## Types and Type Declarations
One of the design principles of Deno is no _magical_ resolution. When TypeScript
is type checking a file, it only cares about the types for the file, and the
`tsc` compiler has a lot of logic to try to resolve those types. By default, it
expects _ambiguous_ module specifiers with an extension, and will attempt to
look for the file under the `.ts` specifier, then `.d.ts`, and finally `.js`
(plus a whole other set of logic when the module resolution is set to `"node"`).
Deno deals with explicit specifiers.
This can cause a couple problems though. For example, let's say I want to
consume a TypeScript file that has already been transpiled to JavaScript along
with a type definition file. So I have `mod.js` and `mod.d.ts`. If I try to
import `mod.js` into Deno, it will only do what I ask it to do, and import
`mod.js`, but that means my code won't be as well type checked as if TypeScript
was considering the `mod.d.ts` file in place of the `mod.js` file.
In order to support this in Deno, Deno has two solutions, of which there is a
variation of a solution to enhance support. The two main situations you come
across would be:
- As the importer of a JavaScript module, I know what types should be applied to
the module.
- As the supplier of the JavaScript module, I know what types should be applied
to the module.
The latter case is the better case, meaning you as the provider or host of the
module, everyone can consume it without having to figure out how to resolve the
types for the JavaScript module, but when consuming modules that you may not
have direct control over, the ability to do the former is also required.
### Providing types when importing
If you are consuming a JavaScript module and you have either created types (a
`.d.ts` file) or have otherwise obtained the types, you want to use, you can
instruct Deno to use that file when type checking instead of the JavaScript file
using the `@deno-types` compiler hint. `@deno-types` needs to be a single line
double slash comment, where when used impacts the next import or re-export
statement.
For example if I have a JavaScript modules `coolLib.js` and I had a separate
`coolLib.d.ts` file that I wanted to use, I would import it like this:
```ts
// @deno-types="./coolLib.d.ts"
import * as coolLib from "./coolLib.js";
```
When type checking `coolLib` and your usage of it in the file, the
`coolLib.d.ts` types will be used instead of looking at the JavaScript file.
The pattern matching for the compiler hint is somewhat forgiving and will accept
quoted and non-question values for the specifier as well as it accepts
whitespace before and after the equals sign.
### Providing types when hosting
If you are in control of the source code of the module, or you are in control of
how the file is hosted on a web server, there are two ways to inform Deno of the
types for a given module, without requiring the importer to do anything special.
#### Using the triple-slash reference directive
Deno supports using the triple-slash reference `types` directive, which adopts
the reference comment used by TypeScript in TypeScript files to _include_ other
files and applies it only to JavaScript files.
For example, if I had created `coolLib.js` and along side of it I had created my
type definitions for my library in `coolLib.d.ts` I could do the following in
the `coolLib.js` file:
```js
///
// ... the rest of the JavaScript ...
```
When Deno encounters this directive, it would resolve the `./coolLib.d.ts` file
and use that instead of the JavaScript file when TypeScript was type checking
the file, but still load the JavaScript file when running the program.
> ℹ️ _Note_ this is a repurposed directive for TypeScript that only applies to
> JavaScript files. Using the triple-slash reference directive of `types` in a
> TypeScript file works under Deno as well, but has essentially the same
> behavior as the `path` directive.
#### Using X-TypeScript-Types header
Similar to the triple-slash directive, Deno supports a header for remote modules
that instructs Deno where to locate the types for a given module. For example, a
response for `https://example.com/coolLib.js` might look something like this:
```
HTTP/1.1 200 OK
Content-Type: application/javascript; charset=UTF-8
Content-Length: 648
X-TypeScript-Types: ./coolLib.d.ts
```
When seeing this header, Deno would attempt to retrieve
`https://example.com/coolLib.d.ts` and use that when type checking the original
module.
### Type Checking Web Workers
When Deno loads a TypeScript module in a web worker, it will automatically type
check the module and its dependencies against the Deno web worker library. This
can present a challenge in other contexts like `deno cache`, `deno bundle`, or
in editors. There are a couple of ways to instruct Deno to use the worker
libraries instead of the standard Deno libraries.
#### Using triple-slash directives
This option couples the library settings with the code itself. By adding the
following triple-slash directives near the top of the entry point file for the
worker script, Deno will now type check it as a Deno worker script, irrespective
of how the module is analyzed:
```ts
///
///
```
The first directive ensures that no other default libraries are used. If this is
omitted, you will get some conflicting type definitions, because Deno will try
to apply the standard Deno library as well. The second instructs Deno to apply
the built in Deno worker type definitions plus dependent libraries (like
`"esnext"`).
When you run a `deno cache` or `deno bundle` command or use an IDE which uses
the Deno language server, Deno should automatically detect these directives and
apply the correct libraries when type checking.
The one disadvantage of this, is that it makes the code less portable to other
non-Deno platforms like `tsc`, as it is only Deno which has the `"deno.worker"`
library built into it.
#### Using a `tsconfig.json` file
Another option is to use a `tsconfig.json` file that is configured to apply the
library files. A minimal file that would work would look something like this:
```json
{
"compilerOptions": {
"target": "esnext",
"lib": ["deno.worker"]
}
}
```
Then when running a command on the command line, you would need to pass the
`--config tsconfig.json` argument, or if you are using an IDE which leverages
the Deno language server, set the `deno.config` setting.
If you also have non-worker scripts, you will either need to omit the `--config`
argument, or have one that is configured to meet the needs of your non-worker
scripts.
### Important points
#### Type declaration semantics
Type declaration files (`.d.ts` files) follow the same semantics as other files
in Deno. This means that declaration files are assumed to be module declarations
(_UMD declarations_) and not ambient/global declarations. It is unpredictable
how Deno will handle ambient/global declarations.
In addition, if a type declaration imports something else, like another `.d.ts`
file, its resolution follow the normal import rules of Deno. For a lot of the
`.d.ts` files that are generated and available on the web, they may not be
compatible with Deno.
To overcome this problem, some solution providers, like the
[Skypack CDN](https://www.skypack.dev/), will automatically bundle type
declarations just like they provide bundles of JavaScript as ESM.
#### Deno Friendly CDNs
There are CDNs which host JavaScript modules that integrate well with Deno.
- [Skypack.dev](https://docs.skypack.dev/skypack-cdn/code/deno) is a CDN which
provides type declarations (via the `X-TypeScript-Types` header) when you
append `?dts` as a query string to your remote module import statements. For
example:
```ts
import React from "https://cdn.skypack.dev/react?dts";
```
### Behavior of JavaScript when type checking
If you import JavaScript into TypeScript in Deno and there are no types, even if
you have `checkJs` set to `false` (the default for Deno), the TypeScript
compiler will still access the JavaScript module and attempt to do some static
analysis on it, to at least try to determine the shape of the exports of that
module to validate the import in the TypeScript file.
This is usually never a problem when trying to import a "regular" ES module, but
in some cases if the module has special packaging, or is a global _UMD_ module,
TypeScript's analysis of the module can fail and cause misleading errors. The
best thing to do in this situation is provide some form of types using one of
the methods mention above.
#### Internals
While it isn't required to understand how Deno works internally to be able to
leverage TypeScript with Deno well, it can help to understand how it works.
Before any code is executed or compiled, Deno generates a module graph by
parsing the root module, and then detecting all of its dependencies, and then
retrieving and parsing those modules, recursively, until all the dependencies
are retrieved.
For each dependency, there are two potential "slots" that are used. There is the
code slot and the type slot. As the module graph is filled out, if the module is
something that is or can be emitted to JavaScript, it fills the code slot, and
type only dependencies, like `.d.ts` files fill the type slot.
When the module graph is built, and there is a need to type check the graph,
Deno starts up the TypeScript compiler and feeds it the names of the modules
that need to be potentially emitted as JavaScript. During that process, the
TypeScript compiler will request additional modules, and Deno will look at the
slots for the dependency, offering it the type slot if it is filled before
offering it the code slot.
This means when you import a `.d.ts` module, or you use one of the solutions
above to provide alternative type modules for JavaScript code, that is what is
provided to TypeScript instead when resolving the module.