Deno is a simple, modern and secure runtime for JavaScript and TypeScript that uses V8 and is built in Rust. Secure by default. No file, network, or environment access, unless explicitly enabled. Supports TypeScript out of the box. Ships only a single executable file. Has built-in utilities like a dependency inspector ( deno info ) and a code formatter ( deno fmt ). Has a set of reviewed (audited) standard modules that are guaranteed to work with Deno: deno.land/std

Installation Deno ships as a single executable with no dependencies. You can install it using the installers below, or download a release binary from the releases page. Shell (Mac, Linux): $ curl -fsSL https://deno.land/x/install/install.sh | sh PowerShell (Windows): $ iwr https://deno.land/x/install/install.ps1 -useb | iex Homebrew (Mac): $ brew install deno Chocolatey (Windows): $ choco install deno Scoop (Windows): $ scoop install deno Build and install from source using Cargo $ cargo install deno See deno_install for more installation options.

Getting Started Try running a simple program: $ deno run https://deno.land/std/examples/welcome.ts Or a more complex one:

import { serve } from "https://deno.land/std@0.70.0/http/server.ts" ; const s = serve ( { port : 8000 } ) ; console . log ( "http://localhost:8000/" ) ; for await ( const req of s ) { req . respond ( { body : "Hello World

" } ) ; }

You can find a more in depth introduction, examples, and environment setup guides in the manual.

Runtime Documentation The basic runtime documentation for Deno can be found on doc.deno.land. Deno comes with a manual which contains more in depth explanations about the more complex functions of the runtime, an introduction to the concepts that Deno is built on, details about the internals of Deno, how to embed Deno in your own application and how to extend Deno using Rust plugins. The manual also contains information about the built in tools that Deno provides.

Standard Modules Next to the Deno runtime, Deno also provides a list of audited standard modules that are reviewed by the Deno maintainers and are guaranteed to work with a specific Deno version. These live alongside the Deno source code in the denoland/deno repository. These standard modules are hosted at deno.land/std and are distributed via URLs like all other ES modules that are compatible with Deno.