A small library that translates the types from Rust
to TypeScript
for better integration for the invoke
function from Tauri
.
- Add
Tauri Types
to your project.
cargo add tauri-types
- Add the derive to a type you want to have access to in your JavaScript program. It can be either struct or enum.
use tauri_types::TauriType;
#[derive(TauriType)]
struct User {
name: String,
username: String,
password: String,
age: u32,
}
That's going to generate this in your tauri-types.ts
file.
export type User = {
name: string;
username: string;
password: string;
age: number;
};
You can use the type by importing it from the tauri-types.ts
file.
import { type User } from './tauri-types';
- Add the
tauri_types::command
macro above any function you want to export.
#[tauri_types::command]
fn get_user() -> User {
return User {
name: "Marko".to_string(),
username: "Maki325".to_string(),
password: "YoullNeverGuessIt".to_string(),
age: 20,
}
}
(You can export it with use tauri_types::command;
, but it's better to use it this way, so it doesn't collide with the command
macro from tauri
.)
- Replace
tauri::generate_handler
macro withtauri_types::generate_invoke
.
...
// .invoke_handler(tauri::generate_handler![
.invoke_handler(tauri_types::generate_invoke![
get_user,
])
.run(tauri::generate_context!())
.expect("error while running tauri application");
...
- Import
invoke
from thetauri-types.ts
, instead of directly fromtauri
.
// import { invoke } from '@tauri-apps/api/tauri';
import { invoke } from './tauri-types';
- Enjoy your type-safe
invoke
.
You will need to always use the second argument, even if it's undefined
. I'm still trying to figure out a way to disable that, but for now just set it to undefined
.
Example:
import { invoke } from './tauri-types';
async function main() {
// This **WILL** give a typescript error, for now
// const user = await invoke('get_user');
// This **WILL** work fine
const user = await invoke('get_user', undefined);
console.log('User:', user);
}
#[derive(TauriType)]
#[namespace = "db"]
struct User {
name: String,
username: String,
password: String,
age: u32,
}
That's going to generate this in your tauri-types.ts
file.
export namespace db {
export type User = {
name: string;
username: string;
password: string;
age: number;
};
}
If the type you want is in another namespace
or you want to explicitly type it to something else, you can use this feature.
#[tauri_types::command]
fn get_username(
#[path = "db.User"]
user: User
) -> String {
return user.username;
}
If the type you want is in another namespace
or you want to explicitly type it to something else, you can use this feature.
#[tauri_types::command]
#[return_path = "db.User"]
fn get_user() -> User {
return User {
name: "Marko".to_string(),
username: "Maki325".to_string(),
password: "YoullNeverGuessIt".to_string(),
age: 20,
}
}
If there are any issues, open one in the Issues
tab on GitHub.
Just be sure that there isn't one like yours already opened!
This is a very side project for me, but I'll try to keep it working.