deno init
, start a new project
Command line usage
deno init [OPTIONS] [dir]
scaffolds a basic Deno project with a script, test, and configuration file
Options Jump to heading
--lib
Jump to heading
Generate an example library project.
--serve
Jump to heading
Generate an example project for deno serve
.
Examples Jump to heading
$ deno init
✅ Project initialized
Run these commands to get started
// Run the program
deno run main.ts
// Run the program and watch for file changes
deno task dev
// Run the tests
deno test
$ deno run main.ts
Add 2 + 3 = 5
$ deno test
Check file:///dev/main_test.ts
running 1 test from main_test.ts
addTest ... ok (6ms)
ok | 1 passed | 0 failed (29ms)
The init
subcommand will create two files (main.ts
and main_test.ts
).
These files provide a basic example of how to write a Deno program and how to
write tests for it. The main.ts
file exports a add
function that adds two
numbers together and the main_test.ts
file contains a test for this function.
You can also specify an argument to deno init
to initialize a project in a
specific directory:
$ deno init my_deno_project
✅ Project initialized
Run these commands to get started
cd my_deno_project
// Run the program
deno run main.ts
// Run the program and watch for file changes
deno task dev
// Run the tests
deno test
Init a JSR package Jump to heading
By running deno init --lib
Deno will bootstrap a project that is ready to be
published on JSR.
$ deno init --lib
✅ Project initialized
Run these commands to get started
# Run the tests
deno test
# Run the tests and watch for file changes
deno task dev
# Publish to JSR (dry run)
deno publish --dry-run
Inside deno.json
you'll see that the entries for name
, exports
and
version
are prefilled.
{
"name": "my-lib",
"version": "0.1.0",
"exports": "./mod.ts",
"tasks": {
"dev": "deno test --watch mod.ts"
},
"imports": {
"@std/assert": "jsr:@std/assert@1"
}
}
Initialize a web server Jump to heading
Running deno init --serve
bootstraps a web server that works with
deno serve
.
$ deno init --serve
✅ Project initialized
Run these commands to get started
# Run the server
deno serve -R main.ts
# Run the server and watch for file changes
deno task dev
# Run the tests
deno -R test
Your deno.json
file will look like
this:
{
"tasks": {
"dev": "deno serve --watch -R main.ts"
},
"imports": {
"@std/assert": "jsr:@std/assert@1",
"@std/http": "jsr:@std/http@1"
}
}
Now, you can start your web server, which
watches for changes,
by running deno task dev
.
$ deno task dev
Task dev deno serve --watch -R main.ts
Watcher Process started.
deno serve: Listening on http://0.0.0.0:8000/
Generate a library project Jump to heading
You can append a --lib
flag to add extra parameters to your deno.json
, such
as "name", "version" and an "exports" fields.
$ deno init my_deno_project --lib
✅ Project initialized
The resulting `deno.json will be as follows:
{
"name": "my_deno_project",
"version": "0.1.0",
"exports": "./mod.ts",
"tasks": {
"dev": "deno test --watch mod.ts"
},
"license": "MIT",
"imports": {
"@std/assert": "jsr:@std/assert@1"
}
}
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