This tool is used to generate dom.generated.d.ts
, webworker.generated.d.ts
and dom.iterable.generated.d.ts
for TypeScript.
The input file is the JSON webidl file generated by the Microsoft Edge browser.
To get things setup:
npm install
To generate the .d.ts
files
npm run build
To test:
npm run test
To deploy:
npm run migrate
The script will look in for a clone of the TypeScript repo in "../TypeScript", or "./TypeScript" to move the generated files in.
The dom.generated.d.ts
, webworker.generated.d.ts
and dom.iterable.generated.d.ts
files from the TypeScript repo are used as baselines.
For each pull request, we will run the script and compare the generated files with the baseline files.
In order to make the tests pass, please update the baseline as well in any pull requests.
It's recommended to first check which spec the wrong type belongs to. Say we are to update IntersectionObserver
which belongs to Intersection Observer
spec, and then we can do:
- First check we have the spec name
Intersection Observer
ininputfiles/idlSources.json
. If not, add it. - Run
npm run fetch-idl "Intersection Observer" && npm run build && npm run baseline-accept
.
If the above didn't fix the type issues, we can fix them via json files as a last resort.
There are three json files that are typically used to alter the type generation: addedTypes.json
, overridingTypes.json
, and removedTypes.json
.
comments.json
can used to add comments to the types.
Finally, knownTypes.json
determine which types are available in a certain environment in case it couldn't be automatically determined.
The format of each file can be inferred from their existing content.
The common steps to send a pull request are:
- Open or refer to an issue in the TypeScript repo.
- Add missing elements to
inputfiles/addedTypes.json
, overriding elements toinputfiles/overridingTypes.json
, or elements to remove toinputfiles/removedTypes.json
. - Run the build script locally to obtain new
dom.generated.d.ts
andwebworker.generated.d.ts
. - Update the files in the
baselines
folder using the newly generated files undergenerated
folder (npm run baseline-accept
).
Changes to this repo can have pretty drastic ecosystem effects, because these types are included by default in TypeScript. Due to this, we tend to be quite conservative with our approach to introducing changes. To give you a sense of whether we will accept changes, you can use these heuristics to know up-front if we'll be open to merging.
For example, changing a type on a field, or nullability references
- Does the PR show examples of the changes being used in spec examples or reputable websites like MDN?
- Did this change come from an IDL update?
- Does the change appear to be high-impact on a well-used API?
- Would the changes introduce a lot of breaking changes to existing code? For example the large corpus of typed code in DefinitelyTyped.
For example, adding a new spec or subsection via a new or updated IDL file
- Does the new objects or fields show up in mdn/browser-compat-data? If not, it's likely too soon.
- Is the IDL source from WHATWG?
- Is the IDL source from W3C?
- What stage of the W3C process is the proposal for these changes: We aim for Proposed recommendation, but can accept Candidate recommendation for stable looking proposals.
- If it's at Working draft the additions available in all three of Firefox, Safari and Chromium
- Could any types added at the global scope have naming conflicts?
- Are the new features going to be used by a lot of people?
For example, removing a browser-specific section of code
- Do the removed objects or fields show up in mdn/browser-compat-data? If so, are they marked as deprecated?
- Does an internet search for the fields show results in blogs/recommendations?
- When was the deprecation (this can be hard to find) but was it at least 2 years ago if so?
src/index.ts
: handles the emitting of the.d.ts
files.src/test.ts
: verifies the output by comparing thegenerated/
andbaseline/
contents.
browser.webidl.preprocessed.json
: a JSON file generated by Microsoft Edge. Do not edit this file.- Due to the different update schedules between Edge and TypeScript, this may not be the most up-to-date version of the spec.
mdn/apiDescriptions.json
: a JSON file generated by fetching API descriptions from MDN. Do not edit this file.addedTypes.json
: types that should exist in either browser or webworker but are missing from the Edge spec. The format of the file mimics that ofbrowser.webidl.preprocessed.json
.overridingTypes.json
: types that are defined in the spec file but has a better or more up-to-date definitions in the json files.removedTypes.json
: types that are defined in the spec file but should be removed.comments.json
: comment strings to be embedded in the generated .js files.deprecatedMessage.json
: the reason why one type is deprecated. The reason why it is a separate file rather than merge in comment.json is mdn/apiDescriptions.json would also possibly be deprecated.