A preprocessor with sourcemap support to help use Typescript with Jest
Usage no npm install needed!
<script type="module">
import tsJestBabel7 from 'https://cdn.skypack.dev/ts-jest-babel-7';
</script>
README
ts-jest
Important note: When using React 16 with Node version 8, you might see wrong line numbers for errors originating from tsx files. There's an issue with more details on this
This setup should allow you to write Jest tests in Typescript and be able to locate errors without any additional gymnastics.
Versioning
From version "jest": "17.0.0" we are using same MAJOR.MINOR as Jest.
For "jest": "< 17.0.0" use "ts-jest": "0.1.13". Docs for it see here.
You can try using ts-jest with jest@test; use at your own risk! (And file an issue if you find problems.)
Coverage
Prior to version 20.0.0, coverage reports could be obtained using the inbuilt coverage processor in ts-jest. Starting with version 20.0.0, ts-jest delegates coverage processing to jest and no longer includes a coverage processor.
To generate coverage results, set the mapCoverage property in the jest configuration section to true.
Please note that the outDir property in the jest configuration section is removed in coverage mode, due to #201.
Default Setup
ts-jest tries to ship with sensible defaults, to get you on your feet as quickly as possible.
Sourcemap support
Sourcemaps should work out of the box. That means your stack traces should have the correct line numbers,
and you should be able to step through the TypeScript code using a debugger.
Automatically finds tsconfig.json
ts-jest automatically located your tsconfig file.
If you want to compile typescript with a special configuration, you can do that too
Supports synthetic modules
If you're on a codebase where you're using synthetic default imports, e.g.
//Regular imports
import * as React from 'react';
//Synthetic default imports:
import React from 'react';
ts-jest tries to support that. If allowSyntheticDefaultImports is set to true in your tsconfig file, it uses babel
to automatically create the synthetic default exports for you - nothing else needed.
You can opt-out of this behaviour with the skipBabel flag
Supports automatic of jest.mock() calls
Just like Jest ts-jest
automatically uses babel to hoist your jest.mock() calls to the top of your file.
You can opt-out of this behaviour with the skipBabel flag
Configuration
If the default setup doesn't address your requirements, you can create a custom setup to suit your project.
tsconfig
By default this package will try to locate tsconfig.json and use its compiler options for your .ts and .tsx files.
You can override this behaviour by pointing ts-jest to a custom TypeScript configuration file.
You can do this by setting the tsConfigFile option in your global variables under the ts-jest key to path of the
custom configuration file (relative to the project's root directory)
Warning: In the past, a __TS_CONFIG__ section could be used to provide an inline TypeScript configuration. Going forward, all custom configurations should be in a different file and the tsConfigFile key in the ts-jest section (under globals) should point to this file (as shown above). You can ignore this if the configuration you want is identical to the main tsconfig.json.
Note that if you haven't explicitly set the module property through a separate configuration file with tsConfigFile, it will be overwritten to commonjs (regardless of the value in tsconfig.json) since that is the format Jest expects. This only happens during testing.
If you don't use mocks, or synthetic default imports you can skip the babel-transpilation step.
This means jest.mock() calls will not be hoisted to the top,
and synthetic default exports will never be created.
Simply add skipBabel to your global variables under the ts-jest key:
When using Babel, ts-jest, by default, doesn't use the .babelrc file. If you want ts-jest to use .babelrc, you should set the globals > ts-jest > useBabelrc flag to true in your jest configuration.
In some cases, projects may not want to have a .babelrc file, but still need to provide custom Babel configuration. In these cases, you can provide a Babel config directly to ts-jest using the globals > ts-jest > babelConfig option in your jest configuration.
Note that if you also set the useBabelrc option to true, any configuration passed using this method will be overwritten by corresponding keys in .babelrc files.
TS compiler & error reporting
If you want to enable Syntactic & Semantic TypeScript error reporting you can enable this through enableTsDiagnostics flag;
If only testing typescript files then remove the js option in the testRegex.
Angular 2
When using Jest with Angular (a.k.a Angular 2) apps you will likely need to parse HTML templates. If you're unable to add html-loader to webpack config (e.g. because you don't want to eject from angular-cli) you can do so by defining __TRANSFORM_HTML__ key in globals for jest.
The default setup shown here picks up only .ts and .tsx files. However, if there are javascript files in your project that use ES2015+ features (spread operator, import, etc), you probably want them processed. There are two ways you can do this:
If you have dependencies on npm packages that are written in TypeScript but are
not published in ES5 you have to tweak your configuration. For example
you depend on a private scoped package @foo/bar you have to add following to
your Jest configuration:
By default Jest ignores everything in node_modules. This setting prevents Jest from ignoring the package you're interested in, in this case @foo, while continuing to ignore everything else in node_modules.
Known Limitations
Known limitations for TS compiler options
You can't use "target": "ES6" while using node v4 in your test environment;
If the jest.mock() calls is placed after actual code, (e.g. after functions or classes) and skipBabel is not set,
the line numbers in stacktraces will be off.
We suggest placing the jest.mock() calls after the imports, but before any actual code.
const enum is not supported
This is due to a limitation in the ts-jest preprocessor which compiles each test file individually, therefore ignoring implementations of ambient declarations. The TypeScript team currently have no plan to support const enum inlining for this particular compiler method. See #112 and #281 for more information.
One possible workaround is to manually inline usage of const enum values - i.e. in your code, use let x: Enum = 1 as Enum as opposed to let x: Enum = Enum.FirstValue. This allows you to keep the type checking on enums without running into this issue.
How to Contribute
If you have any suggestions/pull requests to turn this into a useful package, just open an issue and I'll be happy to work with you to improve this.
Quickstart to run tests (only if you're working on this package)
git clone https://github.com/kulshekhar/ts-jest
cd ts-jest
npm install
npm test
Note: If you are cloning on Windows, you may have to run git config --system core.longpaths true for Windows to stop complaining about long filenames.
License
Copyright (c) Authors.
This source code is licensed under the MIT license.