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mini-style-loader

v3.0.1

Published

A replacement for Webpack's [`style-loader`](https://github.com/webpack-contrib/style-loader) that produces smaller bundles.

Downloads

2

Readme

mini-style-loader

A replacement for Webpack's style-loader that produces smaller bundles.

Motivation

I have a special use case where I can't use something like the Extract Text Webpack Plugin, because the CSS has to be bundled with the JavaScript.

I thought I'd use the style-loader, but it produces ~5.4kb of additional Code, even after uglification. That has mainly to do with all the features it has (hot reload, sourcemaps, etc etc).

So I set out to write a mini-style-loader, without any features – except putting the CSS into a <style>-Element in your document.head. It produces only ~0.3kb of additional code, because it does less.

For development, I'd still advise you to use style-loader, but if you want/need a really small production bundle, I hope the mini-style-loader can help you.

Installation

npm install mini-style-loader

Usage

You have to use it in combination with extract-loader. The extract-loader returns the pure CSS (without JavaScript wrappers from css-loader).

In your webpack.config.js:

const webpackConfig = {
  // entry, output etc

  module: {
    rules: [{
      test: /\.css$/,
      use: [
        'mini-style-loader',
        'extract-loader',
        'css-loader'
      ]
    }]
  }
}

To apply the css to your page:

import './test.css'

mini-style-loader also adds the hash of your css file as the id of the <style> element, and the imported module returns the hash, so you can do stuff with the element, if you need to.

import hash from './test.css'

// pretty pointless, but you could
document.getElementById(hash).remove()

How does it work?

Feel free to read the source code: index.js and lib/apply-style.js.

index.js contains the Webpack loader, which returns a bit of code that requires the lib/apply-style.js and feeds it the CSS.

lib/apply-style.js contains the Code that's actually responsible for putting your css into the document.head. It uses styleEl.textContent, so it's only compatible with IE 9+.