TypeScript static types

Zulip is early in the process of migrating our codebase to use TypeScript, the leading static type system for JavaScript. It works as an extension of the ES6 JavaScript standard, and provides similar benefits to our use of the mypy static type system for Python.

We expect to eventually migrate the entire JavaScript codebase to TypeScript, though our current focus is on getting the tooling and migration process right, not on actually migrating the codebase.

As a result, the details in this document are preliminary ideas for discussion and very much subject to change.

A typical piece of TypeScript code looks like this:

setdefault(key: K, value: V): V {
    const mapping = this._items[this._munge(key)];
    if (mapping === undefined) {
        return this.set(key, value);
    }
    return mapping.v;
}

The following resources are valuable for learning TypeScript:

Type checking

TypeScript types are checked by the TypeScript compiler, tsc, which is run as part of our lint checks. You can run the compiler yourself with tools/run-tsc, which will check all the TypeScript files once, or tools/run-tsc --watch, which will continually recheck the files as you edit them.

Linting and style

We use the ESLint plugin for TypeScript to lint TypeScript code, just like we do for JavaScript. Our long-term goal is to use an idiomatic TypeScript style for our TypeScript codebase.

However, because we are migrating an established JavaScript codebase, we plan to start with a style that is closer to the existing JavaScript code, so that we can easily migrate individual modules without too much code churn. A few examples:

  • TypeScript generally prefers explicit return undefined;, whereas our existing JavaScript style uses just return;.

  • With TypeScript, we expect to make heavy use of let and const rather than var.

  • With TypeScript/ES6, we may no longer need to use _.each() as our recommended way to do loop iteration.

For each of the details, we will either want to bulk-migrate the existing JavaScript codebase before the migration or plan to do it after JS->TS migration for a given file, so that we don’t need to modify these details as part of converting a file from JavaScript to TypeScript.

A possibly useful technique for this will be setting some eslint override rules at the top of individual files in the first commit that converts them from JS to TS.

Migration strategy

Our plan is to order which modules we migrate carefully, starting with those that:

  • Appear frequently as reverse dependencies of other modules (e.g., people.js). These are most valuable to do first because then we have types on the data being interacted with by other modules when we migrate those.

  • Don’t have large open pull requests (to avoid merge conflicts); one can scan for these using TinglingGit.

  • Have good unit test coverage, which limits the risk of breaking correctness through refactoring. Use tools/test-js-with-node --coverage to get a coverage report.

When migrating a module, we want to be especially thoughtful about putting together a commit structure that makes mistakes unlikely and the changes easy to verify. For example:

  • First a commit that just converts the language to TypeScript adding types. The result may potentially have some violations of the long-term style we want (e.g., not using const). Depending on how we’re handling linting, we set some override eslint rules at the top of the module at this stage so CI still passes.

  • Then a commit just migrating use of var to const/let without other changes (other than removing any relevant linter overrides).

  • Etc.

With this approach, we should be able to produce a bunch of really simple commits that can be merged the same day they’re written without significant risk of introducing regressions from typos, refactors that don’t quite work how they were expected to, etc.