$ npm install compatfactory
A library that unifies the TypeScript Compiler API factory functions across all versions of TypeScript and makes them conform with the Node Factory API
TypeScript's Compiler APIs are constantly evolving. With the release of TypeScript 4.0, the TypeScript team announced that they would move away from the old set of factory functions for creating and updating nodes, and over to a new Node Factory API. With the release of TypeScript 5.0, the old factory functions were removed entirely.
Nowadays, if you maintain a library or a tool that needs to work across multiple versions of TypeScript and you use any of TypeScript's Compiler APIs, you're going to have a really tough time. It will be error prone, difficult to read, and hard to maintain. There are many differences between the signatures of these methods across all versions of TypeScript, and many may not even exist.
This library exists to fix this problem. It simply provides a helper function, ensureNodeFactory
, which takes a NodeFactory
or a typescript object, and then returns an object conforming to the NodeFactory
interface.
In case a NodeFactory
is passed to it, or if one could be found via the typescript.factory
property, it will patch any inconsistencies there may be between the signatures of the factory functions across TypeScript versions and most often simply return the existing one with no further edits. For older TypeScript versions, it will
wrap its factory functions with the new API such that you can simply use one API for all your operations! 🎉
Trent Raymond | scrubtheweb |
$ npm install compatfactory
$ yarn add compatfactory
$ pnpm add compatfactory
compatfactory
depends on typescript
, so you need to manually install this as well.
Simply import ensureNodeFactory
and use it in place of the Node Factory you would otherwise be working with.
One very basic example could be:
import {ensureNodeFactory} from "compatfactory";
// Will use typescript.factory if available, and otherwise return an object that wraps typescript's helper functions
// but makes them conform with the Node Factory API
const factory = ensureNodeFactory(typescript);
factory.createClassDeclaration(/* ... */);
A more realistic example would be inside a Custom Transformer context:
import {ensureNodeFactory} from "compatfactory";
import type TS from "typescript";
function getCustomTransformers(typescript: typeof TS): TS.CustomTransformers {
return {
before: [
context => {
const factory = ensureNodeFactory(context.factory ?? typescript);
return sourceFile => {
return factory.updateSourceFile(
sourceFile
// ...
);
};
}
]
};
}
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Frederik Wessberg Twitter: @FredWessberg Github: @wessberg Lead Developer |
MIT © Frederik Wessberg (@FredWessberg) (Website)
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