I am using TypeScript v1.4.1 and would like to require an external module (in this case "chai") and have it be type checked.
However, I am running into some sort of naming conflict with this code:
/// <reference path="../typings/node/node.d.ts" />
/// <reference path="../typings/chai/chai.d.ts" />
/// <reference path="../typings/mocha/mocha.d.ts" />
var chai = require("chai");
var expect = chai.expect;
var assert = chai.assert;
describe("TEST", () =>
{
it("true should be true", (done)=>
{
expect(true).to.be.true;
done();
});
});
With this definition file:
declare module chai {
...
}
declare module "chai" {
export = chai;
}
Compiling gives these errors:
test/test.ts(5,5): error TS2300: Duplicate identifier 'chai'.
typings/chai/chai.d.ts(6,16): error TS2300: Duplicate identifier 'chai'.
It seems my only option is rename my chai
variable name in test.ts. That seems clunky AND won't type check the use of the renamed chai
variable.
Any advice?
Use the import
keyword with require
instead of var
import chai = require('chai');
And compile with --module commonjs
if you're not already
Or, if for some reason you don't want the test code to be an external module, adding a type annotation will preserve type checking.
var c: typeof chai = require("chai");