Nx and TypeScript
The build system for TypeScript that TypeScript deserves
The @nrwl/js
package ships with corresponding generators and executors that best work when it comes to developing TypeScript applications and libraries.
@nrwl/js
is particularly useful if you want to
- Create framework-agnostic TypeScript libraries within an existing Nx workspace (say to use in your React, Node or Angular app)
- Publish TypeScript packages to NPM
To get started with TypeScript packages in Nx, either add the @nrwl/js
package to an existing Nx workspace or generate a new Nx workspace using the --preset=ts
preset.
npx create-nx-workspace happynrwl --preset=ts
Generating a new workspace creates a lightweight setup with a packages
and tools
folder. The tools
folder is where you can add monorepo specific scripts and custom Nx generators, the packages
folder is where all our TS based libs will live.
happynrwl/
├── packages/
├── tools/
├── workspace.json
├── nx.json
├── package.json
└── tsconfig.base.json
As with most Nx plugins, @nrwl/js
comes with a set of generators to quickly scaffold new TypeScript libraries. Let’s have a look at an example.
Create a new TypeScript based library
We can use Nx Console and choose the @nrwl/js:library
generator or directly use the following command:
nx generate @nrwl/js:library --name=hello-tsc --buildable
This creates a new library in the packages/hello-tsc
folder that already comes with both ESLint and Jest set up and ready to use.
You can run nx lint hello-tsc
to run linting or nx test hello-tsc
to run Jest tests.
Note, by passing the --buildable
flag, our library can be built.
nx build hello-tsc
The output of the build step is placed into the dist/packages/hello-tsc
by default.
Create a TypeScript based application
Using either @nrwl/node or @nrwl/web, you can also setup a plain TypeScript application that is framework agnostic.
To generate a new framework agnostic TS node application, run
nx generate @nrwl/node:app demoapp
To generate a new framework agnostic TS web application, run
nx generate @nrwl/web:app demoapp
Applications also come with a “serve” target, that allow you to run the app in watch mode:
nx serve demoapp
Importing Libraries
All the libraries generated within the Nx workspace are configured with corresponding TypeScript path mappings in the root-level tsconfig.base.json
file:
1{
2 "compileOnSave": false,
3 "compilerOptions": {
4 ...
5 "paths": {
6 "@happynrwl/hello-swc": ["packages/hello-swc/src/index.ts"],
7 "@happynrwl/hello-tsc": ["packages/hello-tsc/src/index.ts"]
8 }
9 },
10}
11
This allows you to easily import from libraries, by using the corresponding TypeScript path mapping. The following shows an example of importing the helloTsc
function from the hello-tsc
library into the tsapp
application (the same method works between libraries as well):
1// file: packages/tsapp/src/index.ts
2
3// importing from hello-tsc
4import { helloTsc } from '@happynrwl/hello-tsc';
5
6// use the function
7helloTsc();
8
9console.log(`Running ${tsapp()}`);
10
Use SWC as the compiler
Nx also ships with support to use SWC instead of TSC. When generating a new library/application just pass the --compiler=swc
.
Here's an example of generating a new library:
nx generate @nrwl/js:library --name=hello-tsc --buildable --compiler=swc
Alternatively, if you already have an existing tsc based library/application, you can run the @nrwl/js:convert-to-swc
generator to migrate the package from TSC to SWC.
The following command converts the hello-tsc
library to SWC:
nx generate @nrwl/js:convert-to-swc --name=hello-tsc
Using NPM Scripts rather than Nx executors
If you want to use NPM scripts rather than Nx executors, you can use the --config=npm-scripts
:
nx g @nrwl/js:lib mylib --config=npm-scripts
The Nx generator then creates NPM scripts in the generated library's package.json
(rather than in the project.json
):
1// packages/mylib/package.json
2{
3 "name": "@happynrwl/mylib",
4 "version": "0.0.1",
5 "type": "commonjs",
6 "scripts": {
7 "build": "echo 'implement build'",
8 "test": "echo 'implement test'"
9 }
10}
11
To run these scripts with Nx, use the same syntax as Nx executors. nx build mylib
or nx test mylib
will build or test your library, respectively.
Publish your TypeScript packages to NPM
--publishable
flag
Let's start by generating a new library publish-me
with the following command:
1nx g @nrwl/js:lib publish-me --publishable --importPath="@happynrwl/publish-me"
2
Generating a library with --publishable
flag does several things extra on top of --buildable
. It generates a minimal publish.mjs
script in tools/scripts/
directory if it does not already exist. Additionally, --publishable
also adds a publish
target to the library's project.json
with the following content:
1{
2 "root": "packages/publish-me",
3 "sourceRoot": "packages/publish-me/src",
4 "targets": {
5 "build": {},
6 "publish": {
7 "executor": "nx:run-commands",
8 "options": {
9 "command": "node tools/scripts/publish.mjs publish-me {args.ver} {args.tag}"
10 },
11 "dependsOn": ["build"]
12 },
13 "lint": {},
14 "test": {}
15 },
16 "tags": []
17}
18
The publish
target invokes the generated publish.mjs
script using nx:run-commands
executor. The script does the following:
- Validate the
ver
argument against a simple SemVer RegExp. - Validate the
name
of the project (eg:publish-me
) against the workspace existing projects. - Update the
version
property in thepackage.json
of your project'sbuild.outputPath
- Invoke
npm publish
with the provided tag (default tonext
so you won't publish tolatest
by accident)
Make sure to authenticate with
npm
before running thepublish
target.
1nx publish publish-me --ver=<required-version> --tag=[custom-tag]
2
Thanks to “Target Dependencies” (dependsOn
) property under the publish
target, Nx runs the build
target automatically before Nx runs publish
. And of course, if build
has already run, it won't execute again, thanks to Nx computation caching.
Manual setup
Let's set up our hello-tsc
library to be publishable as well but this time, we'll do it manually. All we have to do is to copy the publish
target from publish-me
library to hello-tsc
and modify it to use hello-tsc
project name instead.
1{
2 "root": "packages/hello-tsc",
3 "sourceRoot": "packages/hello-tsc/src",
4 "targets": {
5 "build": {},
6 "publish": {
7 "executor": "nx:run-commands",
8 "options": {
9 "command": "node tools/scripts/publish.mjs hello-tsc {args.ver} {args.tag}",
10 },
11 "dependsOn": ["build"]
12 },
13 "lint": {},
14 "test": {}
15 },
16 "tags": []
17}
18
19
Now, you should be able to invoke nx publish hello-tsc --ver=<required-version>
to publish it to npm