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node

Provides domain-specific best practices for Node.js development with TypeScript, covering type stripping, async patterns, error handling, streams, modules, testing, performance, caching, logging, and more. Use when setting up Node.js projects with native TypeScript support, configuring type stripping (--experimental-strip-types), writing Node 22+ TypeScript without a build step, or when the user mentions 'native TypeScript in Node', 'strip types', 'Node 22 TypeScript', '.ts files without compilation', 'ts-node alternative', or needs guidance on error handling, graceful shutdown, flaky tests, profiling, or environment configuration in Node.js. Helps configure tsconfig.json for type stripping, set up package.json scripts, handle module resolution and import extensions, and apply robust patterns across the full Node.js stack.

npx skills add https://github.com/mcollina/skills --skill node
SKILL.md

When to use

Use this skill whenever you are dealing with Node.js code to obtain domain-specific knowledge for building robust, performant, and maintainable Node.js applications.

TypeScript with Type Stripping

When writing TypeScript for Node.js, use type stripping (Node.js 22.6+) instead of build tools like ts-node or tsx. Type stripping runs TypeScript directly by removing type annotations at runtime without transpilation.

Key requirements for type stripping compatibility:

  • Use import type for type-only imports
  • Use const objects instead of enums
  • Avoid namespaces and parameter properties
  • Use .ts extensions in imports

Minimal example — a valid type-stripped TypeScript file:

// greet.ts
import type { IncomingMessage } from 'node:http';

const greet = (name: string): string => `Hello, ${name}!`;
console.log(greet('world'));

Run directly with:

node greet.ts

See rules/typescript.md for complete configuration and examples.

Common Workflows

For multi-step processes, follow these high-level sequences before consulting the relevant rule file:

Graceful shutdown: Register signal handlers (SIGTERM/SIGINT) → stop accepting new work → drain in-flight requests → close external connections (DB, cache) → exit with appropriate code. See rules/graceful-shutdown.md.

Error handling: Define a shared error base class → classify errors (operational vs programmer) → add async boundary handlers (process.on('unhandledRejection')) → propagate typed errors through the call stack → log with context before responding or crashing. See rules/error-handling.md.

Diagnosing flaky tests: Isolate the test with --test-only → check for shared state or timer dependencies → inspect async teardown order → add retry logic as a temporary diagnostic step → fix root cause. See rules/flaky-tests.md.

Diagnosing stuck processes/tests (node --test hangs, "process did not exit", CI timeout, open handles): isolate file/test → run with explicit timeout/reporter → inspect handles via why-is-node-running (SIGUSR1) → patch deterministic teardown in resource-creation scope → rerun isolated + full suite until stable. See rules/stuck-processes-and-tests.md.

Profiling a slow path: Reproduce under realistic load → capture a CPU profile with --cpu-prof → identify hot functions → check for stream backpressure or unnecessary serialisation → validate improvement with a benchmark. See rules/profiling.md and rules/performance.md.

High-priority activation checklist (streams + caching)

When the task mentions CSV, ETL, ingestion pipelines, large file processing, backpressure, repeated lookups, or deduplicating concurrent async calls, explicitly apply this checklist:

  1. Use await pipeline(...) from node:stream/promises (prefer this over chained .pipe() in guidance/code).
  2. Include at least one explicit async function* transform when data is being transformed in-stream.
  3. Choose a cache strategy when repeated work appears:
    • lru-cache for bounded in-memory reuse in a single process.
    • async-cache-dedupe for async request deduplication / stale-while-revalidate behavior.
  4. Show where backpressure is handled (implicitly via pipeline() or explicitly via drain).

Integrated example pattern (CSV/ETL)

For CSV/ETL-style prompts, prefer an answer structure like:

  • createReadStream(input)
  • async function* parser/transform
  • optional cached enrichment lookup (async-cache-dedupe or lru-cache)
  • await pipeline(...) to a writable destination

Link relevant rules directly in explanations so models can retrieve details:

How to use

Read individual rule files for detailed explanations and code examples:

Installs600
GitHub Stars1.8k
LanguageTypeScript
AddedJan 27, 2026
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