Flow is a static typechecker for JavaScript. To find out more about Flow, check out flow.org.
Flow works with:
There are binary distributions for each of these platforms and you can also build it from source on any of them as well.
Check out the installation instructions, and then the usage docs.
While Flow is written in OCaml, its parser is available as a compiled-to-JavaScript module published to npm, named flow-parser. Most end users of Flow will not need to use this parser directly, but JavaScript packages which make use of parsing Flow-typed JavaScript can use this to generate Flow's syntax tree with annotated types attached.
Flow is written in OCaml (OCaml 5.2.0 is required).
Install system dependencies:
brew install opam
sudo apt-get install opam
Windows: cygwin and a number of dependencies like make
, gcc
and g++
are required.
One way to install everything is to install Chocolatey and then run .\scripts\windows\install_deps.ps1
and .\scripts\windows\install_opam.ps1
. Otherwise, see the "Manual Installation" section of OCaml for Windows docs and install all of the packages listed in our install_deps.ps1
.
The remainder of these instructions should be run inside the Cygwin shell: C:\tools\cygwin\Cygwin
. Then cd /cygdrive/c/Users/you/path/to/checkout
.
Validate the opam
version is 2.x.x
:
opam --version
The following instructions expect 2.x.x
. Should your package manager have installed a 1.x.x
version, please refer to the opam docs to install a newer version manually.
Initialize opam
:
# on Mac and Linux:
opam init
# on Windows:
scripts/windows/init_opam.sh
Install Flow's OCaml dependencies:
# from within this git checkout
make deps
note: If you find that you get an error looking for ocaml-base-compiler
version, your local dependency repo may be out of date and you need to run opam update
+ opam upgrade
Build the flow
binary:
eval $(opam env)
make
This produces the bin/flow
binary.
Build flow.js
(optional):
opam install -y js_of_ocaml.5.7.2
make js
This produces bin/flow.js
.
The Flow parser can also be compiled to JavaScript. Read how here.
To run the tests, first compile flow using make
. Then run bash ./runtests.sh bin/flow
There is a make test
target that compiles and runs tests.
To run a subset of the tests you can pass a second argument to the runtests.sh
file.
For example: bash runtests.sh bin/flow class | grep -v 'SKIP'
Flow is MIT-licensed (LICENSE). The website and documentation are licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 license (website/LICENSE-DOCUMENTATION).