webpack loader to extract HTML and CSS from the bundle.
The extract-loader evaluates the given source code on the fly and returns the result as string. Its main use-case is to resolve urls within HTML and CSS coming from their respective loaders. Use the file-loader to emit the extract-loader's result as separate file.
import stylesheetUrl from "file!extract!css!main.css";
The extract-loader works similiar to the extract-text-webpack-plugin and is meant as a lean alternative to it. When evaluating the source code, it provides a fake context which was especially designed to cope with the code generated by the html- or the css-loader. Thus it might not work in other situations.
Installation
npm install extract-loader
Examples
Bundling CSS with webpack has some nice advantages like referencing images and fonts with hashed urls or hot module replacement in development. In production, on the other hand, it's not a good idea to apply your stylesheets depending on JS execution. Rendering may be delayed or even a FOUC might be visible. Thus it's still better to have them as separate files in your final production build.
With the extract-loader, you are able to reference your main.css
as regular entry
. The following webpack.config.js
shows how to load your styles with the style-loader in development and as separate file in production.
const live = process.env.NODE_ENV === "production";
const mainCss = ["css", path.join(__dirname, "app", "main.css")];
if (live) {
mainCss.unshift("file?name=[name].[ext]", "extract");
} else {
mainCss.unshift("style");
}
module.exports = {
entry: [
path.join(__dirname, "app", "main.js"),
mainCss.join("!")
],
...
};
You can even add your index.html
as entry
and just reference your stylesheets from there. You just need to tell the html-loader to also pick up link:href
:
var indexHtml = path.join(__dirname, "app", "index.html");
module.exports = {
entry: [
path.join(__dirname, "app", "main.js"),
indexHtml
],
...
module: {
loaders: [
{
test: indexHtml,
loaders: [
"file?name=[name].[ext]",
"extract",
"html?" + JSON.stringify({
attrs: ["img:src", "link:href"]
})
]
},
{
test: /\.css$/,
loaders: [
"file",
"extract",
"css"
]
},
{
test: /\.jpg$/,
loader: "file"
}
]
}
};
turns
<html>
<head>
<link href="main.css" type="text/css" rel="stylesheet">
</head>
<body>
<img src="hi.jpg">
</body>
</html>
into
<html>
<head>
<link href="7c57758b88216530ef48069c2a4c685a.css" type="text/css" rel="stylesheet">
</head>
<body>
<img src="6ac05174ae9b62257ff3aa8be43cf828.jpg">
</body>
</html>
Options
There is currently exactly one option: publicPath
.
If you are using a relative publicPath
in webpack's output options and extracting to a file with the file-loader
, you might need this to account for the location of your extracted file.
Example:
module.exports = {
output: {
path: path.resolve( './dist' ),
publicPath: 'dist/'
},
module: {
loaders: [
{
test: /\.css$/,
loaders: [
"file?name=assets/[name].[ext]",
"extract?publicPath=../",
"css"
]
}
]
}
};
You need another option? Then you should think about:
Contributing
From opening a bug report to creating a pull request: every contribution is appreciated and welcome. If you're planing to implement a new feature or change the api please create an issue first. This way we can ensure that your precious work is not in vain.
All pull requests should have 100% test coverage (with notable exceptions) and need to pass all tests.
- Call
npm test
to run the unit tests - Call
npm run coverage
to check the test coverage (using istanbul)
License
Unlicense