TL;DR:
The feature allows defining parts of the project as separate TypeScript modules. Among other things, this allows configuring those modules differently, building them separately, etc.
Before
Initially, the project structure, when simplified, is similar to this:
/
src/
entity.ts # exports an entity
test/
entity.spec.ts # imports an entity
tsconfig.json
An entity is defined in src/entity.ts
module, and then used in test/entity.spec.ts
file.
Notice that there is only one tsconfig.json
file here, sitting in the root folder. This basically says that this folder contains one big solid TypeScript project. This project includes a couple of files, organized in folders; some of those files are used for testing other ones.
This structure however imposes a problem: the process of compiling the project (namely, tsc
) also compiles the test files, thus creating dist/test/entity.spec.{js|d.ts}
files in the output. This should not happen, therefore the tsconfig.json
file is slightly altered to include only those files/folders that are intended for outside usage:
{
"compilerOptions": {
// compiler options
},
"include": [
"./src"
]
}
This solves the problem, but in my case, it also led to all files in the /test
folder being occasionally ignored by the TypeScript compiler during the development process. Also, this exclusive approach might not fit everybody.
After
After utilizing the feature, the project structure has changed to this:
/
src/
entity.ts # exports an entity
tsconfig.json
test/
entity.spec.ts # imports an entity
tsconfig.json
tsconfig-base.json
Let's go through the changes:
- Renaming
/tsconfig.json
to /tsconfig-base.json
is a pretty major thing by itself: the root folder is not a TypeScript project anymore, since tsc
requires the tsconfig.json
file to be present.
- On the other hand, adding
src/tsconfig.json
and test/tsconfig.json
files turns both src
and test
into two separate TypeScript projects, independent from each other.
The contents of /{src|test}/tsconfig.json
files are similar since no changes in the configuration were expected, i.e., the "strictness", the output folder, as well as other such parameters, should be preserved. In order to make them similar without copy-pasting anything, all the configurations are put in an arbitrary file, accessible from both places; in this case, the tsconfig-base.json
in the root folder was selected for that:
// the contents of /tsconfig-base.json
{
"compilerOptions": {
// compiler options, common to both projects
}
}
This file is being "inherited" then by /{src|test}/tsconfig.json
files, with addition of any other options if needed:
// the contents of /{src|test}/tsconfig.json
{
"extends": "../tsconfig-base.json",
"compilerOptions": {
// additional compiler options, specific to a project
}
}
Notice how this pattern is similar to defining an abstract class
with incomplete implementation, and then extending it by two separate "concrete" classes.
Now, /src
and /test
folders basically hold two separate TypeScript projects with similar configurations. The last thing to do is to specify the relation between the two. Since test
depends on src
, the test
has to somehow "know" about src
. This is done in two pretty obvious steps:
allow src
to be "referenced" from the outside by declaring it as "composite":
// in /src/tsconfig.json
{
"extends": "../tsconfig-base.json",
"compilerOptions": {
// compiler options
"composite": true
}
}
reference src
from test
:
// in /test/tsconfig.json
{
"extends": "../tsconfig-base.json",
"references": [
{ "path": "../src" }
]
}
The "include"
array in /tsconfig-base.json
is not needed now, since the code exclusion is done by "drawing new borders".
UPDATE: the following section seems to be outdated since TypeScript 3.7
Now, the test
project requires *.d.ts
files for the src
project to be present. This means that before running tests, the src
should already be built, separately. This is done by using the new mode of tsc
, triggered by the --build
option:
tsc --build src
This command builds the src
project and puts the output in the specified output folder (in this case, /dist
), without neither breaking test
nor losing any compile errors.