The repository for high quality TypeScript type definitions.
Also see the definitelytyped.org website, although information in this README is more up-to-date.
See the TypeScript handbook.
This is the preferred method. This is only available for TypeScript 2.0+ users. For example:
npm install --save-dev @types/node
The types should then be automatically included by the compiler. See more in the handbook.
For an NPM package "foo", typings for it will be at "@types/foo". If you can't find your package, look for it on TypeSearch.
If you still can't find it, check if it bundles its own typings.
This is usually provided in a "types"
or "typings"
field in the package.json
,
or just look for any ".d.ts" files in the package and manually include them with a /// <reference path="" />
.
These can be used by TypeScript 1.0.
- Typings
NuGet(use preferred alternatives, nuget DT type publishing has been turned off)- Manually download from the
master
branch of this repository
You may need to add manual references.
DefinitelyTyped only works because of contributions by users like you!
Before you share your improvement with the world, use it yourself.
To add new features you can use module augmentation.
You can also directly edit the types in node_modules/@types/foo/index.d.ts
, or copy them from there and follow the steps below.
Add to your tsconfig.json
:
"baseUrl": "types",
"typeRoots": ["types"],
(You can also use src/types
.)
Create types/foo/index.d.ts
containing declarations for the module "foo".
You should now be able import from "foo"
in your code and it will route to the new type definition.
Then build and run the code to make sure your type definition actually corresponds to what happens at runtime.
Once you've tested your definitions with real code, make a PR contributing the definition by copying types/foo
to DefinitelyTyped/foo
and adding a tsconfig.json
and foo-tests.ts
.
Once you've tested your package, you can share it on DefinitelyTyped.
First, fork this repository, install node, and run npm install
.
cd my-package-to-edit
- Make changes. Remember to edit tests.
- You may also want to add yourself to "Definitions by" section of the package header.
- Do this by adding your name to the end of the line, as in
// Definitions by: Alice <https://github.com/alice>, Bob <https://github.com/bob>
.
- Do this by adding your name to the end of the line, as in
npm install -g [email protected]
and runtsc
.
When you make a PR to edit an existing package, dt-bot
should @-mention previous authors.
If it doesn't, you can do so yourself in the comment associated with the PR.
If you are the library author, or can make a pull request to the library, bundle types instead of publishing to DefinitelyTyped.
If you are adding typings for an NPM package, create a directory with the same name.
If the package you are adding typings for is not on NPM, make sure the name you choose for it does not conflict with the name of a package on NPM.
(You can use npm info foo
to check for the existence of the foo
package.)
Your package should have this structure:
File | Purpose |
---|---|
index.d.ts | This contains the typings for the package. |
foo-tests.ts | This contains sample code which tests the typings. This code does not run, but it is type-checked. |
tsconfig.json | This allows you to run tsc within the package. |
tslint.json | Enables linting. |
Generate these by running npm install -g dts-gen
and dts-gen --dt --name my-package-name --template module
.
See all options at dts-gen.
You may edit the tsconfig.json
to add new files, to add "target": "es6"
(needed for async functions), to add to "lib"
, or to add the "jsx"
compiler option.
DefinitelyTyped members routinely monitor for new PRs, though keep in mind that the number of other PRs may slow things down.
For a good example package, see base64-js.
- First, follow advice from the handbook.
- Formatting: Either use all tabs, or always use 4 spaces.
interface Foo { new(): Foo; }
: This defines a type of objects that are new-able. You probably wantdeclare class Foo { constructor(); }
.const Class: { new(): IClass; }
: Prefer to use a class declarationclass Class { constructor(); }
instead of a new-able constant.getMeAT<T>(): T
: If a type parameter does not appear in the types of any parameters, you don't really have a generic function, you just have a disguised type assertion. Prefer to use a real type assertion, e.g.getMeAT() as number
. Example where a type parameter is acceptable:function id<T>(value: T): T;
. Example where it is not acceptable:function parseJson<T>(json: string): T;
. Exception:new Map<string, number>()
is OK.
When a package bundles its own types, types should be removed from DefinitelyTyped to avoid confusion.
You can remove it by running npm run not-needed -- typingsPackageName asOfVersion sourceRepoURL [libraryName]
.
typingsPackageName
: This is the name of the directory to delete.asOfVersion
: A stub will be published to@types/foo
with this version. Should be higher than any currently published version.sourceRepoURL
: This should point to the repository that contains the typings.libraryName
: Descriptive name of the library, e.g. "Angular 2" instead of "angular2". (If ommitted, will be identical to "typingsPackageName".)
Any other packages in DefinitelyTyped that referenced the deleted package should be updated to reference the bundled types. To do this, add a package.json
with "dependencies": { "foo": "x.y.z" }
.
If a package was never on DefinitelyTyped, it does not need to be added to notNeededPackages.json
.
To lint a package, just add a tslint.json
to that package containing { "extends": "../tslint.json" }
. All new packages must be linted.
If a tslint.json
turns rules off, this is because that hasn't been fixed yet. For example:
{
"extends": "../tslint.json",
"rules": {
// This package uses the Function type, and it will take effort to fix.
"forbidden-types": false
}
}
(To indicate that a lint rule truly does not apply, use // tslint:disable rule-name
or better, //tslint:disable-next-line rule-name
.)
Test by running npm run lint package-name
where package-name
is the name of your package.
This script uses dtslint.
The master
branch is automatically published to the @types
scope on NPM thanks to types-publisher.
This usually happens within an hour of changes being merged.
I'm writing a definition that depends on another definition. Should I use <reference types="" />
or an import?
If the module you're referencing is an external module (uses export
), use an import.
If the module you're referencing is an ambient module (uses declare module
, or just declares globals), use <reference types="" />
.
Currently we don't support this, though it is planned.
If you're adding a new major version of a library, you can copy index.d.ts
to foo-v2.3.d.ts
and edit index.d.ts
to be the new version.
Usually you won't need this. When publishing a package we will normally automatically create a package.json
for it.
A package.json
may be included for the sake of specifying dependencies. Here's an example.
We do not allow other fields, such as "description"
, to be defined manually.
Also, if you need to reference an older version of typings, you must do that by adding "dependencies": { "@types/foo": "x.y.z" }
to the package.json.
Some packages have no tslint.json
, and some tsconfig.json
are missing "noImplicitAny": true
, "noImplicitThis": true
, or "strictNullChecks": true
.
Then they are wrong. You can help by submitting a pull request to fix them.
Here are the currently requested definitions.
If types are part of a web standard, they should be contributed to TSJS-lib-generator so that they can become part of the default lib.dom.d.ts
.
A package uses export =
, but I prefer to use default imports. Can I change export =
to export default
?
If default imports work in your environment, consider turning on the --allowSyntheticDefaultImports
compiler option.
Do not change the type definition if it is accurate.
For an NPM package, export =
is accurate if node -p 'require("foo")'
is the export, and export default
is accurate if node -p 'require("foo").default'
is the export.
Then you will have to add a comment to the last line of your definition header (after // Definitions: https://github.com/DefinitelyTyped/DefinitelyTyped
): // TypeScript Version: 2.1
.
This may belong in TSJS-Lib-Generator. See the guidelines there.
If the standard is still a draft, it belongs here.
Use a name beginning with dom-
and include a link to the standard as the "Project" link in the header.
When it graduates draft mode, we may remove it from DefinitelyTyped and deprecate the associated @types
package.
Before making your change, please create a new subfolder with the current version e.g. v2
, and copy existing files to it. You will need to:
- Update the relative paths in
tsconfig.json
as well astslint.json
. - Add path mapping rules to ensure that tests are running against the intended version.
For example history v2 tsconfig.json
looks like:
{
"compilerOptions": {
"baseUrl": "../../",
"typeRoots": ["../../"],
"paths": {
"history": [ "history/v2" ]
},
},
"files": [
"index.d.ts",
"history-tests.ts"
]
}
Please note that unless upgrading something backwards-compatible like node
, all packages depending of the updated package need a path mapping to it, as well as packages depending on those.
For example, react-router
depends on history@2
, so react-router tsconfig.json
has a path mapping to "history": [ "history/v2" ]
;
transitively react-router-bootstrap
(which depends on react-router
) also adds a path mapping in its tsconfig.json.
Also, /// <reference types=".." />
will not work with path mapping, so dependencies must use import
.
GitHub doesn't support file history for renamed files. Use git log --follow
instead.
This project is licensed under the MIT license.
Copyrights on the definition files are respective of each contributor listed at the beginning of each definition file.