Overview
The presence of a tsconfig.json file in a directory indicates that the directory is the root of a TypeScript project.
The tsconfig.json file specifies the root files and the compiler options required to compile the project.
JavaScript projects can use a jsconfig.json file instead, which acts almost the same but has some JavaScript-related compiler flags enabled by default.
A project is compiled in one of the following ways:
Using tsconfig.json or jsconfig.json
- By invoking tsc with no input files, in which case the compiler searches for the
tsconfig.jsonfile starting in the current directory and continuing up the parent directory chain. - By invoking tsc with no input files and a
--project(or just-p) command line option that specifies the path of a directory containing atsconfig.jsonfile, or a path to a valid.jsonfile containing the configurations.
When input files are specified on the command line, tsconfig.json files are ignored.
Examples
Example tsconfig.json files:
-
Using the
"files"propertyjson{ "compilerOptions": { "module": "commonjs", "noImplicitAny": true, "removeComments": true, "preserveConstEnums": true, "sourceMap": true }, "files": [ "core.ts", "sys.ts", "types.ts", "scanner.ts", "parser.ts", "utilities.ts", "binder.ts", "checker.ts", "emitter.ts", "program.ts", "commandLineParser.ts", "tsc.ts", "diagnosticInformationMap.generated.ts" ] } -
Using the
"include"and"exclude"propertiesjson{ "compilerOptions": { "module": "system", "noImplicitAny": true, "removeComments": true, "preserveConstEnums": true, "outFile": "../../built/local/tsc.js", "sourceMap": true }, "include": ["src/**/*"], "exclude": ["node_modules", "**/*.spec.ts"] }
Details
The "compilerOptions" property can be omitted, in which case the compiler’s defaults are used. See our full list of supported Compiler Options.
TSConfig Reference
To learn more about the hundreds of configuration options in the TSConfig Reference.
Schema
The tsconfig.json Schema can be found at the JSON Schema Store.