React typings for TypeScript come with lots of interfaces for all possible HTML elements out there. But sometimes, your browsers, your frameworks or your code are a little bit ahead of what’s possible.

Let’s say you want to use the latest image features in Chrome, and load your images lazily. A progressive enhancement, so only browsers which understand what’s going on know how to interpret this. Other browsers are robust enough not to care.

< img src = " /awesome.jpg " loading = " lazy " alt = " What an awesome image " />

Your TypeScript JSX code? Errors.

function Image ( { src , alt } ) {



return < img src = { src }

alt = { alt }

loading = "lazy" / >

}

To prevent this, we can extend the available interfaces with our own properties. This feature of TypeScript is called declaration merging.

Create a @types folder and put a jsx.d.ts file in it. Change your TypeScript config so your compiler options allow for extra types:

{

"compilerOptions" : {

...



"types" : [ "@types/**" ] ,

} ,

...

}

We re-create the exact module and interface structure:

The module is called 'react' , The interface is ImgHTMLAttributes<T> extends HTMLAttributes<T>

We know that from the original typings. Here, we add the properties we want to have.

import 'react'



declare module 'react' {

interface ImgHTMLAttributes < T > extends HTMLAttributes < T > {

loading ? : 'lazy' | 'eager' | 'auto' ;

}

}

And while we are at it, let’s make sure we don’t forget alt texts!

import 'react'



declare module 'react' {

interface ImgHTMLAttributes<T> extends HTMLAttributes<T> {

loading?: 'lazy' | 'eager' | 'auto';

+ alt: string;

}

}

Way better! TypeScript will take the original definition and merge your declarations. Your autocomplete can give you all available options and will error when you forget an alt text.

We can use the same method, when we want styled-jsx to be compatible with TypeScript. TypeScript does not recognize the jsx and global attributes of the style tag. Let’s change that:

declare module 'react' {

interface StyleHTMLAttributes < T > extends React . HTMLAttributes < T > {

jsx ? : boolean ;

global ? : boolean ;

}

}

When working with Preact, things are a bit more complicated. The original HTML typings are very generous and not so specific as React’s typings. That’s why we have to be a bit more explicit when defining images:

declare namespace JSX {

interface IntrinsicElements {

"img" : HTMLAttributes & {

alt : string ,

src : string ,

loading ? : 'lazy' | 'eager' | 'auto' ;

}

}

}

This makes sure that both alt and src are available, and sets and optional attribute loading .

The technique is the same, though: Declaration merging, which works on namespaces, interfaces and modules.