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Tsickle — TypeScript to Closure Translator

Tsickle - TypeScript to Closure Translator Build Status

Tsickle converts TypeScript code into a form acceptable to the Closure
Compiler
. This allows using TypeScript to transpile your sources, and then
using Closure Compiler to bundle and optimize them, while taking advantage of
type information in Closure Compiler.

What conversion means

A (non-exhaustive) list of the sorts of transformations Tsickle applies:

  • inserts Closure-compatible JSDoc annotations on functions/classes/etc
  • converts ES6 modules into goog.module modules
  • generates externs.js from TypeScript d.ts (and declare, see below)
  • declares types for class member variables
  • translates export * from ... into a form Closure accepts
  • converts TypeScript enums into a form Closure accepts
  • reprocesses all jsdoc to strip Closure-invalid tags

In general the goal is that you write valid TypeScript and Tsickle handles
making it valid Closure Compiler code.

Warning: work in progress

We already use tsickle within Google to minify our apps (including those using
Angular), but we have less experience using tsickle with the various JavaScript
builds that are seen outside of Google.

We would like to make tsickle usable for everyone but right now if you'd like
to try it you should expect to spend some time debugging and reporting bugs.

Usage

Tsickle is a library, designed to be used by a larger program that interacts
with TypeScript and the Closure compiler.

Some known clients are:

  1. Within Google we use tsickle inside the Bazel build
    system
    . That code is published as
    open source as part of Bazel's nodejs/TypeScript
    build rules
    .
  2. tscc wraps tsickle and
    closure compiler, and interops with rollup.
  3. We publish a simple demo program in the demo/ subdirectory.

Design details

Output format

Tsickle is designed to do whatever is necessary to make the code acceptable by
Closure compiler. We view its output as a necessary intermediate form for
communicating to the Closure compiler, and not something for humans. This means
the tsickle output may be kind of ugly to read. Its only real use is to pass it
on to the compiler.

For one example, the syntax of types tsickle produces are specific to Closure.
The type {!Foo} means "Foo, excluding null" and a type alias becomes a var
statement that is tagged with @typedef.

Tsickle emits modules using Closure's goog.module module system. This system
is similar to but different from ES modules, and was supported by Closure before
the ES module system was finalized.

Differences from TypeScript

Closure and TypeScript are not identical. Tsickle hides most of the
differences, but users must still be aware of some differences.

declare

Any declaration in a .d.ts file, as well as any declaration tagged with
declare ..., is intepreted by Tsickle as a name that should be preserved
through Closure compilation (i.e. not renamed into something shorter). Use it
any time the specific string names of your fields are significant. That would
most often happen when the object either coming from outside your program, or
being passed out of the program.

Example:

declare interface JSONResult {
    username: string;
}
let r = JSON.parse(input) as JSONResult;
console.log(r.username);

By adding declare to the interface (or if it were in a .d.ts file), Tsickle
will inform Closure that it must use exactly the field name .username (and not
e.g. .a) in the output JS. This matters for this example because the input
JSON probably uses the string 'username' and not whatever name Closure would
invent for it. (Note: declare on an interface has no additional meaning in
pure TypeScript.)

Exporting decorators

An exporting decorator is a decorator that has @ExportDecoratedItems in its
JSDoc.

The names of elements that have an exporting decorator are preserved through
the Closure compilation process by applying an @export tag to them.

Example:

/** @ExportDecoratedItems */
function myDecorator() {
  // ...
}

@myDecorator()
class DoNotRenameThisClass { ... }

Development

Dependencies

One-time setup

Run yarn to install dependencies.

Build & Test commands

  • yarn build builds the code base.
  • Run tsc --watch for an interactive, incremental, and continuous build.
  • yarn lint checks for lint.
  • yarn test runs unit tests, e2e tests and checks for lint (but make sure to
    yarn build first or run tsc!). Set the TEST_FILTER environment variable
    to filter what golden tests to run.

TypeScript AST help

https://astexplorer.net/ and https://ts-ast-viewer.com/ are convenient tools to
visualize and inspect a TypeScript AST.

Debugging

You can debug tests by passing --node_options=--inspect or
--node_options=--inspect-brk (to suspend execution directly after startup).

For example, to debug a specific golden test:

TEST_FILTER=my_golden_test node --inspect-brk=4332 ./node_modules/.bin/jasmine out/test/*.js

Then open [about:inspect] in Chrome and choose "about:inspect". Chrome will
launch a debugging session on any node process that starts with a debugger
listening on one of the listed ports. The tsickle tests and Chrome both default
to localhost:9229, so things should work out of the box.

The break in specific code locations you can add debugger; statements in the
source code.

Updating Goldens

Run UPDATE_GOLDENS=y yarn test to have the test suite update the goldens in
test_files/....

Environment variables

Set the environment variable TEST_FILTER=<REGEX> to limit the golden tests
(found in test_files/...) to only run tests with a name matching the regex.

Releasing

On a new branch, run

# tsickle releases are all minor releases for now, see npm help version.
$ npm version minor

This will update the version in package.json, commit the changes, and
create a git tag.

Push the branch and get it reviewed, but do not merge. If you click
the "rebase and merge" button in the Github UI it changes the commit,
so the git tag that was created would point at the wrong commit.

Instead, push the branch to master directly via:

$ git push origin mybranch:master

Note that Github will block non-fast-forward pushes to master, so if
there have been other intervening commits you'll need to recreate the
release.

Also push the tag.

$ git push origin v0.32.0  # but use correct version

Once the versioned tag is pushed to Github the release (as found on
https://github.com/angular/tsickle/releases) will be implicitly created.

From the master branch run:

npm config set registry https://wombat-dressing-room.appspot.com
npm login
npm publish  # runs a clean build & test automatically
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