Installing Node packages Failed with incompatible dependency

Summary

When using GDK to install the community edition of GitLab, Installing Node packages encounters dependency imcompactability issue

Steps to reproduce

follow https://gitlab.com/gitlab-org/gitlab-development-kit/-/blob/master/doc/prepare.md

Example Project

n/a

What is the current bug behavior?

cannot install latest GitLab using GDK

What is the expected correct behavior?

Gitlab installs fine

Relevant logs and/or screenshots

-------------------------------------------------------
Installing Node packages
-------------------------------------------------------
warning Resolution field "ts-jest@24.0.0" is incompatible with requested version "ts-jest@^23.10.5"                                                                                           
warning " > monaco-editor-webpack-plugin@1.7.0" has incorrect peer dependency "monaco-editor@^0.15.1".                                                                                        
warning " > eslint-import-resolver-jest@2.1.2" has unmet peer dependency "eslint-plugin-import@>=1.4.0".                                                                                      
warning " > eslint-import-resolver-webpack@0.12.1" has unmet peer dependency "eslint-plugin-import@>=1.4.0".                                                                                  
make: *** [.gettext] Error 1

Output of checks

(If you are reporting a bug on GitLab.com, write: This bug happens on GitLab.com)

Results of GitLab environment info

Expand for output related to GitLab environment info

(For installations with omnibus-gitlab package run and paste the output of:
`sudo gitlab-rake gitlab:env:info`)

(For installations from source run and paste the output of:
`sudo -u git -H bundle exec rake gitlab:env:info RAILS_ENV=production`)

Results of GitLab application Check

yarn -v 1.15.2 node -v v12.10.0 ruby -v ruby 2.6.5p114 (2019-10-01 revision 67812) [x86_64-darwin19]

Possible fixes

(If you can, link to the line of code that might be responsible for the problem)