This is a plugin that lets you roll-up your .d.ts
definition files.
Install the package from npm
:
$ npm install --save-dev rollup-plugin-dts
Add it to your rollup.config.js
:
import dts from "rollup-plugin-dts";
const config = [
// …
{
input: "./my-input/index.d.ts",
output: [{ file: "dist/my-library.d.ts", format: "es" }],
plugins: [dts()],
},
];
export default config;
And then instruct typescript where to find your definitions inside your package.json
:
"types": "dist/my-library.d.ts",
NOTE that the plugin will automatically mark any external library
(@types
for example) as external
, so those will be excluded from bundling.
While this plugin is fairly complete, it does not support all imaginable use-cases.
In particular, the plugin works best with already existing .d.ts
files generated
by the typescript compiler from idiomatic code.
Working with .ts(x)
or even .js(x)
(when setting allowJs: true
) does work,
but is not recommended.
The plugin does its own import resolution through the typescript compiler, and
usage together with other resolution plugins, such as node-resolve
can lead
to errors and is not recommended.
All external dependencies from node_modules
are automatically excluded from
bundling. This can be overridden using the respectExternal
setting, but it is
generally not recommended. While rollup of external @types
generally works,
it is not recommended.
Well, ideally TypeScript should just do all this itself, and it even has a proposal to do that. But there hasn’t been any progress in ~3 years.
Some projects, like rollup itself go the route of completely separating their public interfaces in a separate file.
See some discussions about some of these projects and their tradeoffs.
The code is licensed under the copyleft LGPL-3.0. I have no intention to license this under any non-copyleft license.