Etsy’ s Journey to TypeScript

摘要

Over the past few years, Etsy’s Web Platform team has spent a lot of time bringing our frontend code up to date. It was only a year and a half ago that we modernized our Javascript build system in order to enable advanced features, things like arrow functions and classes, that have been added to the language since 2015. And while this upgrade meant that we had futureproofed our codebase and could write more idiomatic and scalable Javascript, we knew that we still had room for improvement.

Etsy has been around for over sixteen years. Naturally, our codebase has become quite large; our monorepo has over seventeen thousand JavaScript files in it, spanning many iterations of the site. It can be hard for a developer working in our codebase to know what parts are still considered best practice, and which parts follow legacy patterns or are considered technical debt. The JavaScript language itself complicates this sort of problem even further — in spite of the new syntax features added to the language over the past few years, JavaScript is very flexible and comes with few enforceable limitations on how it is used. This makes it notoriously challenging to write JavaScript without first researching the implementation details of any dependencies you use. While documentation can help alleviate this problem somewhat, it can only do so much to prevent a JavaScript library from being used improperly, which can ultimately lead to unreliable code.

All of these problems (and many more!) were ones that we felt TypeScript might be able to solve for us. TypeScript bills itself as a “superset of Javascript.” In other words, TypeScript is everything in Javascript with the optional addition of types. Types, in programming, are basically ways to declare expectations about the data that moves through code: what kinds of input can be used by a function, what sorts of values a variable can hold. (If you’re not familiar with the concept of types, TypeScript’s handbook has a fantastic introduction.) TypeScript is designed to be easily adopted incrementally in existing Javascript projects, particularly in large codebases where shifting to a new language can be an impossibility. It is exceptionally good at inferring types from the code you’ve already written, and it has a type syntax nuanced enough to properly describe all of the quirks that are common in Javascript. Plus, it’s developed by Microsoft, it’s already in use at companies like Slack and AirBnB, and is by far the most used and loved flavor of Javascript according to last year’s “State of JS” survey. If we were going to use types to bring some amount of order to our codebase, TypeScript seemed like a really solid bet.

This is why, hot on the heels of a migration to ES6, we started investigating a path to adopting TypeScript. This post is all about how we designed our approach, some of the fun technical challenges that resulted, and what it took to educate an Etsy-sized company in a new programming language.

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