TypeScript Execute (
tsx
): Node.js enhanced with esbuild to run TypeScript & ESM files
- Blazing fast on-demand TypeScript & ESM compilation
- Works in both CommonJS and ESM packages
- Supports next-gen TypeScript extensions (
.cts
&.mts
) - Supports
node:
import prefixes - Hides experimental feature warnings
- TypeScript REPL
- Resolves
tsconfig.json
paths
- Tested on Linux & Windows with Node.js v12~18
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tsx
is a CLI command (alternative to node
) for seamlessly running TypeScript & ESM, in both commonjs
& module
package types.
It's powered by esbuild so it's insanely fast.
Want to just run TypeScript code? Try tsx:
npx tsx ./script.ts
How does it compare to ts-node? Checkout the comparison.
If you're using it in an npm project, install it as a development dependency:
npm install --save-dev tsx
You can reference it directly in the package.json#scripts
object:
{
"scripts": {
"dev": "tsx ..."
}
}
To use the binary, you can call it with npx
while in the project directory:
npx tsx ...
If you want to use it in any arbitrary project without npx
, install it globally:
npm install --global tsx
Then, you can call tsx
directly:
tsx ...
tsx
is designed to be a drop-in replacement for node
, so you can use it just the way you would use Node.js. All command-line arguments (with the exception of a few) are propagated to Node.js.
Pass in a file to run:
tsx ./file.ts
By default, tsconfig.json
will be detected from the current working directory.
To set a custom path, use the --tsconfig
flag:
tsx --tsconfig ./path/to/tsconfig.custom.json ./file.ts
Run file and automatically rerun on changes:
tsx watch ./file.ts
All imported files are watched except from the following directories:
node_modules
, bower_components
, vendor
, dist
, and .*
(hidden directories).
- Press Return to manually rerun
- Pass in
--clear-screen=false
to disable clearing the screen on rerun
Start a TypeScript REPL by running with no arguments:
tsx
Modules transformations are cached in the system cache directory (TMPDIR
). Transforms are cached by content hash, so duplicate dependencies are not re-transformed.
Set the --no-cache
flag to disable the cache:
tsx --no-cache ./file.ts
tsx
is a standalone binary designed to be used in place of node
, but sometimes you'll want to use node
directly. For example, when adding TypeScript & ESM support to npm-installed binaries.
To use tsx
with Node.js, pass it to the --loader
flag.
Note: Node.js's experimental feature warnings will not be suppressed when used as a loader.
# As a CLI flag
node --loader tsx ./file.ts
# As an environment variable
NODE_OPTIONS='--loader tsx' node ./file.ts
Tip: In rare circumstances, you might be limited to using the
-r, --require
flag.You can use
@esbuild-kit/cjs-loader
, but transformations will only be applied torequire()
.
-
@esbuild-kit/esm-loader - Node.js Loader to transform TypeScript to ESM.
-
@esbuild-kit/cjs-loader - Node.js
require()
hook to transform TypeScript & ESM to CommonJS.
tsx
stands for "TypeScript execute", similar to npx
("Node.js package execute").
It has an unfortunate overlap with React's TSX/JSX, which stands for "JavaScript XML". However, we believe the naming is appropriate for what it does.
No, esbuild does not support type checking.
It's recommended to run TypeScript separately as a command (tsc --noEmit
) or via IDE IntelliSense.
How is tsx
different from ts-node
?
They're both tools to run TypeScript files. But tsx does a lot more to improve the experience of using Node.js.
tsx just works. It's zero-config and doesn't require tsconfig.json
to get started, making it easy for users that just want to run TypeScript code and not get caught up in the configuration.
It's a single binary with no peer-dependencies (e.g. TypeScript or esbuild), so there is no setup necessary, enabling usage that is elegant and frictionless for first-time users:
npx tsx ./script.ts
tsx is zero-config because it has smart detections built in. As a runtime, it detects what's imported to make many options in tsconfig.json
redundant—which was designed for compiling matching files regardless of whether they're imported.
It seamlessly adapts between CommonJS and ESM package types by detecting how modules are loaded (require()
or import
) to determine how to compile them. It even adds support for require()
ing ESM modules from CommonJS so you don't have to worry about your dependencies as the ecosystem migrates to ESM.
Newer and unsupported syntax & features like importing node:
prefixes are downgraded by detecting the Node.js version. For large TypeScript codebases, it has tsconfig.json paths
aliasing support out of the box.
At the core, tsx is powered by esbuild for blazing fast TypeScript compilation, whereas ts-node
(by default) uses the TypeScript compiler. Because esbuild doesn't type check, tsx
is similar to ts-node --esm --swc
(which uses the SWC compiler).
As a bonus, tsx also comes with a watcher to speed up your development.
Here's an exhaustive technical comparison between tsx
, ts-node
, and other runtimes.
No. tsx uses esbuild's Transform API, which doesn't support plugins.
No. tsx's integration with Node.js is designed to be seamless so there is no configuration.