How can I pass multiple source files to the TypeSc

2019-01-22 11:26发布

问题:

TypeScript is designed for large-scale JavaScripty projects which typically consist of multiple internally produced files along with externally produced libraries. How does the TypeScript compiler (tsc) expect you to provide it with the complete set of files that make up a project?

回答1:

dir *.ts /b /s > ts-files.txt
tsc @ts-files.txt
del ts-files.txt

This will compile all *.ts files in working directory and its sub directories. If you don't want to include sub directories, just remove the /s part from the first line.

Note that you can also add other arguments to the tsc line. Here is what I'm using now for one of my projects:

tsc @ts-files.txt --out ..\output/deerchao.web.js --removeComments


回答2:

tsc can compile multiple sources in sequence if you just give the names in order:

tsc foo.ts bar.ts

You can also pass a text file containing a list of files and command line arguments from a text file using the @ command line argument.

tsc @compile.txt

and the compile.txt could look like this:

--module amd
foo.ts
bar.ts

Also note that if on file references another via an import, tsc will automatically figure that out without you having to explicitly list the file that it depends on.



回答3:

In case anyone needs this for Mac OS X:

find . -name "*.ts" -type f >ts-files.txt
/usr/local/bin/tsc @ts-files.txt --module CommonJS --out ./Deploy/ServerMain.js --removeComments
rm ts-files.txt


回答4:

With TypeScript 1.5 (beta but the final version should be there soon), you can create a tsconfig.json file to configure the TypeScript compiler and the files to compile (among other things). See my answer over there: How to watch and compile all TypeScript sources?



回答5:

Or simply:

find ./my/path/ -name \"*.ts\" -type f | tsc


回答6:

If someone needs multiple files pretranspiled before the actual project compiling, use a separate tsconfig with the --project compiler option.

Compile a project given a valid configuration file. The argument can be a file path to a valid JSON configuration file, or a directory path to a directory containing a tsconfig.json file. See tsconfig.json documentation for more details.

One use case would be the need of the resulting JS files used afterwards in command line arguments for ionic app scripts.