dtslint
tests a TypeScript declaration file for style and correctness.
It will install typescript
and tslint
for you, so this is the only tool you need to test a type definition.
Lint rules new to dtslint are documented in the docs directory.
If you are working on DefinitelyTyped, read the DefinitelyTyped README.
If you are writing the library in TypeScript, don't use dtslint
.
Use --declaration
to have type definitions generated for you.
If you are a library author, read below.
dts-gen
may help, but is not required.
Create a types
directory. (Name is arbitrary.)
Add "types": "types"
to your package.json
.
Read more on bundling types here.
Only index.d.ts
needs to be published to NPM. Other files are just for testing.
Write your type definitions here.
Refer to the handbook or dts-gen
's templates for how to do this.
{
"compilerOptions": {
"module": "commonjs",
"lib": ["es6"],
"noImplicitAny": true,
"noImplicitThis": true,
"strictNullChecks": true,
"strictFunctionTypes": true,
"noEmit": true,
// If the library is an external module (uses `export`), this allows your test file to import "mylib" instead of "./index".
// If the library is global (cannot be imported via `import` or `require`), leave this out.
"baseUrl": ".",
"paths": { "mylib": ["."] }
}
}
You may extend "lib"
to, for example, ["es6", "dom"]
if you need those typings.
You may also have add "target": "es6"
if using certain language features.
If you are using the default rules, this is optional.
If present, this will override dtslint
's default settings.
You can specify new lint rules, or disable some. An example:
{
"extends": "dtslint/dtslint.json", // Or "dtslint/dt.json" if on DefinitelyTyped
"rules": {
"semicolon": false,
"indent": [true, "tabs"]
}
}
You can have any number of test files you want, with any names. See below on what to put in them.
A test file should be a piece of sample code that tests using the library. Tests are type-checked, but not run.
To assert that an expression is of a given type, use $ExpectType
.
To assert that an expression causes a compile error, use $ExpectError
.
(Assertions will be checked by the expect
lint rule.)
import { f } from "my-lib"; // f is(n: number) => void
// $ExpectType void
f(1);
// Can also write the assertion on the same line.
f(2); // $ExpectType void
// $ExpectError
f("one");
Normally packages will be tested using TypeScript 2.0. To use a newer version, specify it by including a comment like so:
// TypeScript Version: 2.1
For DefinitelyTyped packages, this should go just under the header (on line 5). For bundled typings, this can go on any line (but should be near the top).
npm install --save-dev dtslint
- Add to your
package.json
scripts
:"dtslint": "dtslint types"
npm run dtslint
npm link . # Global 'dts-lint' should now refer to this.
npm run watch
Use npm run test
to run all tests.
To run a single test: node node_modules/tslint/bin/tslint --rules-dir bin/rules --test test/expect
.
npm run push-production
This script merges changes from master into production
and updates the bin/
directory.
The production
branch is a dependency of DefinitelyTyped and types-publisher.
- Update package.json
- Follow publish steps except for the
git push
at the end. - Make sure you are logged in to npm as typescript.
npm publish
This project has adopted the Microsoft Open Source Code of Conduct. For more information see the Code of Conduct FAQ or contact opencode@microsoft.com with any additional questions or comments.
I'm getting an error about a missing typescript install.
Error: Cannot find module '/node_modules/dtslint/typescript-installs/3.1/node_modules/typescript`
Package lock files such as yarn.lock
and package-lock.json
may cause this issue because of our github dependency on "definitelytyped-header-parser": "github:Microsoft/definitelytyped-header-parser#production"
, which contains the list of typescript versions to install. To fix this, try deleting your lock file and re-installing.