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Setup a Node.js project with Typescript, ESLint, Prettier, Husky

Setup a Node.js project with Typescript, ESLint, Prettier, Husky

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Starting a personal node project could be easy; starting a team node project could be challenging.

I am a developer currently working in SEEK Australia.

In my experience, common mistakes developer make when starting a projects are:

  • No Linting
  • Lack of compile-time type checking (not really mistake but less desirable in my preference)
  • Inconsistent code styling
  • Linter breaking the build

In this article, I am going to not only to share how to address these above problems, but also some of the best practices we implement in our team at SEEK.

The article assumes the reader knows the basics about nodes and typescripts

Typescript

We can start off by a simple node project consisting only the package.json file

yarn add typescript --dev

After adding the dev dependency, create a ts.config.json file under the root of the node project

{
  "compilerOptions":
    {
      "target": "es2018",
      "module": "commonjs",
      "outDir": "dist",
      "sourceMap": true,
    },
  "include": ["src/**/*.ts"],
  "exclude": ["node_modules"],
}

The above are the minimal settings of typescript compiler tsc.

It tells the compiler to

  • use es2018 syntax when generating the distributable
  • use the commonjs module format.
  • generate *.js to /dist folder
  • generate source map
  • include all *.ts file inside /src folder
  • exclude all files inside /node_modules folder

Fancy configuration of ts.config.json is beyond the scope of this article

Adding the following line to package.json

{
  "scripts":{
    "build": "tsc"
  }
}

To build, run the following in shell

yarn build

ESLint

We have a handful choices of linting tools for node development, but the de-factor standard these days for typescript is ESLint. Partnering with prettier it really improves consistency and productivity of a development team.

Again we are starting off by adding the dev dependencies

yarn add eslint @typescript-eslint/eslint-plugin @typescript-eslint/parser --dev

ESLint does not support typescript out of the box. Fortunately we are able to add the typescript support by these two packages @typescript-eslint/eslint-plugin @typescript-eslint/parser thanks to the ESLint team's modular design.

The next thing is to create a .eslintrc file. It does not have a file extension but the default is JSON format:

{
  "parser": "@typescript-eslint/parser",
  "extends": ["plugin:@typescript-eslint/recommended"],
  "parserOptions": { "ecmaVersion": 2018, "sourceType": "module" },
  "rules": {}
}

It tells the ESLint linter to:

  • use Typescript parser
  • use Recommended Typescript preset for linting
  • use ES2018 and module sourceType to match ts.config settings

Add the following lines in package.json:

{
  "scripts": {
    "lint": "eslint src/**/*.ts",
    "format": "eslint src/**/*.ts --fix"
  }
}

To lint, run the following in shell

yarn lint

To format the code to comply with linting rules, run the following in shell

yarn format

Prettier

Prettier drastically improves team consistency by automatically formatting the code. To enable prettier, we first install it by running:

yarn add prettier --dev

Configure prettier by adding a .prettierrc to the root of the project with the following content

{
    "semi": true,
    "trailingComma": "all",
    "singleQuote": true,
    "printWidth": 120,
    "tabWidth": 2
}

The setting let Prettier to

  • Ensure semi colon at the end of each statement
  • Ensure trailing comma at the end of each statement
  • Convert all double quotes to single quotes where applicable
  • Break into new lines for all lines greater than 120 characters wide
  • Ensure tab width is 2 characters

In Visual Studio Code, Ctrl (CMD) + P then select Format Code, or enable Format on Save in settings for best result.

Husky

No matter how careful I am, I always endup with situations where I changed and committed the code to Github without linting, and that can lead to failure CI builds.

A good pratcice is to lint before commit. Husky is a very popular plugin to achieve so.

Install Husky by

yarn add husky --save-dev

Husky does not have its own configuration files. Instead we will add its config into package.json:

{
  "husky": {
    "hooks": {
      "pre-commit": "yarn lint"
    }
  }
}

Next time you commit, husky would exit the git commit when the code does not pass linting.

The End

There are so many more things you could do to your project to ensure productivity, consistency and coding styles, but I think this is a good start. This article will be subject to improvements to the latest changes and practices.

If you find this article useful please let me know.

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