So I've defined my 'enum' at the top of my javascript file as so:
var loaderOptions = { "SHOW": 0,
"CHANGEPAGE": 1,
"HIDE": 2
};
I wanted this enum to be used in a utility function used later ( showLoader(miliseconds, elementOrPageID, option, textMessage, callbackFunc) {} ).
This is all working fabulously as I have intellisense when I call the enum/variable
HOWEVER, I would like to move the function and its enum OUT of my main file into a utility file ... I can make this work just fine but I lose the intellisense ... any tricks to be able to keep this ability?
Add a References Directive on top of the JavaScript file
/// <reference path="file1.js" />
MSDN Doc
Mads Kristensen's blog post on the _references.js
file shows a more recent way of handling this than the one epascarello mentions in his answer. Here's a quote from Mads's post:
Enter _references.js.
This file must (by default) be located in a folder at the root called /scripts/. That's the naming convention. Any file located at /scripts/_references.js is automatically added to global Intellisense. This is now the only file we need for triple-slash references. Here's what the contents of this file may look like:
/// <reference path="modernizr-2.6.2.js" />
/// <reference path="jquery-1.10.2.js" />
/// <reference path="bootstrap.js" />
/// <reference path="respond.js" />
Just a bunch of references. This is also the only file that is included in Intellisense by default at all times.