@vjpr/style-loader v0.13.1-vjpr.1
Adds CSS to the DOM by injecting a <style>
tag
npm install style-loader --save-dev
Simple API
require("style-loader!raw-loader!./file.css");
// => add rules in file.css to document
It's recommended to combine it with the css-loader
: require("style-loader!css-loader!./file.css")
.
It's also possible to add a URL instead of a CSS string:
require("style-loader/url!file-loader!./file.css");
// => add a <link rel="stylesheet"> to file.css to document
Local scope CSS
(experimental)
When using local scope CSS the module exports the generated identifiers:
var style = require("style-loader!css-loader!./file.css");
style.placeholder1 === "z849f98ca812bc0d099a43e0f90184"
Reference-counted API
var style = require("style-loader/useable!css-loader!./file.css");
style.use(); // = style.ref();
style.unuse(); // = style.unref();
Styles are not added on require
, but instead on call to use
/ref
. Styles are removed from page if unuse
/unref
is called exactly as often as use
/ref
.
Note: Behavior is undefined when unuse
/unref
is called more often than use
/ref
. Don't do that.
Options
insertAt
By default, the style-loader appends <style>
elements to the end of the <head>
tag of the page. This will cause CSS created by the loader to take priority over CSS already present in the document head. To insert style elements at the beginning of the head, set this query parameter to 'top', e.g. require('../style.css?insertAt=top')
.
singleton
If defined, the style-loader will re-use a single <style>
element, instead of adding/removing individual elements for each required module. Note: this option is on by default in IE9, which has strict limitations on the number of style tags allowed on a page. You can enable or disable it with the singleton query parameter (?singleton
or ?-singleton
).
Recommended configuration
By convention the reference-counted API should be bound to .useable.css
and the simple API to .css
(similar to other file types, i.e. .useable.less
and .less
).
So the recommended configuration for webpack is:
{
module: {
rules: [
{
test: /\.css$/,
use: [
{ loader: "style-loader" },
{ loader: "css-loader" },
],
},
{
test: /\.useable\.css$/,
use: [
{
loader: "style-loader",
options: {
useable: true
},
},
{ loader: "css-loader" },
],
},
],
},
}
Note about source maps support and assets referenced with url
: when style loader is used with ?sourceMap option, the CSS modules will be generated as Blob
s, so relative paths don't work (they would be relative to chrome:blob
or chrome:devtools
). In order for assets to maintain correct paths setting output.publicPath
property of webpack configuration must be set, so that absolute paths are generated.
Don't hesitate to create a pull request. Every contribution is appreciated. In development you can start the tests by calling npm test
.
MIT
8 years ago