In this tutorial, you will learn how to set up a Node.js and Express project with Typescript and live auto-reloading. Note that this method also works for any kind of Node.js apps not just Node.js with Express.
Before getting started, note that this article assumes that you have basic knowledge of Javascript, Node.js, Typescript, Express.js
Setting Up
Create a new directory for our project and name is typescript-express
and cd
into the folder.
mkdir typescript-express
cd typescript-express
Now initialize our Node project using this command
npm init -y
The -y
flag generates package.json
with default values. Instead of asking for information for every field for package.json
Now we can add the dependencies.
Adding Dependencies
We need to add two frameworks Express and Typescript to our project. To do so run the following command.
npm install express
npm install typescript --save-dev
Because we are using Typescript we also need to install the types provided by Express.
npm install @types/express --save-dev
The Typescript-related dependencies are installed as devDependencies
because we only need them when we build our app not when we run the app.
Configuring Typescript
Before we use Typescript we need to configure it. You will need to create a tsconfig.json
file at the root directory to indicate that the directory is a Typescript project.
To create a tsconfig.json
file simply run this command:
tsc --init
This command will create the tsconfig.json
file with the default configuration. This file will contain a lot of settings, most of which are commented out. However, there are some settings that are important to know:
target
This specifies which ECMAScript version your code will compile to. By default, this is set toES5
which is supported by most browsers. This allows you to use modern Javascript features without compromising browser support.module
This specifies what module code generator to use. By default it usescommon.js
.outDir
This specifies where the compiled js files should be.rootDir
This specifies where your ts files are stored.
Now create a new folder src
and create a file server.ts
with this content:
import Express from 'express'
const app = Express()
const port = 3000
app.get('/', (req, res) => {
res.send("Hello From Express and Typescirpt")
})
app.listen(port, () => {
console.log(`Example app listening at http://localhost:${port}`)
})
And change the values of these two fields in tsconfig.json
to the ones below:
...
"outDir": "./build", /* Redirect output structure to the directory. */
"rootDir": "./src", /* Specify the root directory of input files. Use tocontrol the output directory structure with--outDir. */
...
Now if you run tsc
command in the root directory a new directory build
will popup containing the compiled js files.
Run node build/server.js
to run your app.
If you run tsc --watch
it will automatically compile your ts files to js whenever you make changes to your ts files.
Setting up auto-reload
Add two new dependency nodemon
and concurrently
to your project.
npm install nodemon concurrently --save-dev
nodemon
will re-run your node app whenever the source files change.concurrently
will run both nodemon
and tsc --watch
at the same time.
Change the ourDir
in your tsconfig.json
to ./tmp
.
...
"outDir": "./tmp",
...
Add these scripts in your package.json
file.
...
"scripts": {
"build": "tsc --outDir build",
"serve": "concurrently --kill-others \"tsc --watch\" \"nodemon ./tmp/server.js \"",
"start": "node build/server.js"
},
...
And remove the "main": "index.js"
line from package.json
.
Your package.json
now should look like this:
{
"name": "typescript-express",
"version": "1.0.0",
"description": "",
"scripts": {
"build": "tsc --outDir build",
"dev": "concurrently --kill-others \"tsc --watch\" \"nodemon ./tmp/server.js \"",
"start": "node build/server.js"
},
"keywords": [],
"author": "",
"license": "ISC",
"dependencies": {
"express": "^4.17.1"
},
"devDependencies": {
"@types/express": "^4.17.13",
"concurrently": "^6.2.1",
"nodemon": "^2.0.12",
"typescript": "^4.4.3"
}
}
npm run build
will build your app for production use.
npm run start
will run your app for production use.
npm run dev
will run your app for development with auto-reloading enabled
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