pcss-loader
A loader for Webpack that imports pcss files and return js modules.
How to setup in your webpack configuration
Install with npm i -D pcss-loader
. Then your webpack configuration must contain the following module:
...
module: {
rules: [
...
{
test: /\.pcss$/i,
include: 'your_src_folder_path',
use: {
loader: 'pcss-loader',
options: {}
}
}
]
},
...
Default options
options: {
minified: false,
presetEnv: {
stage: 0,
features: ['css-nesting'],
browsers: 'cover 100%'
},
customPlugins: []
}
You can read the documentation about postcss-preset-env to learn more about the options you can pass to presetEnv
.
Plugins in use
You can add any plugins you want to post-css with the customPlugins
array. But here are the ones currently in use.
Input and output
If you have the two following pcss files:
$mainColor: #00c;
@import 'src_path/Colors.pcss';
body {
color: #000;
}
.__SCOPE {
color: #c00;
> .example {
color: $mainColor;
}
}
And you import them in a JavaScript file with import AppStyles from './AppStyles.pcss';
, you obtain this object:
{
hash: "_d9ce6323d17badc0ff20482741b70d84",
styles: `
body {
color: #000;
}
._d9ce6323d17badc0ff20482741b70d84 {
color: #c00;
}
._d9ce6323d17badc0ff20482741b70d84 > .example {
color: #00c;
}
`,
}
It should be injected in a style
tag in your DOM.
The value of styles
will be minified if you pass minified: true
in the options and will be: body{color:#000}._8fd83ea9dc8f28944de69aac4284bba3{color:#c00}._8fd83ea9dc8f28944de69aac4284bba3>.example{color:#00c}
The .__SCOPE
class
The loader uses that class to scope your styles. Then you can use the hash returned by the loader as a class for the container and so the styles will be scoped only to his children.
You can also store the hash to make sure that you don't inject twice the same styles.
The styles in body
are not nested in the __SCOPE
class. The loader put them in the global scope.