- Generate types from Laravel's Models
- Support Relationhips
- Support Enum (from PHP8.1)
- Generate types from Laravel's Form Requests
- Generate types for ziggy (Routing)
- Provide useful types for Laravel (e.g. pagination, etc.)
This library supports the following versions:
- Laravel 9.x and 10.x
- TypeScript 5.0 and above
$ npm install -D @7nohe/laravel-typegen
Laravel Typegen may require installing doctrine/dbal
via Composer in order to execute the php artisan model:show
command internally.
$ composer require doctrine/dbal
Edit package.json
{
"scripts": {
"typegen": "laravel-typegen"
},
}
$ npm run typegen
We also support php8.1 enums.
<!-- app/Enums/GenderType.php -->
<?php
namespace App\Enums;
enum GenderType: string
{
case Male = 'Male';
case Female = 'Female';
case Other = 'Other';
}
Then, cast model attributes to enums.
<!-- app/Models/User.php -->
<?php
namespace App\Models;
use App\Enums\GenderType;
class User extends Authenticatable
{
/**
* The attributes that should be cast.
*
* @var array<string, string>
*/
protected $casts = [
'gender' => GenderType::class,
];
}
This library will generate the following TypeScript types:
export type User = {
id: number;
name: string;
email: string;
gender: GenderType;
email_verified_at?: string;
created_at?: string;
updated_at?: string;
posts?: Post[];
};
export enum GenderType {
Male = "Male",
Female = "Female",
Other = "Other"
}
If you use Laravel Enum, use the option --laravel-enum
.
{
"scripts": {
"typegen": "laravel-typegen --laravel-enum"
},
}
Running the laravel-typegen
command with the --ziggy
option will generate route.d.ts.
It helps typing the route()
function.
{
"scripts": {
"typegen": "laravel-typegen --ziggy"
},
}
For example, define the following routes
// routes/web.php
Route::resource('posts', PostsController::class);
$ php artisan route:list
GET|HEAD posts/{post} posts.show › PostsController@show
Parameters will be checked strictly based on the route name.
// in your TypeScript code
// OK
route('posts.show', { post: post.id })
// Error
route('posts.show', { id: post.id })
If you have created a project using the --typescript
option of Laravel Breeze, you need to delete the declaration for the route()
function in resources/js/types/global.d.ts.
import { PageProps as InertiaPageProps } from '@inertiajs/core';
import { AxiosInstance } from 'axios';
import ziggyRoute, { Config as ZiggyConfig } from 'ziggy-js';
import { PageProps as AppPageProps } from './';
declare global {
interface Window {
axios: AxiosInstance;
}
var route: typeof ziggyRoute;
var Ziggy: ZiggyConfig;
}
- declare module 'vue' {
- interface ComponentCustomProperties {
- route: typeof ziggyRoute;
- }
- }
declare module '@inertiajs/core' {
interface PageProps extends InertiaPageProps, AppPageProps {}
}
We provide useful types for Laravel (especially for Inertia).
For example, to return a paginated Inertia response in DashboardController, you can write the following
<?php
namespace App\Http\Controllers;
use App\Models\User;
use Inertia\Inertia;
class DashboardController extends Controller
{
public function __invoke()
{
$users = User::latest('id')->paginate(5);
return Inertia::render(
'Dashboard',
[
'users' => $users
]
);
}
}
You can import types already defined by Laravel Typegen.
<!-- Dashboard.vue -->
<script setup lang="ts">
import { Paginate } from '@7nohe/laravel-typegen';
import { User } from '@/types/model'; // generated types
defineProps<{ users: Paginate<User> }>();
</script>
<template>
<div>
<ul>
<li v-for="user in users.data">- {{ user.name }}({{ user.email }})</li>
</ul>
<div class="flex justify-center mt-4 space-x-4">
<Link v-for="(link, key) in users.links" :key="key" :href="link.url ?? '#'" v-html="link.label" />
</div>
</div>
</template>
You can generate types from Laravel's Form Request by executing the command with the --form-requests
option.
If you have the Form Request class as shown below:
<?php
namespace App\Http\Requests;
use App\Models\User;
use Illuminate\Foundation\Http\FormRequest;
use Illuminate\Validation\Rule;
class ProfileUpdateRequest extends FormRequest
{
/**
* Get the validation rules that apply to the request.
*
* @return array<string, mixed>
*/
public function rules()
{
return [
'name' => ['string', 'max:255'],
'email' => ['email', 'max:255', Rule::unique(User::class)->ignore($this->user()->id)],
];
}
}
The corresponding TypeScript types will be automatically generated as follows:
// formRequests.ts
export type ProfileUpdateRequest = {
name?: string;
email?: string;
};
By using these generated types in combination with HTTP Client libraries like Axios, you can write more type-safe code.
Usage: laravel-typegen [options]
Generate TypeScript types from your Laravel code
Options:
-V, --version output the version number
-o, --output <value> Output directory (default: "resources/js/types")
--laravel-enum Use Laravel Enum (default: false)
--enum-path <value> Path to enum files (default: "app/Enums")
--model-path <value> Path to model files (default: "app/Models")
-z, --ziggy Generate types for ziggy (default: false)
--vendor-routes Include routes defined by vendor packages (default: false)
--ignore-route-dts Ignore generating route.d.ts (default: false)
--form-request Generate types for FormRequests (default: false)
--form-request-path <value> Path to FormRequest files (default: "app/Http/Requests")
-h, --help display help for command
$ cd examples/laravel10-app
$ cp .env.example .env
$ docker run --rm \
-u "$(id -u):$(id -g)" \
-v "$(pwd):/var/www/html" \
-w /var/www/html \
laravelsail/php81-composer:latest \
composer install --ignore-platform-reqs
$ ./vendor/bin/sail up -d
$ ./vendor/bin/sail php artisan key:generate
$ ./vendor/bin/sail php artisan migrate --seed
$ ./vendor/bin/sail npm install
$ pnpm install
$ sh debug.sh
MIT