MTT generates TypeScript interfaces from .NET DTOs. It implements most major features of the current TypeScript specification. This utility could be preferred over some others as it is completely independent of your IDE or workflow, because it uses a MSBUILD task and converts the code directly from the source. This means its great for .Net Core and VS Code.
Using dotnet CLI:
dotnet add package MTT
dotnet restore
Then in .csproj add a Target.
WorkingDirectory is the input directory of the c# dtos (seperate multiple directories with ';')
ConvertDirectory is the output directory of the ts interfaces
AutoGeneratedTag (default true) show "/* Auto Generated */" at the top of every file. If set to false then no tags are generated
EnumValues (default int enums) if set to Strings, generates typescript string enums
PathStyle (default is folders stay the same and files become camelCase) if set to Kebab, changes the file and directory names to kebab-case.
PropertyStyle (default is CamelCase) if set to PascalCase, changes the properties to PascalCase.
<Project Sdk="Microsoft.NET.Sdk">
<PropertyGroup>
<TargetFramework>netcoreapp3.1</TargetFramework>
</PropertyGroup>
<ItemGroup>
<PackageReference Include="MTT" Version="0.7.2"/>
</ItemGroup>
<Target Name="Convert" BeforeTargets="PrepareForBuild">
<ConvertMain WorkingDirectory="Resources/" ConvertDirectory="models/"/>
</Target>
</Project>
using System.Collections.Generic;
using Example.Resources.Parts;
using Example.Resources.Parts.Unit;
namespace Example.Resources.Vehicles
{
public abstract class Vehicle : Entity
{
public int Year { get; set; }
public string Make { get; set; }
public string Model { get; set; }
public int? Mileage;
public Dictionary<string, Units> Options { get; set; }
public VehicleState Condition { get; set; } // this is an enum of type int
public virtual ICollection<Part> Parts { get; set; }
public IList<Part> SpareParts { get; set; } = new List<Part>();
}
}
/* Auto Generated */
import { Entity } from "./../entity";
import { Units } from "./../Parts/Unit/units";
import { VehicleState } from "./vehicleState";
import { Part } from "./../Parts/part";
export interface Vehicle extends Entity {
year: number;
make: string;
model: string;
mileage?: number;
options: Partial<Record<string, Units>>;
condition: VehicleState;
parts: Part[];
spareParts: Part[];
}
It correctly converts the following C# types to the equivalent typescript:
- bool
- byte
- decimal
- double
- float
- int
- uint
- long
- sbyte
- short
- string
- ulong
- ushort
- Boolean
- Byte
- Char
- DateTime
- Decimal
- Double
- Int16
- Int32
- Int64
- SByte
- UInt16
- UInt32
- UInt64
- Array
- Collection
- Enumerbale
- IEnumerable
- ICollection
- IList
- Enum
- Optional
- virtual
- abstract
- Dictionary
- IDictionary
- Guid
If a Convert Directory is supplied, it will be deleted everytime script is ran and will be remade
Comments like //
are ignored in c# files. Comments like /* */
could cause undefined behavior.
Follows the case and naming conventions of each language by default. However this behavior can be modified with the options.
Thanks to natemcmaster this project really helped me out!