#Using TypeScript
In this guide, we will go through the steps to get a Hardhat project working with TypeScript. This means that you can write your Hardhat config, tasks, scripts and tests in TypeScript.
For a general overview of using Hardhat refer to the Getting started guide.
# Enabling TypeScript support
Hardhat will automatically enable its TypeScript support if your config file ends in .ts
and is written in valid TypeScript. This requires a few changes to work properly.
#Installing dependencies
TIP
If you installed @nomicfoundation/hardhat-toolbox
using npm 7 or higher, you don't need to follow these steps.
Hardhat uses TypeScript and ts-node
under the hood, so you need to install them. To do it, open your terminal, go to your Hardhat project, and run:
npm install --save-dev ts-node typescript
npm install --save-dev ts-node typescript
yarn add --dev ts-node typescript
To be able to write your tests in TypeScript, you also need these packages:
npm install --save-dev chai@4 @types/node @types/mocha @types/chai@4
npm install --save-dev chai@4 @types/node @types/mocha @types/chai@4
yarn add --dev chai@4 @types/node @types/mocha @types/chai@4
#TypeScript configuration
You can easily turn a JavaScript Hardhat config file into a TypeScript one. Let's see how this is done starting with a fresh Hardhat project.
Open your terminal, go to an empty folder, run npx hardhat init
, and go through the steps to create a JavaScript project. When you're done your project directory should look something like this:
$ ls -l
total 1200
drwxr-xr-x 3 pato wheel 96 Oct 20 12:50 contracts/
-rw-r--r-- 1 pato wheel 567 Oct 20 12:50 hardhat.config.js
drwxr-xr-x 434 pato wheel 13888 Oct 20 12:52 node_modules/
-rw-r--r-- 1 pato wheel 604835 Oct 20 12:52 package-lock.json
-rw-r--r-- 1 pato wheel 460 Oct 20 12:52 package.json
drwxr-xr-x 3 pato wheel 96 Oct 20 12:50 ignition/modules/
drwxr-xr-x 3 pato wheel 96 Oct 20 12:50 test/
Then, you should follow the steps mentioned in the Installing dependencies section above.
Now, we are going to rename the config file from hardhat.config.js
to hardhat.config.ts
, just run:
mv hardhat.config.js hardhat.config.ts
We need to make a single change to your config for it to work with TypeScript: you must use import
/export
instead of require
/module.exports
.
By using TypeScript, you can also type your configuration, which will save you from typos and other mistakes.
For example, the sample project's config turns from this:
require("@nomicfoundation/hardhat-toolbox");
/** @type import('hardhat/config').HardhatUserConfig */
module.exports = {
solidity: "0.8.28",
};
into this:
import { HardhatUserConfig } from "hardhat/config";
import "@nomicfoundation/hardhat-toolbox";
const config: HardhatUserConfig = {
solidity: "0.8.28",
};
export default config;
Finally, you need to create a tsconfig.json
file. Here's our recommended one:
{
"compilerOptions": {
"target": "es2020",
"module": "commonjs",
"esModuleInterop": true,
"forceConsistentCasingInFileNames": true,
"strict": true,
"skipLibCheck": true,
"resolveJsonModule": true
}
}
And that's really all it takes. Now you can write your config, tests, tasks and Ignition modules in TypeScript.
# Type-checking your project
For performance reasons, Hardhat won't type-check your project when you run a task. You can explicitly enable type-checking with the --typecheck
flag.
For example, if you run npx hardhat test
and one of your tests has a compilation error, the test task will be executed anyway. But if you run npx hardhat test --typecheck
, Hardhat will detect and throw the compilation error before starting to run the tests.
Since type-checking adds significant overhead, we recommend to do it only in your CI or in pre-commit/pre-push hooks.
# Writing tests and scripts in TypeScript
When using JavaScript, all the properties in the Hardhat Runtime Environment are injected into the global scope. When using TypeScript nothing will be available in the global scope and you will need to import everything explicitly using, for example, import { ethers } from "hardhat"
.
Follow the Getting started guide and create a TypeScript project for a complete example on how to write tests using TypeScript.
# Type-safe smart contract interactions
TIP
If you installed @nomicfoundation/hardhat-toolbox
you can skip this section, as it includes @typechain/hardhat
.
If you want Hardhat to generate types for your smart contract you should install and use @typechain/hardhat
. It generates typing files (*.d.ts
) based on ABI's, and it requires little to no configuration.
# Support for path mappings
Typescript allows defining custom path mappings via the paths
configuration option:
{
compilerOptions: {
paths: { "~/*": ["src/*"] },
// ...Other compilerOptions
},
}
To support this option when running Hardhat tests or scripts, you need to install the package tsconfig-paths
and register it in your hardhat.config.ts
:
import { HardhatUserConfig } from "hardhat/config";
// This adds support for typescript paths mappings
import "tsconfig-paths/register";
const config: HardhatUserConfig = {
// Your type-safe config goes here
};
export default config;
# Running your tests and scripts directly with ts-node
When running Hardhat scripts without the CLI, you need to use ts-node
's --files
flag.
This can also be enabled with TS_NODE_FILES=true
.