sass-resources-loader
v2.2.5
Published
SASS resources loader for Webpack
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920,942
Readme
sass-resources-loader
This loader will load your SASS resources into every required
SASS module. So you can use your shared variables, mixins and functions across all SASS styles without manually loading them in each file.
- Made to work with CSS Modules!
- This loader is not limited to Sass resources. It supposedly works with less, post-css, etc. per issue 31.
- Supports Webpack 4
- Supports Sass
@use
syntax. You must use Dart Sass (sass
, notnode-sass
npm package). See thehoistUseStatements
option.
About
This project is maintained by the software consulting firm ShakaCode. We focus on Ruby on Rails applications with React front-ends, often using TypeScript or ReasonML. We also build Gatsby sites. See our recent work for examples of what we do. Feel free to contact Justin Gordon, [email protected], for more information.
Slack Room: Click for a Slack invite.
Installation
Get it via npm:
npm install sass-resources-loader
Usage
Create your file (or files) with resources, which are snippets of Sass that you want available to places like CSS modules Sass:
/* resources.scss */
$section-width: 700px;
@mixin section-mixin {
margin: 0 auto;
width: $section-width;
}
Options
| Name | Type | Default | Description |
|----------------------|----------------------|-------------|------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------|
| resources
| {String\|String[]}
| undefined
| Resources to include in files |
| hoistUseStatements
| {Boolean}
| false
| If true, entry file @use
imports will be hoisted. This means the @use statements will go above the inclusion of resources. |
Option Examples
resources
Specify resources, contents of these will be prepended to each file.
If file example/a.scss
has content of $my-variable: #fff
, we could do this
{
loader: 'sass-resources-loader',
options: {
resources: 'example/a.scss'
}
}
This would output the following:
// Entry file
$my-variable: #fff;
// Entry file's contents go here
hoistUseStatements
Tells the compiler if an existing @use
statement is found in entry file, it should be hoisted to the top.
The reason is that @use
must go before most other declarations, except variable declarations, per the docs.
If our entry file has the following content
// Entry file
@use 'my/definitions/file';
@use 'my/other/definitions/file';
// Entry file's contents go here
and our resource file contains this
$my-variable: #fff;
@mixin some-mixin {
color: #000;
}
Then the output, with hoistUseStatements set to true would be the following.
Note that the @use
statements are above the inclusion of resources.
// Entry file
@use 'my/definitions/file';
@use 'my/other/definitions/file';
// Resources
$my-variable: #fff;
@mixin some-mixin {
color: #000;
}
// Rest of entry file's content goes here
You can also use this multi-line syntax:
@use 'config' with (
$text-color: #FAFAFA
);
See ./test/scss/hoist-multiline.scss for an example.
As mentioned in the docs for Sass @use, you don't need to hoist if your "resources" only contains variable definitions.
If you get the error:
SassError: @use rules must be written before any other rules.
then you need to use the hoistUseStatements: true
option.
Tips
- Do not include anything that will be actually rendered in CSS, because it will be added to every imported Sass file.
- Avoid using Sass import rules inside resources files as it slows down incremental builds. Add imported files directly in
sassResources
array in webpack config instead. If you concerned about location of your resources index, you might want to check out the solution outlined in this comment. - If you still want to use Sass import rules make sure your paths are relative to the file they defined in (basically, your file with resources), except the ones started with
~
(~
is resolved tonode_modules
folder).
Apply loader in webpack config (v1.x.x
& v2.x.x
are supported) and provide path to the file with resources:
/* Webpack@2: webpack.config.js */
module: {
rules: [
// Apply loader
{
test: /\.scss$/,
use: [
'style-loader',
'css-loader',
'postcss-loader',
'sass-loader',
{
loader: 'sass-resources-loader',
options: {
// Provide path to the file with resources
resources: './path/to/resources.scss',
// Or array of paths
resources: [
'./path/to/vars.scss',
'./path/to/mixins.scss',
'./path/to/functions.scss'
]
},
},
],
},
],
},
/* Webpack@1: webpack.config.js */
module: {
loaders: [
// Apply loader
{ test: /\.scss$/, loader: 'style!css!sass!sass-resources' },
],
},
// Provide path to the file with resources
sassResources: './path/to/resources.scss',
// Or array of paths
sassResources: ['./path/to/vars.scss', './path/to/mixins.scss'],
NOTE: If
webpackConfig.context
is not defined,process.cwd()
will be used to resolve files with resource.
Now you can use these resources without manually loading them:
/* component.scss */
.section {
@include section-mixin; // <--- `section-mixin` is defined here
}
import React from 'react';
import css from './component.scss';
// ...
render() {
return (
<div className={css.section} />
);
}
Glob pattern matching
You can specify glob patterns to match your all of your files in the same directory.
// Specify a single path
resources: './path/to/resources/**/*.scss', // will match all files in folder and subdirectories
// or an array of paths
resources: [ './path/to/resources/**/*.scss', './path/to/another/**/*.scss' ]
Note that sass-resources-loader
will resolve your files in order. If you want your variables to be accessed across all of your mixins you should specify them in first place.
resources: [ './path/to/variables/vars.scss', './path/to/mixins/**/*.scss' ]
Examples and Related Libraries
- react-webpack-rails-tutorial, live example at www.reactrails.com.
- bootstrap-loader
Example of Webpack 4 Config for Vue
module: {
rules: [
{
test: /\.vue$/,
use: 'vue-loader'
},
{
test: /\.css$/,
use: [
{ loader: 'vue-style-loader' },
{ loader: 'css-loader', options: { sourceMap: true } },
]
},
{
test: /\.scss$/,
use: [
{ loader: 'vue-style-loader' },
{ loader: 'css-loader', options: { sourceMap: true } },
{ loader: 'sass-loader', options: { sourceMap: true } },
{ loader: 'sass-resources-loader',
options: {
sourceMap: true,
resources: [
resolveFromRootDir('src/styles/variables.scss'),
]
}
}
]
}
]
}
VueJS webpack template(vue-cli@2)
If you wish to use this loader in the VueJS Webpack template you need to add the following code in build/utils.js
after line 42 :
if (loader === 'sass') {
loaders.push({
loader: 'sass-resources-loader',
options: {
resources: 'path/to/your/file.scss',
},
});
}
VueJS webpack template(vue-cli@3)
If you are using vue-cli@3, you need create a vue.config.js
file in your project root(next to package.json). Then, add the following code :
// vue.config.js
module.exports = {
chainWebpack: config => {
const oneOfsMap = config.module.rule('scss').oneOfs.store
oneOfsMap.forEach(item => {
item
.use('sass-resources-loader')
.loader('sass-resources-loader')
.options({
// Provide path to the file with resources
resources: './path/to/resources.scss',
// Or array of paths
resources: ['./path/to/vars.scss', './path/to/mixins.scss', './path/to/functions.scss']
})
.end()
})
}
}
Contributing
This project is intended to be a safe, welcoming space for collaboration, and contributors are expected to adhere to the code of conduct.
See Contributing to get started.
License
sass-resources-loader is available under MIT. See LICENSE for more details.