- Asynchronous and synchronous version - uses import for async and require for sync.
- Caches JavaScript files into directory inside .cache/ts-import.
- Fast - I've benchmarked ways to compare detecting file changes with fs module and checking mtimeMs turned out to be fastest (https://jsperf.com/fs-stat-mtime-vs-mtimems). Also, compilation in versions 3+ is approximately 10x faster than in version 2.
- Few dependencies - uses only
comment-parser
and my tiny utility packageoptions-defaults
. - Highly flexible and configurable - all compilerOptions are available under transpileOptions parameter.
- No interference - doesn't interfere with native import, require etc. changing their behavior or impacting their performance.
npm i ts-import@4
- CJS
npm i ts-import@5
- ESM
import * as tsImport from 'ts-import';
const main = async () => {
const filePath = `/home/user/file.ts`;
const asyncResult = await tsImport.load(filePath, {
// allowConfigurationWithComments: false,
});
// Only available in version 4.
const syncResult = tsImport.loadSync(filePath);
};
void main();
You can define if file should be imported in the default transpile
mode or compile
mode by placing a comment on top of the specific file.
Compile mode is slower, but allows the specified file to be part of a complex program - it can import other files etc.
/**
* @tsImport
* { "mode": "compile" }
*/
import { getOtherVariable } from './get-other-variable';
const result = getOtherVariable();
export { result };