TypeScript Development with Strapi
The content of this page might not be fully up-to-date with Strapi 5 yet.
While developing a TypeScript-based application with Strapi, you can:
- access typings for the
Strapi
class with autocompletion, - generate typings for your project's content-types,
- start Strapi programmatically,
- and follow some TypeScript-specific instructions for plugins development.
Use Strapi
TypeScript typings
Strapi provides typings on the Strapi
class to enhance the TypeScript development experience. These typings come with an autocomplete feature that automatically offers suggestions while developing.
To experience TypeScript-based autocomplete while developing Strapi applications, you could try the following:
-
Open the
./src/index.ts
file from your code editor. -
Declare the
strapi
argument as typeStrapi
within the globalregister
method:./src/index.tsimport { Strapi } from '@strapi/strapi';
export default {
register({ strapi }: { strapi: Strapi }) {
// ...
},
}; -
Within the body of the
register
method, start typingstrapi.
and use keyboard arrows to browse the available properties. -
Choose
runLifecyclesFunctions
from the list. -
When the
strapi.runLifecyclesFunctions
method is added, a list of available lifecycle types (i.e.register
,bootstrap
anddestroy
) are returned by the code editor. Use keyboard arrows to choose one of the lifecycles and the code will autocomplete.
Generate typings for content-types schemas
To generate typings for your project schemas use the ts:generate-types
CLI command. The ts:generate-types
command creates the folder types
, at the project root, which stores the typings for your project. The optional --debug
flag returns a detailed table of the generated schemas.
To use ts:generate-types
run the following code in a terminal at the project root:
- npm
- yarn
npm run strapi ts:generate-types --debug #optional flag to display additional logging
yarn strapi ts:generate-types --debug #optional flag to display additional logging
Types can be automatically generated on server restart by adding autogenerate: true
to the config/typescript.js|ts
configuration file.
To use Strapi types in your front-end application, you can use a workaround until Strapi implements an official solution.
Fix build issues with the generated types
The generated types can be excluded so that the Entity Service doesn't use them and falls back on looser types that don't check the actual properties available in the content types.
To do that, edit the tsconfig.json
of the Strapi project and add types/generated/**
to the exclude
array:
// ...
"exclude": [
"node_modules/",
"build/",
"dist/",
".cache/",
".tmp/",
"src/admin/",
"**/*.test.ts",
"src/plugins/**",
"types/generated/**"
]
// ...
However, if you still want to use the generated types on your project, but don't want Strapi to use them, a workaround could be to copy those generated types and paste them outside of the generated
directory (so that they aren't overwritten when the types are regenerated) and remove the declare module '@strapi/types'
from the bottom of the file.
Types should only be imported from @strapi/strapi
to avoid breaking changes. The types in @strapi/types
is for internal use only and is subject to change without notice.
Start Strapi programmatically
To start Strapi programmatically in a TypeScript project the Strapi instance requires the compiled code location. This section describes how to set and indicate the compiled code directory.
Use the strapi()
factory
Strapi can be run programmatically by using the strapi()
factory. Since the code of TypeScript projects is compiled in a specific directory, the parameter distDir
should be passed to the factory to indicate where the compiled code should be read:
const strapi = require('@strapi/strapi');
const app = strapi({ distDir: './dist' });
app.start();
Use the strapi.compile()
function
The strapi.compile()
function should be mostly used for developing tools that need to start a Strapi instance and detect whether the project includes TypeScript code. strapi.compile()
automatically detects the project language. If the project code contains any TypeScript code, strapi.compile()
compiles the code and returns a context with specific values for the directories that Strapi requires:
const strapi = require('@strapi/strapi');
strapi.compile().then(appContext => strapi(appContext).start());
Develop a plugin using TypeScript
New plugins can be generated following the plugins development documentation, ensuring you select "TypeScript" when prompted by the CLI tool.
There are 2 important distinctions for TypeScript applications:
- After creating the plugin, run
yarn
ornpm install
in the plugin directorysrc/admin/plugins/[my-plugin-name]
to install the dependencies for the plugin. - Run
yarn build
ornpm run build
in the plugin directorysrc/admin/plugins/[my-plugin-name]
to build the admin panel including the plugin.
It is not necessary to repeat the yarn
or npm install
command after the initial installation. The yarn build
or npm run build
command is necessary to implement any plugin development that affects the admin panel.