This project has been merged with tsx and this repository is no longer maintained.
Use tsx instead:
node --loader tsx/esm ./file.ts
Node.js loader for loading TypeScript files.
- Transforms TypeScript to ESM on demand
- Classic Node.js resolution (extensionless & directory imports)
- Cached for performance boost
- Supports Node.js v12.20.0+
- Handles
node:import prefixes - Resolves
tsconfig.jsonpaths - Named imports from JSON modules
Protip: use with cjs-loader or tsx
esm-loader only transforms ES modules (
.mjs/.mtsextensions or.jsfiles inmoduletype packages).To transform CommonJS files (
.cjs/.ctsextensions or.jsfiles incommonjstype packages), use this with cjs-loader.Alternatively, use tsx to handle them both automatically.
npm install --save-dev @esbuild-kit/esm-loaderPass @esbuild-kit/esm-loader into the --loader flag.
node --loader @esbuild-kit/esm-loader ./file.tsThe following properties are used from tsconfig.json in the working directory:
strict: Whether to transform to strict modejsx: Whether to transform JSXWarning: When set to
preserve, the JSX syntax will remain untransformed. To prevent Node.js from throwing a syntax error, chain another Node.js loader that can transform JSX to JS.jsxFactory: How to transform JSXjsxFragmentFactory: How to transform JSX FragmentsjsxImportSource: Where to import JSX functions fromallowJs: Whether to apply the tsconfig to JS filespaths: For resolving aliases
By default, tsconfig.json will be detected from the current working directory.
To set a custom path, use the ESBK_TSCONFIG_PATH environment variable:
ESBK_TSCONFIG_PATH=./path/to/tsconfig.custom.json node --loader @esbuild-kit/esm-loader ./file.tsModules transformations are cached in the system cache directory (TMPDIR). Transforms are cached by content hash so duplicate dependencies are not re-transformed.
Set environment variable ESBK_DISABLE_CACHE to a truthy value to disable the cache:
ESBK_DISABLE_CACHE=1 node --loader @esbuild-kit/esm-loader ./file.tsYes. This loader transpiles JSON modules so it's also compatible with named imports.
Node.js has built-in support for network imports behind the --experimental-network-imports flag.
You can pass it in with esm-loader:
node --loader @esbuild-kit/esm-loader --experimental-network-imports ./file.tsIn ESM, import paths must be explicit (must include file name and extension).
For backwards compatibility, this loader adds support for classic Node resolution for extensions: .js, .json, .ts, .tsx, .jsx. Resolving a index file by the directory name works too.
import file from './file' // -> ./file.js
import directory from './directory' // -> ./directory/index.jsESM import resolution expects explicit import paths, whereas CommonJS resolution expects implicit imports (eg. extensionless & directory imports).
As a result of this change, Node.js changes how it imports a path that matches both a file and directory. In ESM, the directory would be imported, but in CJS, the file would be imported.
To use to the CommonJS resolution algorithm, use the --experimental-specifier-resolution=node flag.
node --loader @esbuild-kit/esm-loader --experimental-specifier-resolution=node ./file.ts-
tsx - Node.js runtime powered by esbuild using
@esbuild-kit/cjs-loaderand@esbuild-kit/esm-loader. -
@esbuild-kit/cjs-loader - TypeScript & ESM to CJS transpiler using the Node.js loader API.