I'll do this step-by-step with explanations so this may seem lengthy, but following the instructions given should take just a few minutes. In fact, here's the short version you can just run in either bash or PowerShell!
mkdir -p ./local-types/foo
cd ./local-types/foo
npm init --scope types --yes
echo "export function hello(): void; export function world(): void" > ./index.d.ts
cd ../..
npm install ./local-types/foo
Background
Let's imagine the following project structure:
proj/
├─ tsconfig.json
└─ src/
└─ ...
Create a local-types folder at the root of your project.
Doesn't matter what it's called, but we'll call it local-types
. You can change it to whatever you want once you have a good grasp on what we've done here.
proj/
├─ tsconfig.json
├─ local-types/
└─ src/
└─ ...
In most cases outside of this example, I might just name this types
.
Create a new package in your local types directory
Since you're trying to import a module named foo
, we'll create a folder named foo
with an index.d.ts
.
// local-types/foo/index.d.ts
export function hello(): void;
export function world(): void;
We'll also want to make this an npm package by creating a package.json:
cd local-types/foo
npm init --scope types --yes
At this point, your project should look like this:
proj/
├─ tsconfig.json
├─ local-types/
| └─ foo/
| └─ index.d.ts
| └─ package.json
└─ src/
└─ ...
You should now be able to just import foo
from any file within src
.
import { hello, world } from "foo";
hello();
world();
Keep in mind, you may not have a single-entry-point package with an index.d.ts
. In that case, you'll want to mimick the package structure as it's been published on npm.
Add the package as a dependency (or potentially devDependency)
If you're writing a library, you'll likely want this in your dependencies, but apps might want to use devDependencies. Simply add file:./local-types/foo
as the version for @types/foo
:
"dependencies": {
"@types/foo": "file:local-types/foo"
}
Publish to DefinitelyTyped
Are your .d.ts
files complete and useful? Consider writing some tests and sending a pull request to DefinitelyTyped so that others can benefit from the work you've done!
If you're able to import those packages with no problems at runtime, you'll already have the appropriate package structure.
Things to keep in mind