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typescript-circular-dependency

@blader/typescript-circular-dependency
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Updated 1/18/2026
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Detect and resolve TypeScript/JavaScript circular import dependencies. Use when: (1) "Cannot access 'X' before initialization" at runtime, (2) Import returns undefined unexpectedly, (3) "ReferenceError: Cannot access X before initialization", (4) Type errors that disappear when you change import order, (5) Jest/Vitest tests fail with undefined imports that work in browser.

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name: typescript-circular-dependency description: | Detect and resolve TypeScript/JavaScript circular import dependencies. Use when: (1) "Cannot access 'X' before initialization" at runtime, (2) Import returns undefined unexpectedly, (3) "ReferenceError: Cannot access X before initialization", (4) Type errors that disappear when you change import order, (5) Jest/Vitest tests fail with undefined imports that work in browser. author: Claude Code version: 1.0.0 date: 2024-03-10

TypeScript Circular Dependency Detection and Resolution

Problem

Circular dependencies occur when module A imports from module B, which imports (directly or indirectly) from module A. TypeScript compiles successfully, but at runtime, one of the imports evaluates to undefined because the module hasn't finished initializing yet.

Context / Trigger Conditions

Common error messages:

ReferenceError: Cannot access 'UserService' before initialization
TypeError: Cannot read properties of undefined (reading 'create')
TypeError: (0 , _service.doSomething) is not a function

Symptoms that suggest circular imports:

  • Import is undefined even though the export exists
  • Error only appears at runtime, not during TypeScript compilation
  • Moving an import statement changes which import is undefined
  • Tests fail but the app works (or vice versa)
  • Adding console.log at the top of a file changes behavior

Solution

Step 1: Detect the Cycle

Use a tool to visualize dependencies:

# Install madge
npm install -g madge

# Find circular dependencies
madge --circular --extensions ts,tsx src/

# Generate visual graph
madge --circular --image graph.svg src/

Or use the TypeScript compiler:

# Check for cycles (requires tsconfig setting)
npx tsc --listFiles | head -50

Step 2: Identify the Pattern

Common circular dependency patterns:

Pattern A: Service-to-Service

services/userService.ts → services/orderService.ts → services/userService.ts

Pattern B: Type imports

types/user.ts → types/order.ts → types/user.ts

Pattern C: Index barrel files

components/index.ts → components/Button.tsx → components/index.ts

Step 3: Resolution Strategies

Strategy 1: Extract Shared Dependencies

Before:

// userService.ts
import { OrderService } from './orderService';
export class UserService { ... }

// orderService.ts  
import { UserService } from './userService';
export class OrderService { ... }

After:

// types/interfaces.ts (new file - no imports from services)
export interface IUserService { ... }
export interface IOrderService { ... }

// userService.ts
import { IOrderService } from '../types/interfaces';
export class UserService implements IUserService { ... }

Strategy 2: Dependency Injection

// orderService.ts
export class OrderService {
  constructor(private userService: IUserService) {}
  
  // Instead of importing UserService directly
}

// main.ts
const userService = new UserService();
const orderService = new OrderService(userService);

Strategy 3: Dynamic Imports

// Only import when needed, not at module level
async function processOrder() {
  const { UserService } = await import('./userService');
  // ...
}

Strategy 4: Use Type-Only Imports

If you only need types (not values), use type-only imports:

// This doesn't create a runtime dependency
import type { User } from './userService';

Strategy 5: Restructure Barrel Files

Before (problematic):

// components/index.ts
export * from './Button';
export * from './Modal';  // Modal imports Button from './index'

After:

// components/Modal.tsx
import { Button } from './Button';  // Direct import, not from index

Step 4: Prevent Future Cycles

Add to your CI/build process:

// package.json
{
  "scripts": {
    "check:circular": "madge --circular --extensions ts,tsx src/"
  }
}

Or configure ESLint:

// .eslintrc.js
module.exports = {
  plugins: ['import'],
  rules: {
    'import/no-cycle': ['error', { maxDepth: 10 }]
  }
}

Verification

  1. Run madge --circular src/ - should report no cycles
  2. Run your test suite - previously undefined imports should work
  3. Delete node_modules and reinstall - app should still work
  4. Build for production - no runtime errors

Example

Problem: OrderService is undefined when imported in UserService

Detection:

$ madge --circular src/
Circular dependencies found!
  src/services/userService.ts → src/services/orderService.ts → src/services/userService.ts

Fix: Extract shared interface

// NEW: src/types/services.ts
export interface IOrderService {
  createOrder(userId: string): Promise<Order>;
}

// MODIFIED: src/services/userService.ts
import type { IOrderService } from '../types/services';

export class UserService {
  constructor(private orderService: IOrderService) {}
}

// MODIFIED: src/services/orderService.ts  
// No longer imports UserService
export class OrderService implements IOrderService {
  async createOrder(userId: string): Promise<Order> { ... }
}

Notes

  • TypeScript import type is your friend—it's erased at runtime and can't cause cycles
  • Barrel files (index.ts) are a common source of accidental cycles
  • The order of exports in a file can matter when there's a cycle
  • Jest/Vitest may handle module resolution differently than your bundler
  • Some bundlers (Webpack, Vite) have better cycle handling than others
  • require() can sometimes mask circular dependency issues that import exposes