dotnet-to-typescript
0.1.2
See the version list below for details.
dotnet tool install --global dotnet-to-typescript --version 0.1.2
dotnet new tool-manifest # if you are setting up this repo dotnet tool install --local dotnet-to-typescript --version 0.1.2
#tool dotnet:?package=dotnet-to-typescript&version=0.1.2
nuke :add-package dotnet-to-typescript --version 0.1.2
dotnet-to-typescript
A .NET tool that converts C# classes to TypeScript definitions, enabling type-safe JavaScript scripting in .NET applications.
Installation
Install as a global .NET tool:
dotnet tool install dotnet-to-typescript --global
Features
- Converts C# classes to TypeScript definitions
- Supports enums, interfaces, and complex types
- Generates TypeScript instance files for scripting
- Handles async methods (Task/Task<T>)
- Supports collections (List<T>, Dictionary<K,V>)
- Preserves nullable types
Usage
1. Add Required Attributes
Define two attributes in your assembly:
[AttributeUsage(AttributeTargets.Class | AttributeTargets.Enum | AttributeTargets.Struct)]
public class JavascriptTypeAttribute : Attribute
{
}
[AttributeUsage(AttributeTargets.Class, AllowMultiple = true)]
public class JavascriptObjectAttribute : Attribute
{
public string Name { get; }
public JavascriptObjectAttribute(string name)
{
Name = name;
}
}
2. Decorate Your Classes
Mark classes that should be available to JavaScript:
[JavascriptType] // Adds a definition for the class
[JavascriptObject("car")] // Adds an instance of the class to the javascript context
[JavascriptType]
public class Car : IVehicle
{
public string Make { get; set; }
public int Year { get; set; }
public bool AddUser(User user)
{
return true;
}
}
3. Build Your Assembly
4. Generate TypeScript Files
Run the tool against your assembly:
dotnet-to-typescript path/to/your/assembly.dll
Note that you can also specify multiple assemblies to generate definitions for:
dotnet-to-typescript path/to/your/assembly1.dll path/to/your/assembly2.dll
The attributes need to be defined in one of the assemblies.
Optional parameters:
-o, --output-directory
: Specify output directory for generated files
5. Review the sample output
2 files will be created in the same directory as the assembly (or specified output directory):
assembly.d.ts
- TypeScript definitions, same name as the assemblyassembly.ts
- TypeScript instances, same name as the assembly
// assembly.d.ts
declare class Car {
Make: string;
Year: number;
AddUser(user: User): boolean;
}
// assembly.ts
/// <reference path="SampleLibrary.d.ts" />
let car = new Car();
// Insert your script below
// -------------------------
Use Cases
This tool is particularly useful when:
- Using JavaScript engines like Jint in your .NET application
- Need type-safe JavaScript/TypeScript scripting
- Want to maintain type consistency between C# and JavaScript
- Developing scripts with full IntelliSense support in VS Code
Supported Types
- Primitive types (string, number, boolean)
- DateTime → Date
- Arrays and Lists → Array
- Dictionaries → Record/indexed type
- Enums
- Complex types
- Nullable types
- Task<T> → Promise<T>
- Interfaces (mapped to concrete implementations)
Contributing
Contributions are welcome! Please feel free to submit a Pull Request.
License
This project is licensed under the MIT License - see the LICENSE file for details.
Product | Versions Compatible and additional computed target framework versions. |
---|---|
.NET | net9.0 is compatible. |
This package has no dependencies.