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72 lines
2.4 KiB
Markdown
72 lines
2.4 KiB
Markdown
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## Migrating to and from JavaScript
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One of the advantages of Deno is that it treats TypeScript and JavaScript pretty
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equally. This might mean that transitioning from JavaScript to TypeScript or
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even from TypeScript to JavaScript is something you want to accomplish. There
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are several features of Deno that can help with this.
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### Type checking JavaScript
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You might have some JavaScript that you would like to ensure is more type sound
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but you don't want to go through a process of adding type annotations
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everywhere.
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Deno supports using the TypeScript type checker to type check JavaScript. You
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can mark any individual file by adding the check JavaScript pragma to the file:
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```js
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// @ts-check
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```
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This will cause the type checker to infer type information about the JavaScript
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code and raise any issues as diagnostic issues.
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These can be turned on for all JavaScript files in a program by providing a
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configuration file with the check JS option enabled:
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```json
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{
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"compilerOptions": {
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"checkJs": true
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}
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}
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```
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And setting the `--config` option on the command line.
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### Using JSDoc in JavaScript
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If you are type checking JavaScript, or even importing JavaScript into
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TypeScript you can use JSDoc in JavaScript to express more types information
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than can just be inferred from the code itself. Deno supports this without any
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additional configuration, you simply need to annotate the code in line with the
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supported
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[TypeScript JSDoc](https://www.typescriptlang.org/docs/handbook/jsdoc-supported-types.html).
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For example to set the type of an array:
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```js
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/** @type {string[]} */
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const a = [];
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```
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### Skipping type checking
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You might have TypeScript code that you are experimenting with, where the syntax
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is valid but not fully type safe. You can always bypass type checking for a
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whole program by passing the `--no-check`.
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You can also skip whole files being type checked, including JavaScript if you
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have check JS enabled, by using the no-check pragma:
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```js
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// @ts-nocheck
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```
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### Just renaming JS files to TS files
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While this might work in some cases, it has some severe limits in Deno. This is
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because Deno, by default, runs type checking in what is called _strict mode_.
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This means a lot of unclear or ambiguous situations where are not caught in
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non-strict mode will result in diagnostics being generated, and JavaScript is
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nothing but unclear and ambiguous when it comes to types.
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