Using ti-parts-engine
@tscircuit/ti-parts-engine is an external helper package for local TI-backed
development workflows. It is not built into @tscircuit/eval by default.
Instead, provide it through a custom platform configuration.
Install from GitHub
ti-parts-engine is currently installed directly from GitHub:
bun add -D github:tscircuit/ti-parts-engine
Use TI as a Custom Parts Engine
If your local tooling loads a JS/TS platform config module, you can keep the TI
parts engine in a tscircuit.config.ts-style file:
import { createTiPartsEngine } from "@tscircuit/ti-parts-engine"
export default {
platformConfig: {
partsEngine: createTiPartsEngine({
// local CLI/dev usage only
partnerToken: process.env.PARTNER_TOKEN!,
}),
},
}
This wires TI-backed automatic part lookup through platform.partsEngine.
Keep PARTNER_TOKEN in local development tooling only. Do not expose it to
browser clients or commit it to your repository.
Use Explicit ti: Footprint Strings
If you want to use explicit footprint strings such as
footprint="ti:MSP430", you also need a TI footprint library mapping. The
easiest way to wire both pieces together is createTiPlatformConfig(...):
import { createTiPlatformConfig } from "@tscircuit/ti-parts-engine"
export default {
platformConfig: createTiPlatformConfig({
partnerToken: process.env.PARTNER_TOKEN!,
}),
}
This configures:
partsEnginefor TI-backed part lookupfootprintLibraryMap.tifor explicitti:footprint strings
If you only provide createTiPartsEngine(...), automatic TI part lookup works,
but the ti: footprint prefix is not added by itself.
Programmatic Usage
You can also pass the same platform config directly when creating a runner or root circuit:
import { createTiPlatformConfig } from "@tscircuit/ti-parts-engine"
import { RootCircuit } from "@tscircuit/core"
const circuit = new RootCircuit({
platform: createTiPlatformConfig({
partnerToken: process.env.PARTNER_TOKEN!,
}),
})
For more background on platform customization, see Platform Configuration.