In order to overcome a few current limitations in TypeScript's allowances for plain JavaScript being converted to declaration files, this package offers handling to improve the process in a few limited cases.
- Supports a custom
@local
tag to add to@typdef
blocks to ensure such blocks are not exported (and one can thus use them for aliasing long types, keeping one's JSDoc easier to read). Workaround for TS #22160. - Support creation of a class skeleton (so that the class type can be targeted externally) when one wishes to export the class type but the code is not doing so (e.g., because the class is built dynamically and returned by a public function), one can overcome the limitation that TypeScript only exports the actual public exports in the case of classes. Workaround for TS #22126
Note that for class building, this is currently limited to returns of a certain
subset of class expressions. You can supply your own customClassHandling
and/or customParamHandling
to customize the building process further (as may
be necessary in some cases where the limited approach we are using doesn't
track types throughout the project and might not be readily detectable no
matter the approach). See the source for more.
npm install -D @es-joy/js2ts-assistant
async function js2tsAssistant ({
// Defaults to `_preprocess_include` value in `tsconfig.json`
includeFiles,
// Defaults to `_preprocess_exclude` value in `tsconfig.json`
ignoreFiles,
// Passed: `tag`, `identifier`, `typeCast`; Defaults to `undefined`
customParamHandling,
// Passed: `ast`, `builders`, `superClassName`; Defaults to `undefined`
customClassHandling,
// Where the files will be built (and can be targeted by tsc)
targetDirectory = "tmp"
}) {
}
We use @es-joy/jsdoc-eslint-parser/typescript.js
to parse JavaScript with
JSDoc blocks treated as regular AST nodes. This allows us to then use esquery
to quickly find the tags of interest to us.
In the case of building our dummy class, we use builders
from ast-types
to cleanly build our desired AST.
Then after modifications have been made, we use a light, jsdoc-comment-aware
fork of escodegen
, @es-joy/escodegen
, along with stringification of
@es-joy/jsdoccomment
to convert the modified JS+JSDoc back to a string
for saving to a file (which can then be processed by tsc
).