Absolute paths in React using craco (feat. TypeScript and ts-jest)

Brandon Wie
3 min readDec 16, 2021

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An endless straight road on a desert area
Photo by Rémi Jacquaint on Unsplash

Even though many helper extensions exist out there on VSCode to address the “dot-dot-slash recursive hell,” the relational paths are painful to write if you have a folder structure with multiple layers. You may see some projects using absolute paths, and it looks cool, right? So, why not? Let’s use it. 😄
I ended up spending a lot of time configuring absolute paths for Jest (the webpack part was relatively easy), so I’d like to share how I made it work.

Before we start, “/” really matters when setting paths, TypeScript compiler will viciously throw errors on your face so if yours complains, see if there are any mistakes made on the forward slash or try to give some tweaks with “/” and “.”

Suppose you have React app installed on your local machine using,

npx create-react-app myApp --template typescript

Step 1. Create a file tsconfig.path.json in your root folder for your TypeScript compiler

let TS know what @page, @components, … means (of course you can use other than @, it’s up to you 🙂)

// tsconfig.path.json (in root)
{
"compilerOptions": {
"baseUrl": "./src",
"paths": {
"@pages": ["pages"], // this doesn't work for @pages/smth
"@pages/*": ["pages/*"],
"@components": ["components"],
"@components/*": ["components/*"],
...
}
}

If you don’t use Jest, putting just "@*": ["*"] in "paths" is going to work, but I prefer not to use it because of readability.

Step2. Add the path of tsconfig.path.json in tsconfig.json as "extends"

// tsconfig.json
{
"extends": "./tsconfig.path.json",
"compilerOptions": {
...
}
}

Now your TS compiler knows what @path means.

You can write all what’s in tsconfig.path.json in tsconfig.json, but I prefer to separate it because the part is used for a different(or unique per se) functionality.

Step3. Install craco and ts-jest

# npm
$ npm install @craco/craco
$ npm install --dev ts-jest
# yarn
$ yarn add @craco/craco
$ yarn add --dev ts-jest

Step4. Create craco.config.js in your root folder and configure it for your bundler and testing library to know what @paths means

// craco.config.js (in root)
const path = require('path');
const { pathsToModuleNameMapper } = require('ts-jest');
const { compilerOptions } = require('./tsconfig.path.json');
module.exports = {
webpack: {
alias: {
'@components': path.resolve(__dirname, 'src/components'),
'@pages': path.resolve(__dirname, 'src/pages'),
...
}
},
jest: {
configure: {
preset: 'ts-jest',
moduleNameMapper: pathsToModuleNameMapper(compilerOptions.paths, {
prefix: '<rootDir>/src/',
}),
},
},
};

There are other ways around to declare moduleNameMapper in jest.configure. You can find it by following the ts-jest link below.

Step5. Add the path of “craco.config.js" in “package.json" to let your app know where to find craco configurations

{
...,
"cracoConfig": "craco.config.js"
}

Step6. Lastly, change your react-scripts command to craco in package.json

{
...
"scripts": {
"start": "craco start",
"build": "craco build",
"test": "craco test",
"eject": "react-scripts eject",
...
}
}

It’s DONE! 🙌

Please comment down below if anything is mispresented.
I hope you find it helpful. ☕️ Happy Coding!

CRACO — NPM page
ts-jest Documentation — Paths mapping

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Brandon Wie

A front-end developer working at AIFFEL Modulabs in Seoul. Working as a DevOps in Google is my current goal.