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@patrickkettner/ts-transformer-inline-file

v0.1.2

Published

A TypeScript custom transformer for inlining files

Downloads

3

Readme

= TypeScript transformer for inlining files :npm-name: ts-transformer-inline-file :gh-name: jirutka/{npm-name} :gh-branch: master :vs-marketplace-uri: https://marketplace.visualstudio.com/items?itemName=

ifdef::env-github[] image:https://travis-ci.com/{gh-name}.svg?branch={gh-branch}[Build Status, link="https://travis-ci.com/{gh-name}"] image:https://img.shields.io/npm/v/{npm-name}.svg[npm Version, link="https://www.npmjs.org/package/{npm-name}"] endif::env-github[]

This is a TypeScript AST transformer footnote:[If you’ve never heard about TypeScript transformers, I can recommend https://blog.logrocket.com/using-typescript-transforms-to-enrich-runtime-code-3fd2863221ed/[this blog post] to dive into the topic.] that allows you to include content of a file into the transpiled code, i.e. inline it in build-time.

You can think about it as a C preprocessor’s directive #include but more powerful… way more powerful. If the referenced file is a JSON file, it doesn’t include it as a string but converts the JSON to an object literal. Thus it can be further optimized by a minifier. Moreover, if you use an object destructing assignment, this transformer will optimize it itself -- include only the assigned properties!

== Usage

Add {npm-name} package to your project as a development dependency and <<How to Configure the Transformer, configure the transformer>>.

=== Inline Any Textual File

[source, js, subs="+attributes"]

import { $INLINE_FILE } from '{npm-name}'

const words = $INLINE_FILE('../data/words.txt').trim().split(' ')

This will be transformed into:

[source, js] const words = "lorem ipsum dolor\n".trim().split(' ');

…where "lorem ipsum dolor\n" is full content of the file ../data/words.txt.

=== Inline JSON Data

[source, js, subs="+attributes"]

import { $INLINE_JSON } from '{npm-name}'

const pkg = $INLINE_JSON('../package.json')

This will be transformed into:

[source, js] const pkg = { "name": "my-package", "version": "0.1.0", "license": "MIT", ... }

However, if you need only few properties from the referenced JSON file, use object destructuring assignment:

[source, js] const { name, version } = $INLINE_JSON('../package.json')

…and the transformer will include only the assigned properties:

[source, js] const { name, version } = { "name": "my-package", "version": "0.1.0" }

NOTE: This works only for the top level; filtering of nested properties is currently not supported.

== How to Configure the Transformer

Unfortunately, TypeScript itself does not currently provide any easy way to use custom transformers (see https://github.com/Microsoft/TypeScript/issues/14419[Microsoft/TypeScript#14419]). Fortunately, there are few solutions.

=== TTypescript

If you don’t use any bundler such as Rollup or webpack, https://github.com/cevek/ttypescript[TTypescript] is the way to go. It provides wrappers ttsc and ttserver for the tsc and tsserver commands that add support for custom transformers. All you have to do is to use these wrappers instead of the original commands and define the transformer in your tsconfig.json:

.tsconfig.json: [source, jsonc, subs="+attributes"]

{ "compilerOptions": { // ... "plugins": [ { "transform": "{npm-name}/transformer" } ] }, // ... }

=== Rollup (with rollup-plugin-typescript2)

.rollup.config.js: [source, js, subs="+attributes"]

import typescript from 'rollup-plugin-typescript2' import inlineFileTransformer from '{npm-name}/transformer'

export default { // ... plugins: [ typescript({ transformers: [ (service) => ({ before: [ inlineFileTransformer(service.getProgram()) ], after: [], }), ], }), ], }

=== Webpack (with ts-loader or awesome-typescript-loader)

.webpack.config.js: [source, js, subs="+attributes"]

const inlineFileTransformer = require('{npm-name}/transformer').default

module.exports = { // ... module: { rules: [ { test: /.ts$/, loader: 'ts-loader', // or 'awesome-typescript-loader', options: { getCustomTransformers: (program) => ({ before: [ inlineFileTransformer(program), ], }), }, }, ], }, }

ifndef::npm-readme[]

== Development

=== System Requirements

  • https://nodejs.org[NodeJS] 10.13+
  • https://pandoc.org[Pandoc] and https://asciidoctor.org[Asciidoctor] (used only for converting README.adoc to Markdown for npmjs)

=== Used Tools

  • https://www.typescriptlang.org[TypeScript] the language
  • https://yarnpkg.com[yarn] for dependencies management and building
  • https://eslint.org[ESLint] for linting JS/TypeScript code
  • https://github.com/substack/tape[tape] for testing

=== How to Start

. Clone this repository: [source, subs="+attributes"] git clone https://github.com/{gh-name}.git cd {npm-name}

. Install Yarn (if you don’t have it already): [source] npm install -g yarn

. Install all JS dependencies: [source] yarn install

. Build the project: [source] yarn build

. Run tests: [source] yarn test

. Run linter: [source] yarn lint

=== Visual Studio Code

If you use Visual Studio Code, you may find the following extensions useful:

  • link:{vs-marketplace-uri}EditorConfig.EditorConfig[EditorConfig for VS Code]
  • link:{vs-marketplace-uri}dbaeumer.vscode-eslint[ESLint]
  • link:{vs-marketplace-uri}gamunu.vscode-yarn[yarn]

endif::[]

== License

This project is licensed under http://opensource.org/licenses/MIT/[MIT License]. For the full text of the license, see the link:LICENSE[LICENSE] file.