files with
bundler.add()
. - 0.3.0 - Added Browserify 5.x support.
- 0.2.1 - Fixed paths for sources in sourcemaps.
- 0.2.0 - Made Browserify prioritize *.ts files over *.js files in dependency resolution.
- 0.1.4 - Handled case where the entry point is not a TypeScript file.
- 0.1.3 - Automatically added *.ts to Browserify's list of file extensions to resolve.
- 0.1.2 - Added sourcemap support.
- 0.1.1 - Fixed issue where intermediate *.js files were being written to disk when using
watchify
. - 0.1.0 - Initial version.