npm install css-loader --save-dev
var css = require("css!./file.css");
// => returns css code from file.css, resolves imports and url(...)
@import
and url(...)
are interpreted like require()
and will be resolved by the css-loader.
Good loaders for requiring your assets are the file-loader
and the url-loader which you should specify in your config (see below).
To be compatible with existing css files:
url(image.png)
=>require("./image.png")
url(~module/image.png)
=>require("module/image.png")
This webpack config can load css files, embed small png images as Data Urls and jpg images as files.
module.exports = {
module: {
loaders: [
{ test: /\.css$/, loader: "style-loader!css-loader" },
{ test: /\.png$/, loader: "url-loader?limit=100000" },
{ test: /\.jpg$/, loader: "file-loader" }
]
}
};
For urls that start with a /
, the default behavior is to not translate them:
url(/image.png)
=>url(/image.png)
If a root
query parameter is set, however, it will be prepended to the url
and then translated:
With a config like:
loaders: [
{ test: /\.css$/, loader: "style-loader!css-loader?root=." },
...
]
The result is:
url(/image.png)
=>require("./image.png")
(experimental)
By default CSS exports all class names into a global selector scope. This is a feature which tries to offer a local selector scope.
The syntax .local[className]
can be used to declare className
in the local scope. The local identifiers are exported by the module.
It does it by replacing the selectors by unique identifiers. The choosen unique identifiers are exported by the module.
Example:
.local[className] { background: red; }
#local[someId] { background: green; }
.local[className] .local[subClass] { color: green; }
#local[someId] .local[subClass] { color: blue; }
is transformed to
.ze24205081ae540afa51bd4cce768e8b7 { background: red; }
#zdf12049771f7fc796a63a3945da3a66d { background: green; }
.ze24205081ae540afa51bd4cce768e8b7 .z9f634213cd27594c1a13d18554d47a8c { color: green; }
#zdf12049771f7fc796a63a3945da3a66d .z9f634213cd27594c1a13d18554d47a8c { color: blue; }
and the identifiers are exported:
exports.locals = {
className: "ze24205081ae540afa51bd4cce768e8b7",
someId: "zdf12049771f7fc796a63a3945da3a66d",
subClass: "z9f634213cd27594c1a13d18554d47a8c"
}
You can configure the generated ident with the localIdentName
query parameter (default [hash:base64]
). Example: css-loader?localIdentName=[path][name]---[local]---[hash:base64:5]
for easier debugging.
Note: For prerendering with extract-text-webpack-plugin you should use css-loader/locals
instead of style-loader!css-loader
in the prerendering bundle. It doesn't embed CSS but only exports the identifier mappings.
To include SourceMaps set the sourceMap
query param.
require("css-loader?sourceMap!./file.css")
I. e. the extract-text-webpack-plugin can handle them.
The query parameter importLoaders
allow to configure which loaders should be applied to @import
ed resources.
importLoaders
(int): That many loaders after the css-loader are used to import resources.
Examples:
require("style-loader!css-loader?importLoaders=1!autoprefixer-loader!...")
// => imported resources are handled this way:
require("css-loader?importLoaders=1!autoprefixer-loader!...")
require("style-loader!css-loader!stylus-loader!...")
// => imported resources are handled this way:
require("css-loader!...")
By default the css-loader minimizes the css if specified by the module system.
In some cases the minification is destructive to the css, so you can provide some options to it. clean-css is used for minification and you find a list of options here. Just provide them as query parameter: i. e. require("css-loader?-restructuring&compatibility")
to disable restructuring and enable compatibility mode.
You can also disable or enforce minification with the minimize
query parameter.
require("css-loader?minimize!./file.css")
(enforced)
require("css-loader?-minimize!./file.css")
(disabled)