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grunt-ts

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Written from scratch TypeScript compiler task for GruntJS.

Following are the reasons why grunt-ts was created:

  • Written in TypeScript
  • Enables a TypeScript development workflow in addition to simple file compilation.
  • Supports overriding the bundled compiler with an alternate version.

Check how grunt-ts can help streamline front end development: Sample usage with AngularJS

Additional / longer / more basic video tutorial: http://youtu.be/Km0DpfX5ZxM

For a quickstart see the full featured Gruntfile.

If you don't know what is meant by external modules please see this short video. We highly recommend you use external modules only in all your projects.

Key features

Compiler support

Supports the following compiler flags in both original format and camelCase (preferred):

--allowBool                   Allow 'bool' as a synonym for 'boolean'.
--allowImportModule           Allow 'module(...)' as a synonym for 'require(...)'.
--declaration                 Generates corresponding .d.ts file
--mapRoot LOCATION            Specifies the location where debugger should locate map files instead of generated locations.
--module KIND                 Specify module code generation: "commonjs" or "amd" (grunt-ts default)
--noImplicitAny               Warn on expressions and declarations with an implied 'any' type.
--noResolve                   Skip resolution and preprocessing
--removeComments              Do not emit comments to output (grunt-ts default)
--sourceMap                   Generates corresponding .map file (grunt-ts default)
--sourceRoot LOCATION         Specifies the location where debugger should locate TypeScript files instead of source locations.
--target VERSION              Specify ECMAScript target version: "ES3" (tsc default), or "ES5" (grunt-ts default)

There is also support for js file concatenation using --out. Additionally supported is an output directory for the generated JavaScript using --outDir flag. For file ordering look at JavaScript Generation below.

Transforms

Objective : To allow easier code refactoring by taking the relative path maintainance burden off the developer. If the paths to the files changes grunt-ts will regenerate the relevant sections.

Transforms begin with a three-slash comment /// and are prefixed with ts:

You can also run transforms without compiling your code b ysetting compile: false in your config. For example:

grunt.initConfig({
   ts: {
      "transforms-only": {
         options: {
            compile: false
         },
         // in addition to your standard settings:
         // src: ...
         // outDir: ...
      },
      // ...
   }
} );

Import Transform

///ts:import=<fileOrDirectoryName>[,<variableName>]

This will generate the relevant import foo = require('./path/to/foo'); code without you having to figure out the relative path.

If a directory is provided, the entire contents of the directory will be imported. However if a directory has a file index.ts inside of it, then instead of importing the entire folder only index.ts is imported.

Examples

Import file:

///ts:import=filename
import filename = require('../path/to/filename'); ///ts:import:generated

Import file with an alternate name:

///ts:import=BigLongClassName,foo
import foo = require('../path/to/BigLongClassName'); ///ts:import:generated

Import directory:

///ts:import=directoryName
import filename = require('../path/to/directoryName/filename'); ///ts:import:generated
import anotherfile = require('../path/to/directoryName/deeper/anotherfile'); ///ts:import:generated
...

Import directory that has an index.ts file in it:

///ts:import=directoryName
import directoryName = require('../path/to/directoryName/index'); ///ts:import:generated

See Exports for examples of how grunt-ts can generate an index.ts file for you

Export Transform

///ts:export=<fileOrDirectoryName>[,<variableName>]

This is similar to ///ts:import but will generate export import foo = require('./path/to/foo'); and is very useful for generating indexes of entire module directories when using external modules (which you should always be using).

Examples

Export file:

///ts:export=filename
export import filename = require('../path/to/filename'); ///ts:export:generated

Export file with an alternate name:

///ts:export=filename,foo
export import foo = require('../path/to/filename'); ///ts:export:generated

Export directory:

///ts:export=dirName
export import filename = require('../path/to/dirName/filename'); ///ts:export:generated
export import anotherfile = require('../path/to/dirName/deeper/anotherfile'); ///ts:export:generated
...

References

///ts:ref=<fileName>

This will generate the relevant /// <references path="./path/to/foo" /> code without you having to figure out the relative path.

Examples

Reference file:

///ts:ref=filename
/// <reference path='../path/to/filename'/> ///ts:ref:generated

Reference file generation

Grunt-ts can generate a reference.ts file which contains a reference to all ts files.

This means there will never be a need to cross reference files manually, instead just reference reference.ts :)

Usage

In your gruntfile:

grunt.initConfig({
   ts: {
      target: {
         reference: "./path/to/references.ts",
         // in addition to your standard settings:
         // src: ...
         // outDir: ...
         // options: {}
      }
   }
} );

Warning: Using the compiler with --out / reference.ts will slow down a fast compile pipeline. Use external modules with transforms instead.

JavaScript generation and ordering

When a output file is specified via out in combination with a reference file via reference then grunt-ts uses the generated reference file to order the code in the generated JavaScript.

Use reference.ts to specify the order for the few files the build really cares about and leave the rest to be maintained by grunt-ts.

E.g. in the following case the generated JavaScript for someBaseClass.ts is guaranteed to be at the top, and the generated JavaScript for main.ts is guaranteed to be at the bottom of the single merged js file.

Everything between grunt-start and grunt-end is generated and maintained by grunt-ts. If there is no grunt-start section found, it is created. If reference.ts does not exist originally, it is also created.

/// <reference path="someBaseClass.ts" />

// Put comments here and they are preserved

//grunt-start
/// <reference path="autoreference.ts" />
/// <reference path="someOtherFile.ts" />
//grunt-end


/// <reference path="main.ts" />

JavaScript generation redirect

If an outDir is specified all output JavaScript is redirected to this folder to keep the source folder clean.

AMD / RequireJS support

(Deprecated) Please use Transforms + external modules all things in new projects. Documentation if you need it

Html 2 TypeScript support

Grunt-ts can re-encode html files into TypeScript and make them available as a variable.

For example a file called test.html:

<div> Some Content </div>

Will be compiled to a TypeScript file test.html.ts containing:

module test { export var html =  '<div> Some content </div>' }

This will export the variable test.html within the TypeScript scope to get the content of test.html as a string, with the main benefit of limiting the http-requests needed to load templates in various front-end frameworks.

You can also customize this variable.

Html 2 TypeScript usage in AngularJS

This is great for putting variables in templateCache: http://docs.angularjs.org/api/ng.$templateCache or even using the html string directly by setting it to the template properties (directives/views) instead of templateUrl

Html 2 TypeScript usage in EmberJS

It is possible to specify this string to the template on a view: http://emberjs.com/api/classes/Ember.View.html

Specifically: http://stackoverflow.com/a/9867375/390330

Live file watching and building

Grunt-ts can watch a directory and recompile TypeScript files when any TypeScript file changes, gets added, gets removed. Use the watch target option specifying a target directory that will be watched.

Fast compile

If you are using external modules grunt-ts will try to do a fast compile by default, basically only compiling what's changed. It will just work with the built-in file watching as well as with external tools like grunt-contrib-watch (More).

It maintains a cache of hashes for typescript files in the .tscache folder to detect changes (needed for external watch tool support). Also it creates a .baseDir.ts file at the root, passing it compiler to make sure that --outDir is always respected in the generated JavaScript.

It should just work out of the box. You can however customize its behaviour.

Installation

Grunt-ts is published as npm package:

For new projects make sure to have installed nodejs, then install grunt-cli:

$ npm install -g grunt-cli

Install the and save to package.json devDependencies:

$ npm install grunt-ts --save-dev

Alternate compiler version

grunt-ts always ships (bundled) with the latest compiler. Support for legacy projects can be enabled using the compiler override:

At runtime the plugin will look for an alternate compiler in the same node_modules folder. To use a different version of the TypeScript compiler install the required typescript version as a peer of grunt-ts. If no override was found the bundled compiler is used.

The package.json would look something like this for a legacy project:

{
  "devDependencies": {
    "grunt" : "~0.4.1",
    "grunt-ts" : "~1.9.2",
    "typescript" : "0.9.7"
  }
}

Note: make sure to pin the exact TypeScript version (do not use ~ or >).

Custom compiler

Alternatively, you can also explicitly use a custom compiler build that is not on NPM (e.g. current LKG) by specifying the compiler task option pointing to the path of the node-executable compiler js file (i.e. raw tsc or tsc.js)

ts: {
  options: {
    compiler: './customcompiler/tsc',
  },
}

Configuration

Create a Gruntfile.js. Modify it to load grunt-ts by adding the following lines:

module.exports = function (grunt) {

    // load the task
    grunt.loadNpmTasks("grunt-ts");

    // Configure grunt here
}

Add some configuration for the plugin:

grunt.initConfig({
    ...
    ts: {
		// A specific target
        build: {
			// The source TypeScript files, http://gruntjs.com/configuring-tasks#files
			src: ["test/work/**/*.ts"],
			// The source html files, https://github.com/grunt-ts/grunt-ts#html-2-typescript-support
            html: ["test/work/**/*.tpl.html"],
			// If specified, generate this file that to can use for reference management
			reference: "./test/reference.ts",  
			// If specified, generate an out.js file which is the merged js file
            out: 'test/out.js',
			// If specified, the generate JavaScript files are placed here. Only works if out is not specified
            outDir: 'test/outputdirectory',
			// If specified, watches this directory for changes, and re-runs the current target
            watch: 'test',
			// Use to override the default options, http://gruntjs.com/configuring-tasks#options
            options: {
				// 'es3' (default) | 'es5'
                target: 'es3',
				// 'amd' (default) | 'commonjs'
                module: 'commonjs',
				// true (default) | false
                sourceMap: true,
				// true | false (default)
                declaration: false,
				// true (default) | false
                removeComments: true
            },
        },
		// Another target
        dist: {
            src: ["test/work/**/*.ts"],
			// Override the main options for this target
            options: {
                sourceMap: false,
            }
        },
    },
    ...
});

It is recommended to add a default target to run in case no arguments to grunt are specified:

grunt.registerTask("default", ["ts:build"]);

For an example of an up-to-date configuration look at the sample gruntfile

Different configurations per target

Grunt-ts supports the Grunt convention of having multiple configuration targets per task. It is convenient to have one set of default options and then override these selectively for a target (e.g build , dev, staging etc).

Awesome file globs

For advanced use-cases there is support for Grunt's selection options, such as using globbing or using a callback to filter paths.

Contributing

With npm and grunt-cli installed, run the following from the root of the repository:

$ npm install

Building the project:

To build all

$ grunt build

Running the tests:

To test all

$ grunt test

Before PR

$ grunt release

It runs build followed by test. This is also the default task. You should run this before sending a PR.

Development

You will probably be working and testing a particular feature. Modify tasksToTest in our Gruntfile.js and run:

$ grunt dev

It will watch your changes (to grunt-ts task as well as examples) and run your tasksToTest after updating the task (if any changes detected).

Additional commands

Update the current grunt-ts to be the last known good version (dogfood). Commit message should be Update LKG.

$ grunt upgrade

License

Licensed under the MIT License.

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A grunt task to manage your complete typescript development to production workflow

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