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299 lines
9.5 KiB
Markdown
299 lines
9.5 KiB
Markdown
## Set up your environment
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To productively get going with Deno you should set up your environment. This
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means setting up shell autocomplete, environmental variables and your editor or
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IDE of choice.
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### Environmental variables
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There are several env vars that control how Deno behaves:
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`DENO_DIR` defaults to `$HOME/.cache/deno` but can be set to any path to control
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where generated and cached source code is written and read to.
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`NO_COLOR` will turn off color output if set. See https://no-color.org/. User
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code can test if `NO_COLOR` was set without having `--allow-env` by using the
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boolean constant `Deno.noColor`.
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### Shell autocomplete
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You can generate completion script for your shell using the
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`deno completions <shell>` command. The command outputs to stdout so you should
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redirect it to an appropriate file.
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The supported shells are:
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- zsh
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- bash
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- fish
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- powershell
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- elvish
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Example (bash):
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```shell
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deno completions bash > /usr/local/etc/bash_completion.d/deno.bash
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source /usr/local/etc/bash_completion.d/deno.bash
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```
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Example (zsh without framework):
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```shell
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mkdir ~/.zsh # create a folder to save your completions. it can be anywhere
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deno completions zsh > ~/.zsh/_deno
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```
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then add this to your `.zshrc`
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```shell
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fpath=(~/.zsh $fpath)
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autoload -Uz compinit
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compinit -u
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```
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and restart your terminal. note that if completions are still not loading, you
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may need to run `rm ~/.zcompdump/` to remove previously generated completions
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and then `compinit` to generate them again.
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Example (zsh + oh-my-zsh) [recommended for zsh users] :
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```shell
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mkdir ~/.oh-my-zsh/custom/plugins/deno
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deno completions zsh > ~/.oh-my-zsh/custom/plugins/deno/_deno
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```
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After this add deno plugin under plugins tag in `~/.zshrc` file. for tools like
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`antigen` path will be `~/.antigen/bundles/robbyrussell/oh-my-zsh/plugins` and
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command will be `antigen bundle deno` and so on.
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Example (Powershell):
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```shell
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deno completions powershell > $profile
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.$profile
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```
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This will be create a Powershell profile at
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`$HOME\Documents\WindowsPowerShell\Microsoft.PowerShell_profile.ps1` by default,
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and it will be run whenever you launch the PowerShell.
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### Editors and IDEs
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Because Deno requires the use of file extensions for module imports and allows
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http imports, and most editors and language servers do not natively support this
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at the moment, many editors will throw errors about being unable to find files
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or imports having unnecessary file extensions.
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The community has developed extensions for some editors to solve these issues:
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#### VS Code
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The beta version of [vscode_deno](https://github.com/denoland/vscode_deno) is
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published on the
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[Visual Studio Marketplace](https://marketplace.visualstudio.com/items?itemName=denoland.vscode-deno).
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Please report any issues.
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#### JetBrains IDEs
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Support for JetBrains IDEs is available through
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[the Deno plugin](https://plugins.jetbrains.com/plugin/14382-deno).
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For more information on how to set-up your JetBrains IDE for Deno, read
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[this comment](https://youtrack.jetbrains.com/issue/WEB-41607#focus=streamItem-27-4160152.0-0)
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on YouTrack.
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#### Vim and NeoVim
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Vim works fairly well for Deno/TypeScript if you install
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[CoC](https://github.com/neoclide/coc.nvim) (intellisense engine and language
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server protocol) or [ALE](https://github.com/dense-analysis/ale) (syntax checker
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and language server protocol client).
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##### CoC
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After CoC is installed, from inside Vim, run`:CocInstall coc-tsserver` and
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`:CocInstall coc-deno`. Run `:CocCommand deno.initializeWorkspace` in your
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project to initialize workspace configurations. From now on, things like `gd`
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(go to definition) and `gr` (goto/find references) should work.
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##### ALE
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ALE integrates with Deno's LSP out of the box and should not require any extra
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configuration. However, if your Deno executable is not located in `$PATH`, has a
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different name than `deno` or you want to use unstable features/APIs, you need
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to override ALE's default values. See
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[`:help ale-typescript`](https://github.com/dense-analysis/ale/blob/master/doc/ale-typescript.txt).
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ALE provides support for autocompletion, refactoring, going to definition,
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finding references and more, however, key bindings need to be configured
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manually. Copy the snippet below into your `vimrc`/`init.vim` for basic
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configuration or consult the
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[official documentation](https://github.com/dense-analysis/ale#table-of-contents)
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for a more in-depth look at how to configure ALE.
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ALE can fix linter issues by running `deno fmt`. To instruct ALE to use the Deno
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formatter the `ale_linter` setting needs to be set either on a per buffer basis
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(`let b:ale_linter = ['deno']`) or globally for all TypeScript files
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(`let g:ale_fixers={'typescript': ['deno']}`)
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```vim
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" Use ALE autocompletion with Vim's 'omnifunc' setting (press <C-x><C-o> in insert mode)
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autocmd FileType typescript set omnifunc=ale#completion#OmniFunc
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" Make sure to use map instead of noremap when using a <Plug>(...) expression as the {rhs}
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nmap gr <Plug>(ale_rename)
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nmap gR <Plug>(ale_find_reference)
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nmap gd <Plug>(ale_go_to_definition)
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nmap gD <Plug>(ale_go_to_type_definition)
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let g:ale_fixers = {'typescript': ['deno']}
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let g:ale_fix_on_save = 1 " run deno fmt when saving a buffer
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```
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#### Emacs
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Emacs works pretty well for a TypeScript project targeted to Deno by using a
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combination of [tide](https://github.com/ananthakumaran/tide) which is the
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canonical way of using TypeScript within Emacs and
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[typescript-deno-plugin](https://github.com/justjavac/typescript-deno-plugin)
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which is what is used by the
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[official VSCode extension for Deno](https://github.com/denoland/vscode_deno).
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To use it, first make sure that `tide` is setup for your instance of Emacs.
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Next, as instructed on the
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[typescript-deno-plugin](https://github.com/justjavac/typescript-deno-plugin)
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page, first `npm install --save-dev typescript-deno-plugin typescript` in your
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project (`npm init -y` as necessary), then add the following block to your
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`tsconfig.json` and you are off to the races!
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```jsonc
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{
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"compilerOptions": {
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"plugins": [
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{
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"name": "typescript-deno-plugin",
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"enable": true, // default is `true`
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"importmap": "import_map.json"
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}
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]
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}
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}
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```
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#### LSP clients
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Deno has builtin support for the
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[Language server protocol](https://langserver.org) as of version 1.6.0 or later.
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If your editor supports the LSP, you can use Deno as a language server for
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TypeScript and JavaScript.
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The editor can start the server with `deno lsp`.
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##### Example for Kakoune
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After installing the [`kak-lsp`](https://github.com/kak-lsp/kak-lsp) LSP client
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you can add the Deno language server by adding the following to your
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`kak-lsp.toml`
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```toml
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[language.deno]
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filetypes = ["typescript", "javascript"]
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roots = [".git"]
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command = "deno"
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args = ["lsp"]
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```
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##### Example for Vim/Neovim
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After installing the [`vim-lsp`](https://github.com/prabirshrestha/vim-lsp) LSP
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client you can add the Deno language server by adding the following to your
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`vimrc`/`init.vim`:
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```vim
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if executable("deno")
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augroup LspTypeScript
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autocmd!
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autocmd User lsp_setup call lsp#register_server({
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\ "name": "deno lsp",
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\ "cmd": {server_info -> ["deno", "lsp"]},
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\ "root_uri": {server_info->lsp#utils#path_to_uri(lsp#utils#find_nearest_parent_file_directory(lsp#utils#get_buffer_path(), "tsconfig.json"))},
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\ "allowlist": ["typescript", "typescript.tsx"],
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\ "initialization_options": {
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\ "enable": v:true,
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\ "lint": v:true,
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\ "unstable": v:true,
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\ },
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\ })
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augroup END
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endif
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```
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##### Example for Sublime Text
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- Install the [Sublime LSP package](https://packagecontrol.io/packages/LSP)
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- Install the
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[TypeScript package](https://packagecontrol.io/packages/TypeScript) to get
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syntax highlighting
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- Add the following `.sublime-project` file to your project folder
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```jsonc
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{
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"settings": {
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"LSP": {
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"deno": {
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"command": [
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"deno",
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"lsp"
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],
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"initializationOptions": {
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// "config": "", // Sets the path for the config file in your project
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"enable": true,
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// "importMap": "", // Sets the path for the import-map in your project
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"lint": true,
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"unstable": false
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},
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"enabled": true,
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"languages": [
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{
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"languageId": "javascript",
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"scopes": ["source.js"],
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"syntaxes": [
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"Packages/Babel/JavaScript (Babel).sublime-syntax",
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"Packages/JavaScript/JavaScript.sublime-syntax"
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]
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},
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{
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"languageId": "javascriptreact",
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"scopes": ["source.jsx"],
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"syntaxes": [
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"Packages/Babel/JavaScript (Babel).sublime-syntax",
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"Packages/JavaScript/JavaScript.sublime-syntax"
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]
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},
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{
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"languageId": "typescript",
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"scopes": ["source.ts"],
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"syntaxes": [
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"Packages/TypeScript-TmLanguage/TypeScript.tmLanguage",
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"Packages/TypeScript Syntax/TypeScript.tmLanguage"
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]
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},
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{
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"languageId": "typescriptreact",
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"scopes": ["source.tsx"],
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"syntaxes": [
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"Packages/TypeScript-TmLanguage/TypeScriptReact.tmLanguage",
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"Packages/TypeScript Syntax/TypeScriptReact.tmLanguage"
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]
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}
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]
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}
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}
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}
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}
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```
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If you don't see your favorite IDE on this list, maybe you can develop an
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extension. Our [community Discord group](https://discord.gg/deno) can give you
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some pointers on where to get started.
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