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Converts Closure-style JSDoc type annotations to TypeScript definition files.

The purpose of this tool is to assist developers writing TypeScript definitions on large libraries. Our goal is to generate correct type definitions in most cases, and to provide a useful starting point for manually fixing the difficult cases.

Setup

git clone [email protected]:fivetran/typescript-closure-tools.git
cd typescript-closure-tools
git submodule update --init
npm install
tsc --module commonjs definition-generator/src/*.ts
node definition-generator/src/main.js test/example.js test/example.d.ts # Run a single example

Usage

node definition-generator/src/main.js
  [--provides symbols.tsv]
  [--globals output/dir/global-declarations.d.ts]
  [--input_root input/dir]
  [--output_root output/dir]
  input/dir/input-file.js output/dir/output-file.d.ts
  input/dir/another-input-file.js output/dir/another-output-file.d.ts
  ...
  • --provides symbols.tsv A tab-separated file where each row has the form file-name.js providedSymbol If this option isn't present, we will simply look for global symbols in the input files.
  • --globals output/dir/global-declarations.d.ts A TypeScript declaration that will be referenced at the top of every output file.
  • --input_root input/dir Root of inputs, considered when computing relative paths for ///<reference path="..." /> tags.
  • --output_root output/dir Root of outputs, considered when computing relative paths for ///<reference path="..." /> tags.

Structure

  • index/ Typescript definition files for the Closure library

definitions-generator/

  • src/ Typescript sources
  • scripts/ Shell scripts used for converting the Closure library
  • test/ Jasmine specs and example JS files used in testing
  • lib/ Dependencies

Running the tests

tsc test/*.ts
./node_modules/jasmine-node/bin/jasmine-node test/*.js

Differences between the Closure type system and TypeScript

There are several important differences between the Closure type system and TypeScript.

Differences that are resolved automatically

Closure has unions, TypeScript has overloads

Closure has unions such as:

/** @typedef {number|string} */
MyType;

and:

/** @param {number|string} x */
myFunction = function(x) { };

Closure unions are converted using the following rules:

Expand unions into overloads

/** @param {number|string} x */
myFunction = function(x) { };

becomes:

function myFunction(x: number);
function myFunction(x: string);

This works for nested union types as well:

/** @typedef {number|string} */
UnionType
/** @param {{myProperty:UnionType}} x */
myFunction = function(x) { };

becomes:

function myFunction(x: { myProperty: number });
function myFunction(x: { myProperty: string });

Inline typedef unions where possible

/** @typedef {number|string} */
MyTypeDef;

/** @param {MyTypeDef} x */
myFunction = function(x) { };

becomes:

function myFunction(x: number);
function myFunction(x: string);

Create empty interfaces when all else fails

/** @typedef {Array<T>|string} */
AnnoyingType;
/** @param {AnnoyingType<number>} x */
myFunction = function(x) { };

becomes:

interface AnnoyingType { /* Array<T>|string */ }
function myFunction(x: AnnoyingType);

Static inheritance

In typescript, static properties of classes are inherited:

declare class SuperClass { }
declare module SuperClass {
    var myStaticProperty: number;
}

declare class SubClass extends SuperClass { }

SubClass.myStaticProperty; // : number

In Closure they are not:

/** @constructor */
SuperClass = function() { };
/** @type {string} */
SuperClass.myStaticProperty;
/** @type {string} */
SuperClass.prototype.myInstanceProperty;

/** @extends {SuperClass} */
SubClass = function() { };
goog.inherits(SubClass, SuperClass);

SubClass.myStaticProperty; // undefined

To fix this, we create a common superclass without the static properties:

declare class SuperClass extends SuperClass.__Class { }
declare module SuperClass {
    class __Class {  // fake common superclass without myStaticProperty
        myInstanceProperty: string;
    }
    myStaticProperty: string; // static property that won't be inherited by 'extends SuperClass.__Class'
}

declare class SubClass extends SubClass.__Class { }
declare module SubClass {
    class __Class extends SuperClass.__Class { }
}

These fake superclasses don't actually exist and are present solely to simulate the behavior of goog.inherits(SubClass, SuperClass) in TypeScript definition files. Calling new SuperClass.__Class or extends SuperClass.__Class in non-declaration TypeScript code will generate a runtime error. You should use new SuperClass and extends SuperClass in non-declaration TypeScript code.

Private types

In Closure, the @private annotation is not enforced, and private type definitions, interfaces, classes and enums are often used in public function declarations. Therefore, these private types are included in the TypeScript definition.

Differences that must be fixed manually

Shadowing

In typescript, the current module shadows the global namespace:

declare class MyClass;
declare module myModule {
    class MyClass;
    var myValue : MyClass; // Refers to myModule.MyClass, not global MyClass

This can create problems when referring to global variables that are shadowed by locals:

goog.Error = function() { }

/**
 * @param {Error} e
 */
goog.f = function(e) { };

becomes:

declare module goog {
    class Error { }

    function f(e: Error) { }
}

Duplicate overloads

Closure unions sometimes include two types which are structurally equivalent:

/** @typedef {{length: number}} */
Lengthable;

/** @typedef {{length: number}} */
ArrayLike;

/** @param {Lengthable|ArrayLike} x */
f = function(x) { };

which becomes:

interface Lengthable {
  length: number;
}

interface ArrayLike {
  length: number;
}

f(x: Lengthable);
f(x: ArrayLike);

TypeScript has a structural type system, so the above example is considered a duplicate overload. One of them will need to be manually deleted.

RequireJS support

Basic RequireJS support is present:

define(function(require, exports, module) {
    /** @param {number} x */
    function functionDeclaration(x) { }
});

becomes:

module MODULE {
    functionDeclaration(x: number): void;
}

Limitations

Declarations are always placed in a module named MODULE

Only symbols with JSDoc annotations are exported

define(function(require, exports, module) {
    /** @type {number} */
    var documentedSymbol = 1;

    var ignoredSymbol = 2;

    exports.documentedSymbol = documentedSymbol;
    exports.ignoredSymbol = 2;
});

becomes:

module MODULE {
    var documentedSymbol: number;
}

exports and module are ignored

Symbols are exported using their local name:

define(function(require, exports, module) {
    /** @type {number} */
    var localName = 1;

    exports.exportedName = localName;
});

becomes:

module MODULE {
    var localName: number;
}

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