ts-named
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1.0.8 • Public • Published

Ts-Named : TypeScript Transformer for extracting variable name

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ts-named provides two types of transformations for extracting identifiers from named variables into strings, which will escape variable name mangling applied by tools like Terser or UglifyJS and will be conserved for runtime use.

named function

Transforms :

import { named } from 'ts-named';
// ...
const SOME_ID = named(id => ({ ID: id, TYPE: 'Typed' }));
 
console.log(SOME_ID.ID);

To :

const SOME_ID = (id => ({ ID: id, TYPE: 'Typed' }))('SOME_ID');
 
console.log(SOME_ID.ID); // "SOME_ID"

ID constant

Transforms :

import { ID } from 'ts-named';
// ...
const SOME_ID = { ID: ID, TYPE: 'Typed' };
 
console.log(SOME_ID.ID);

To :

const SOME_ID = { ID: 'SOME_ID', TYPE: 'Typed' };
 
console.log(SOME_ID.ID); // "SOME_ID"

Usage

named function is a declared function that receives an arrow function as parameter :

export declare function named<T>(idF: (id: string) => T): T;

The transformation expects it to be used before a variable declaration as follows :

import { named } from 'ts-named';
const SOME_ID = named(id => ({ ID: id, TYPE: 'Typed' }));

After the transformation the import and the function usages are removed. The named function usage is replaced with an immediately invoked arrow function (IIAF), with the variable name as argument.

ID constant is a declared string constant :

export declare const ID: string;

Its usages are replaced during the transformation with the englobing variable assignments identifier :

import { ID } from 'ts-named';
class MyObject {
  constructor(public name: string) {}
}
const SOME_ID = new MyObject(ID);

Configuration

TypeScript compiler does not provide a standard way of including AST transformers to the tsc. You need to configure the build tool you use.

Webpack

const tsNamed = require('ts-named');
 
module.exports = {
  // ...etc...
  module: {
    rules: [
      {
        test: /\.tsx?$/,
        use: [
          {
            loader: 'ts-loader', // or awesome-typescript-loader
            options: {
              getCustomTransformers: () => ({ before: [tsNamed()] }),
            },
          },
        ],
      },
    ],
  },
};

Gulp

const gulp = require('gulp');
const ts = require('gulp-typescript');
const tsNamed = require('ts-named');
 
gulp.task('typescript', function() {
  gulp
    .src('src/**/*.ts')
    .pipe(
      ts({
        getCustomTransformers: () => ({ before: [tsNamed()] }),
      })
    )
    .pipe(gulp.dest('dist'));
});

Jest (with ts-jest)

In jest.config.js

    globals: {
        'ts-jest': {
            astTransformers: ['ts-named']
        }
    }

tsc (with ttypescript)

Alternatively you can use the ttypescript wrapper.

In tsconfig.json

{
  "compilerOptions": {
    "plugins": [{ "transform": "ts-named" }]
  }
}

Then configure different build tools to use the ttypescript instead of tsc, as shown here : https://github.com/cevek/ttypescript

For example to use ttypescript with Webpack,

    rules: [
      {
        test: /\.tsx?$/,
        use: [
          {
            loader: 'ts-loader', // or awesome-typescript-loader
              options: {
                  compiler: 'ttypescript'
              }
          },
        ],
      },
    ],

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Version

1.0.8

License

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  • ozangunalp