rollup-plugin-postcss
v4.0.2
Published
Seamless integration between Rollup and PostCSS
Downloads
2,948,475
Readme
rollup-plugin-postcss
Seamless integration between Rollup and PostCSS.
Install
yarn add postcss rollup-plugin-postcss --dev
Usage
v2.0
support rollup v1 or above, but it prints deprecated warning from rollup v2.
Breaking change: v3.0
only support rollup v2, and the extract path based on bundle root
the location of the generated file outside the bundle directory not allowed in rollup v2.
// rollup.config.js
import postcss from 'rollup-plugin-postcss'
export default {
plugins: [
postcss({
plugins: []
})
]
}
Then you can use CSS files:
import './style.css'
Note that the generated CSS will be injected to <head>
by default, and the CSS string is also available as default export unless extract: true
:
// Inject to `<head>` and also available as `style`
import style from './style.css'
It will also automatically use local PostCSS config files.
Extract CSS
// for v2
postcss({
extract: true,
// Or with custom file name, it will generate file relative to bundle.js in v3
extract: 'dist/my-custom-file-name.css'
})
// for v3
import path from 'path'
postcss({
extract: true,
// Or with custom file name
extract: path.resolve('dist/my-custom-file-name.css')
})
CSS modules
postcss({
modules: true,
// Or with custom options for `postcss-modules`
modules: {}
})
With Sass/Stylus/Less
Install corresponding dependency:
- For
Sass
installnode-sass
:yarn add node-sass --dev
- For
Stylus
Installstylus
:yarn add stylus --dev
- For
Less
Installless
:yarn add less --dev
That's it, you can now import .styl
.scss
.sass
.less
files in your library.
imports
For Sass/Scss Only.
Similar to how webpack's sass-loader works, you can prepend the path with ~
to tell this plugin to resolve in node_modules
:
@import "~bootstrap/dist/css/bootstrap";
Options
extensions
Type: string[]
Default: ['.css', '.sss', '.pcss']
This plugin will process files ending with these extensions and the extensions supported by custom loaders.
plugins
Type: Array
PostCSS Plugins.
inject
Type: boolean
object
function(cssVariableName, fileId): string
Default: true
Inject CSS into <head>
, it's always false
when extract: true
.
You can also use it as options for style-inject
.
It can also be a function
, returning a string
which is js code.
extract
Type: boolean
string
Default: false
Extract CSS to the same location where JS file is generated but with .css
extension.
You can also set it to an absolute path.
modules
Type: boolean
object
Default: false
Enable CSS modules or set options for postcss-modules
.
autoModules
Type: boolean
Default: true
Automatically enable CSS modules for .module.css
.module.sss
.module.scss
.module.sass
.module.styl
.module.stylus
.module.less
files.
namedExports
Type: boolean
function
Default: false
Use named exports alongside default export.
You can supply a function to control how exported named is generated:
namedExports(name) {
// Maybe you simply want to convert dash to underscore
return name.replace(/-/g, '_')
}
If you set it to true
, the following will happen when importing specific classNames:
- dashed class names will be transformed by replacing all the dashes to
$
sign wrapped underlines, eg.--
=>$__$
- js protected names used as your style class names, will be transformed by wrapping the names between
$
signs, eg.switch
=>$switch$
All transformed names will be logged in your terminal like:
Exported "new" as "$new$" in test/fixtures/named-exports/style.css
The original will not be removed, it's still available on default
export:
import style, { class$_$name, class$__$name, $switch$ } from './style.css'
console.log(style['class-name'] === class$_$name) // true
console.log(style['class--name'] === class$__$name) // true
console.log(style['switch'] === $switch$) // true
minimize
Type: boolean
object
Default: false
Minimize CSS, boolean
or options for cssnano
.
sourceMap
Type: boolean
"inline"
Enable sourceMap.
parser
Type: string
function
PostCSS parser, like sugarss
.
stringifier
Type: string
function
PostCSS Stringifier.
syntax
Type: string
function
PostCSS Syntax.
exec
Type: boolean
Enable PostCSS Parser support in CSS-in-JS
.
config
Type: boolean
object
Default: true
Load PostCSS config file.
config.path
Type: string
The path to config file, so that we can skip searching.
config.ctx
Type: object
ctx
argument for PostCSS config file.
Note: Every key you pass to config.ctx
will be available under options
inside
the postcss config.
// rollup.config.js
postcss({
config: {
ctx: {
foo: 'bar'
}
}
})
// postcss.config.js
module.exports = context => {
console.log(context.options.foo) // 'bar'
return {}
}
to
Type: string
Destination CSS filename hint that could be used by PostCSS plugins, for example, to properly resolve path, rebase and copy assets.
use
Type: name[]
[name, options][]
{ sass: options, stylus: options, less: options }
Default: ['sass', 'stylus', 'less']
Use a loader, currently built-in loaders are:
sass
(Support.scss
and.sass
)stylus
(Support.styl
and.stylus
)less
(Support.less
)
They are executed from right to left.
If you pass the object
, then its property sass
, stylus
and less
will
be pass in the corresponding loader.
loaders
Type: Loader[]
An array of custom loaders, check out our sass-loader as example.
interface Loader {
name: string,
test: RegExp,
process: (this: Context, input: Payload) => Promise<Payload> | Payload
}
interface Context {
/** Loader options */
options: any
/** Sourcemap */
sourceMap: any
/** Resource path */
id: string
/** Files to watch */
dependencies: Set<string>
/** Emit a waring */
warn: PluginContext.warn
/** https://rollupjs.org/guide/en#plugin-context */
plugin: PluginContext
}
interface Payload {
/** File content */
code: string
/** Sourcemap */
map?: string | SourceMap
}
onImport
Type: id => void
A function to be invoked when an import for CSS file is detected.
License
MIT © EGOIST