This is a TypeScript transformer that improves development experience of styled-components
.
The main purpose is to provide compile-time information of creates styled components, such as names of these components, for the run-time, allowing to operate with proper names of such the components.
The plugin was mostly inspired by great Babel's plugin babel-plugin-styled-components
and partially provides similar functionality for TypeScript users.
Note: This transformer will be useful to you only when you are transpiling your TS code using actual TS compiler, like tsc
ts-loader
or awesome-typescript-loader
. If your TS code is transpiled using babel-plugin-transform-typescript
, you should use babel-plugin-styled-components
instead.
The following command adds the packages to the project as a development-time dependency:
yarn add typescript-plugin-styled-components --dev
- Integration with
Webpack
- Integration with
Rollup
- TypeScript compiler (CLI)
ttypescript
compiler- API
- Notes
This section describes how to integrate the plugin into the build/bundling process driven by Webpack and its TypeScript loaders.
There are two popular TypeScript loaders that support specifying custom transformers:
- awesome-typescript-loader, supports custom transformers since v3.1.3
- ts-loader, supports custom transformers since v2.2.0
Both loaders use the same setting getCustomTransformers
which is an optional function that returns { before?: Transformer[], after?: Transformer[] }
.
In order to inject the transformer into compilation, add it to before
transformers array, like: { before: [styledComponentsTransformer] }
.
In the webpack.config.js
file in the section where awesome-typescript-loader is configured as a loader:
// 1. import default from the plugin module
const createStyledComponentsTransformer = require('typescript-plugin-styled-components').default;
// 2. create a transformer;
// the factory additionally accepts an options object which described below
const styledComponentsTransformer = createStyledComponentsTransformer();
// 3. add getCustomTransformer method to the loader config
var config = {
...
module: {
rules: [
{
test: /\.tsx?$/,
loader: 'awesome-typescript-loader',
options: {
... // other loader's options
getCustomTransformers: () => ({ before: [styledComponentsTransformer] })
}
}
]
}
...
};
Please note, that in the development mode, awesome-typescript-loader
uses multiple separate processes to speed up compilation. In that mode the above configuration cannot work because functions, which getCustomTransformers
is, are not transferrable between processes.
To solve this please refer to Forked process configuration section.
In the webpack.config.js
file in the section where ts-loader is configured as a loader:
// 1. import default from the plugin module
const createStyledComponentsTransformer = require('typescript-plugin-styled-components').default;
// 2. create a transformer;
// the factory additionally accepts an options object which described below
const styledComponentsTransformer = createStyledComponentsTransformer();
// 3. add getCustomTransformer method to the loader config
var config = {
...
module: {
rules: [
{
test: /\.tsx?$/,
loader: 'ts-loader',
options: {
... // other loader's options
getCustomTransformers: () => ({ before: [styledComponentsTransformer] })
}
}
]
}
...
};
Please note, when awesome-typescript-loader
is used with HappyPack
or thread-loader
, they use multiple separate processes to speed up compilation. In that mode the above configuration cannot work because functions, which getCustomTransformers
is, are not transferrable between processes.
To solve this please refer to Forked process configuration section.
To configure the transformer for development mode in awesome-typescript-loader
or ts-loader
with HappyPack
or thread-loader
, you need to make getCustomTransformers
a resolvable module name instead of the function. Since the configuration is very similar, here's an example:
Let's assume it is in the same folder as your webpack.config
and has name webpack.ts-transformers.js
:
// 1. import default from the plugin module
const createStyledComponentsTransformer = require('typescript-plugin-styled-components').default;
// 2. create a transformer;
// the factory additionally accepts an options object which described below
const styledComponentsTransformer = createStyledComponentsTransformer();
// 3. create getCustomTransformer function
const getCustomTransformers = () => ({ before: [styledComponentsTransformer] });
// 4. export getCustomTransformers
module.exports = getCustomTransformers;
-const createStyledComponentsTransformer = require('typescript-plugin-styled-components').default;
-const styledComponentsTransformer = createStyledComponentsTransformer();
options: {
... // other loader's options
- getCustomTransformers: () => ({ before: [styledComponentsTransformer] })
+ getCustomTransformers: path.join(__dirname, './webpack.ts-transformers.js')
}
This section describes how to integrate the plugin into the build/bundling process driven by Rollup and its TypeScript loader - rollup-plugin-typescript2.
In the rollup.config.js
file in the section where rollup-plugin-typescript2 is configured as a loader:
// 1. import default from the plugin module
const createStyledComponentsTransformer = require('typescript-plugin-styled-components').default;
// 2. create a transformer;
// the factory additionally accepts an options object which described below
const styledComponentsTransformer = createStyledComponentsTransformer();
// 3. add getCustomTransformer method to the loader config
var config = {
...
plugins: [
rollupTypescript({
...
transformers: [
() => ({
before: [styledComponentsTransformer],
}),
],
}),
...
],
...
};
TypeScript command line compiler tool (tsc
) does not support using of pluggable modules and transformers.
For that reason there are other tools created that do support pluggable transformers. See ttypescript
compiler section.
The ttypescript
compiler is a CLI tool that allows to use TypeScript compiler with pluggable transformers.
To use the transformer with that tool you can configure it by updating tsconfig.json
the following way:
{
"compilerOptions": {
"plugins": [
{
"transform": "typescript-plugin-styled-components",
"type": "config",
// other typescript-plugin-styled-components options can be added here
"minify": true,
"ssr": true
}
]
}
}
function createTransformer(options?: Partial<Options>): TransformerFactory<SourceFile>;
A factory that creates an instance of a TypeScript transformer (which is a factory itself).
It allows to optionally pass options that allow to tweak transformer's behavior. See Options
for details.
interface Options {
getDisplayName(filename: string, bindingName: string | undefined): string | undefined;
identifiers: CustomStyledIdentifiers;
ssr: boolean;
displayName: boolean;
minify: boolean;
componentIdPrefix: string;
}
This method is used to determine component display name from filename and its binding name.
filename
is the file name, relative to the project base directory, of the file where the styled component defined.
bindingName
is the name that is used in the source code to bind the component. It can be null
if the component was not bound or assigned.
Default strategy is to use bindingName
if it's defined and use inference algorithm from filename
otherwise.
Sample:
function getStyledComponentDisplay(filename, bindingName) {
return bindingName || makePascalCase(filename);
}
By adding a unique identifier to every styled component, this plugin avoids checksum mismatches due to different class generation on the client and on the server.
This option allows to disable component id generation by setting it to false
.
Default value is true
which means that component id is being injected.
This option enhances the attached CSS class name on each component with richer output to help identify your components in the DOM without React DevTools.
It also adds allows you to see the component's displayName
in React DevTools.
To disable displayName
generation set this option to false
Default value is true
which means that display name is being injected.
The option allows to turn on minification of inline styles used in styled components.
It is similar to babel-plugin-styled-components
's same option.
The minification is not exactly the same and may produce slightly different results.
Default value is false
which means the minification is not being performed.
To avoid colisions when running more than one insance of typescript-plugin-styled-components at a time, you can add a componentIdPrefix by providing an arbitrary string to this option.
Default value is ''
which means that no namespacing will happen.
This option allows to customize identifiers used by styled-components
API functions.
Warning. By providing custom identifiers, predefined ones are not added automatically. Make sure you add standard APIs in case you meant to use them.
interface CustomStyledIdentifiers {
styled: string[];
attrs: string[];
keyframes: string[];
css: string[];
createGlobalStyle: string[];
extend: string[];
}
styled
- list of identifiers ofstyled
API (default['styled']
)attrs
- list of identifiers ofattrs
API (default['attrs']
)keyframes
- list of identifiers ofkeyframes
API (default['keyframes']
)css
- list of identifiers ofcss
API (default['css']
)createGlobalStyle
- list of identifiers ofcreateGlobalStyle
API (default['createGlobalStyle']
)extend
- list of identifiers ofextend
API (default[]
). Note this API has been deprecated instyled-components
so starting from1.5
this option by default has empty set, which means it does not recognize this API by default.
Example
const styledComponentsTransformer = createStyledComponentsTransformer({
identifiers: {
styled: ['styled', 'typedStyled'] // typedStyled is an additional identifier of styled API
}
});
Technically, typescript-plugin-styled-components
is not a TypeScript plugin, since it is only exposed as a TypeScript transformer.