37 stable releases (10 major)
10.1.0 | Dec 1, 2024 |
---|---|
10.0.0 | Sep 19, 2024 |
9.0.1 | Jun 28, 2024 |
8.1.0 | Mar 22, 2024 |
0.2.3 | Dec 18, 2020 |
#3 in WebAssembly
76,332 downloads per month
Used in 87 crates
(56 directly)
79KB
1K
SLoC
ts-rs
ts-rs
Generate typescript type declarations from rust types
Why?
When building a web application in rust, data structures have to be shared between backend and frontend. Using this library, you can easily generate TypeScript bindings to your rust structs & enums so that you can keep your types in one place.
ts-rs might also come in handy when working with webassembly.
How?
ts-rs exposes a single trait, TS
. Using a derive macro, you can implement this interface for your types.
Then, you can use this trait to obtain the TypeScript bindings.
We recommend doing this in your tests.
See the example and the docs.
Get started
[dependencies]
ts-rs = "10.1"
use ts_rs::TS;
#[derive(TS)]
#[ts(export)]
struct User {
user_id: i32,
first_name: String,
last_name: String,
}
When running cargo test
or cargo test export_bindings
, the TypeScript bindings will be exported to the file bindings/User.ts
and will contain the following code:
export type User = { user_id: number, first_name: string, last_name: string, };
Features
- generate type declarations from rust structs
- generate union declarations from rust enums
- inline types
- flatten structs/types
- generate necessary imports when exporting to multiple files
- serde compatibility
- generic types
- support for ESM imports
cargo features
Feature | Description |
---|---|
serde-compat | Enabled by default See the "serde compatibility" section below for more information. |
format | Enables formatting of the generated TypeScript bindings. Currently, this unfortunately adds quite a few dependencies. |
no-serde-warnings | By default, warnings are printed during build if unsupported serde attributes are encountered. Enabling this feature silences these warnings. |
import-esm | When enabled,import statements in the generated file will have the .js extension in the end of the path to conform to the ES Modules spec. Example: import { MyStruct } from "./my_struct.js" |
serde-json-impl | Implement TS for types from serde_json |
chrono-impl | Implement TS for types from chrono |
bigdecimal-impl | Implement TS for types from bigdecimal |
url-impl | Implement TS for types from url |
uuid-impl | Implement TS for types from uuid |
bson-uuid-impl | Implement TS for bson::oid::ObjectId and bson::uuid |
bytes-impl | Implement TS for types from bytes |
indexmap-impl | Implement TS for types from indexmap |
ordered-float-impl | Implement TS for types from ordered_float |
heapless-impl | Implement TS for types from heapless |
semver-impl | Implement TS for types from semver |
smol_str-impl | Implement TS for types from smol_str |
tokio-impl | Implement TS for types from tokio |
If there's a type you're dealing with which doesn't implement TS
, use either
#[ts(as = "..")]
or #[ts(type = "..")]
, or open a PR.
serde
compatability
With the serde-compat
feature (enabled by default), serde attributes can be parsed for enums and structs.
Supported serde attributes:
rename
rename-all
rename-all-fields
tag
content
untagged
skip
flatten
default
Note: skip_serializing
and skip_deserializing
are ignored. If you wish to exclude a field
from the generated type, but cannot use #[serde(skip)]
, use #[ts(skip)]
instead.
When ts-rs encounters an unsupported serde attribute, a warning is emitted, unless the feature no-serde-warnings
is enabled.
Contributing
Contributions are always welcome! Feel free to open an issue, discuss using GitHub discussions or open a PR. See CONTRIBUTING.md
MSRV
The Minimum Supported Rust Version for this crate is 1.63.0
License: MIT
Dependencies
~0.3–12MB
~132K SLoC