/ts-monorepo-starter

Primary LanguageTypeScriptMIT LicenseMIT

Template project for setting up a TypeScript monorepo

tests


Table of content

Features

The main focus of this repo is making the Go to definition feature in IDEs work without any surprises, meaning it will work after a fresh clone without needing to build the project.

find-usage

The secondary focus is to remove surprises when publishing packages. The repo is set up so that each package gets a clean build output without any artifacts from other packages.

build-output

Everything else is kept to a minimum. Apart from my personal ESLint config to keep the code clean, there are no extra tools included — you're free to customize this to your own needs after cloning. Compilation targets, module systems, tree shaking etc. are left up to you to decide.

Setup

This repo uses pnpm, but should work fine with any of the following:

I strongly recommend pnpm over the other solutions, not only because it's usually faster, but because it avoids dependency problems caused by hoisting (see https://github.com/NiGhTTraX/ts-monorepo/commit/d93139166b25fab15e9538df58a7d06270b846c9 as an example).

# Install pnpm with your preferred method: https://pnpm.io/installation.
npm i -g pnpm

# Install all dependencies.
pnpm i

Docs

See the following blog posts:

If you're looking for the project references solution checkout the project-references branch.

Packages vs apps

This repo contains two types of workspaces:

  • packages: meant to be published to npm and installed,
  • apps: meant to be executed.

A good example to illustrate the difference is create-react-app: you wouldn't publish an app like this to npm, you would run it, more specifically you would build the JS bundle and then deploy that somewhere.

For packages, you don't want to bundle all the monorepo dependencies, and instead publish them individually. That's why packages have a separate build tsconfig.json that resolves monorepo dependencies to node_modules.

Integrations

ts-node

Use tsconfig-paths to resolve the path aliases at runtime:

{
  "scripts": {
    "start": "ts-node -r tsconfig-paths/register src/index.ts"
  }
}

See the full example here.

Babel

Use babel-plugin-module-resolver to resolve the path aliases:

module.exports = {
  presets: [
    ["@babel/preset-env", { targets: { node: "current" } }],
    "@babel/preset-typescript",
  ],

  plugins: [
    [
      "module-resolver",
      {
        alias: {
          "^@nighttrax/(.+)": "../\\1/src",
        },
      },
    ],
  ],
};

See the full example here.

webpack

Use tsconfig-paths-webpack-plugin to resolve the path aliases:

const TsconfigPathsPlugin = require("tsconfig-paths-webpack-plugin");

module.exports = {
  resolve: {
    plugins: [new TsconfigPathsPlugin()]
  }
};

See the full example here.

jest

If you use Babel then see this example from the Babel section above.

If you use ts-jest then you can use its pathsToModuleNameMapper helper:

const { pathsToModuleNameMapper } = require("ts-jest");
const { compilerOptions } = require("../../tsconfig.json");

module.exports = {
  preset: "ts-jest",

  moduleNameMapper: pathsToModuleNameMapper(compilerOptions.paths, {
    // This has to match the baseUrl defined in tsconfig.json.
    prefix: "<rootDir>/../../",
  }),
};

See the full example here.

create-react-app

Use craco or react-app-rewired to extend CRA's webpack config and apply the tsconfig-paths-webpack-plugin:

const TsconfigPathsPlugin = require("tsconfig-paths-webpack-plugin");

module.exports = (config) => {
  // Remove the ModuleScopePlugin which throws when we
  // try to import something outside of src/.
  config.resolve.plugins.pop();

  // Resolve the path aliases.
  config.resolve.plugins.push(new TsconfigPathsPlugin());

  // Let Babel compile outside of src/.
  const oneOfRule = config.module.rules.find((rule) => rule.oneOf);
    const tsRule = oneOfRule.oneOf.find((rule) =>
      rule.test.toString().includes("ts|tsx")
    );
  tsRule.include = undefined;
  tsRule.exclude = /node_modules/;

  return config;
};

See the full example here. For tests, see the jest example.

Vite

Use vite-tsconfig-paths in the Vite config:

import { defineConfig } from "vite";
import react from "@vitejs/plugin-react";
import tsconfigPaths from "vite-tsconfig-paths";

export default defineConfig({
  plugins: [
    react(), 
    tsconfigPaths()
  ],
});

See full example here.

NextJS

Extend Next's webpack config to enable compiling packages from the monorepo:

module.exports = {
  webpack: (config) => {
    // Let Babel compile outside of src/.
    const tsRule = config.module.rules.find(
      (rule) => rule.test && rule.test.toString().includes("tsx|ts")
    );
    tsRule.include = undefined;
    tsRule.exclude = /node_modules/;

    return config;
  },
};

See the full example here.

NestJS

Include the path aliases in both tsconfig.json and tsconfig.build.json and tell NestJS where to find the main.js file:

{
  "collection": "@nestjs/schematics",
  "sourceRoot": "src",
  "entryFile": "apps/nestjs/src/main"
}

See the full example here.

Storybook

Extend Storybook's webpack config and apply the tsconfig-paths-webpack-plugin:

const TsconfigPathsPlugin = require('tsconfig-paths-webpack-plugin');

module.exports = {
  webpackFinal: async (config) => {
    config.resolve.plugins = [
      ...(config.resolve.plugins || []),
      new TsconfigPathsPlugin({
        extensions: config.resolve.extensions,
      }),
    ];
    return config;
  },
};

See the full example here.