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117 lines
6.3 KiB
Markdown
117 lines
6.3 KiB
Markdown
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## FAQs about TypeScript in Deno
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### Can I use TypeScript not written for Deno?
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Maybe. That is the best answer, we are afraid. For lots of reasons, Deno has
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chosen to have fully qualified module specifiers. In part this is because it
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treats TypeScript as a first class language. Also, Deno uses explicit module
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resolution, with no _magic_. This is effectively the same way browsers
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themselves work, thought they don't obviously support TypeScript directly. If
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the TypeScript modules use imports that don't have these design decisions in
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mind, they may not work under Deno.
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Also, in recent versions of Deno (starting with 1.5), we have started to use a
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Rust library to do transformations of TypeScript to JavaScript in certain
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scenarios. Because of this, there are certain situations in TypeScript where
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type information is required, and therefore those are not supported under Deno.
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If you are using `tsc` as stand-alone, the setting to use is `"isolatedModules"`
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and setting it to `true` to help ensure that your code can be properly handled
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by Deno.
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One of the ways to deal with the extension and the lack of _magical_ resolution
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is to use [import maps](../linking_to_external_code/import_maps.md) which would
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allow you to specify "packages" of bare specifiers which then Deno could resolve
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and load.
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### What version(s) of TypeScript does Deno support?
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Deno is built with a specific version of TypeScript. To find out what this is,
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type the following on the command line:
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```shell
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> deno --version
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```
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The TypeScript version (along with the version of Deno and v8) will be printed.
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Deno tries to keep up to date with general releases of TypeScript, providing
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them in the next patch or minor release of Deno.
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### There was a breaking change in the version of TypeScript that Deno uses, why did you break my program?
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We do not consider changes in behavior or breaking changes in TypeScript
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releases as breaking changes for Deno. TypeScript is a generally mature language
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and breaking changes in TypeScript are almost always "good things" making code
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more sound, and it is best that we all keep our code sound. If there is a
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blocking change in the version of TypeScript and it isn't suitable to use an
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older release of Deno until the problem can be resolved, then you should be able
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to use `--no-check` to skip type checking all together.
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In addition you can utilize `@ts-ignore` to _ignore_ a specific error in code
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that you control. You can also replace whole dependencies, using
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[import maps](../linking_to_external_code/import_maps), for situations where a
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dependency of a dependency isn't being maintained or has some sort of breaking
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change you want to bypass while waiting for it to be updated.
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### Why are you forcing me to use isolated modules, why can't I use const enums with Deno, why do I need to do export type?
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As of Deno 1.5 we defaulted to _isolatedModules_ to `true` and in Deno 1.6 we
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removed the options to set it back to `false` via a configuration file. The
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_isolatedModules_ option forces the TypeScript compiler to check and emit
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TypeScript as if each module would stand on its own. TypeScript has a few _type
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directed emits_ in the language at the moment. While not allowing type directed
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emits into the language was a design goal for TypeScript, it has happened
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anyways. This means that the TypeScript compiler needs to understand the
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erasable types in the code to determine what to emit, which when you are trying
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to make a fully erasable type system on top of JavaScript, that becomes a
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problem.
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When people started transpiling TypeScript without `tsc`, these type directed
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emits became a problem, since the likes of Babel simply try to erase the types
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without needing to understand the types to direct the emit. In the internals of
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Deno we have started to use a Rust based emitter which allows us to optionally
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skip type checking and generates the bundles for things like `deno bundle`. Like
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all transpilers, it doesn't care about the types, it just tries to erase them.
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This means in certain situations we cannot support those type directed emits.
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So instead of trying to get every user to understand when and how we could
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support the type directed emits, we made the decision to disable the use of them
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by forcing the _isolatedModules_ option to `true`. This means that even when we
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are using the TypeScript compiler to emit the code, it will follow the same
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"rules" that the Rust based emitter follows.
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This means that certain language features are not supportable. Those features
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are:
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- Re-exporting of types is ambigious and requires to know if the source module
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is exporting runtime code or just type information. Therefore, it is
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recommended that you use `import type` and `export type` for type only imports
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and exports. This will help ensure that when the code is emitted, that all the
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types are erased.
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- `const enum` is not supported. `const enum`s require type information to
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direct the emit, as `const enum`s get written out as hard coded values.
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Especially when `const enum`s get exported, they are a type system only
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construct.
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- `export =` and `import =` are legacy TypeScript syntax which we do not
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support.
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- Only `declare namespace` is support. Runtime `namespace` is legacy TypeScript
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syntax that is not supported.
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### Why don't you support language service plugins or transformer plugins?
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While `tsc` supports language service plugins, Deno does not. Deno does not
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always use the built in TypeScript compiler to do what it does, and the
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complexity of adding support for a language service plugin is not feasible.
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TypeScript does not support emitter plugins, but there are a few community
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projects which _hack_ emitter plugins into TypeScript. First, we wouldn't want
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to support something that TypeScript doesn't support, plus we do not always use
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the TypeScript compiler for the emit, which would mean we would need to ensure
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we supported it in all modes, and the other emitter is written in Rust, meaning
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that any emitter plugin for TypeScript wouldn't be available for the Rust
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emitter.
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The TypeScript in Deno isn't intended to be a fully flexible TypeScript
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compiler. Its main purpose is to ensure that TypeScript and JavaScript can run
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under Deno. The secondary ability to do TypeScript and JavaScript emitting via
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the runtime API `Deno.emit()` is intended to be simple and straight forward and
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support a certain set of use cases.
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