4.0.0 • Published 7 years ago

est-less-loader v4.0.0

Weekly downloads
4
License
-
Repository
github
Last release
7 years ago

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Use the css-loader or the raw-loader to turn it into a JS module and the ExtractTextPlugin to extract it into a separate file.

npm install --save-dev less-loader less

The less-loader requires less as peerDependency. Thus you are able to control the versions accurately.

Chain the less-loader with the css-loader and the style-loader to immediately apply all styles to the DOM.

// webpack.config.js
module.exports = {
    ...
    module: {
        rules: [{
            test: /\.less$/,
            use: [{
                loader: "style-loader" // creates style nodes from JS strings
            }, {
                loader: "css-loader" // translates CSS into CommonJS
            }, {
                loader: "less-loader" // compiles Less to CSS
            }]
        }]
    }
};

You can pass any Less specific options to the less-loader via loader options. See the Less documentation for all available options in dash-case. Since we're passing these options to Less programmatically, you need to pass them in camelCase here:

// webpack.config.js
module.exports = {
    ...
    module: {
        rules: [{
            test: /\.less$/,
            use: [{
                loader: "style-loader"
            }, {
                loader: "css-loader"
            }, {
                loader: "less-loader", options: {
                    strictMath: true,
                    noIeCompat: true
                }
            }]
        }]
    }
};

In production

Usually, it's recommended to extract the style sheets into a dedicated file in production using the ExtractTextPlugin. This way your styles are not dependent on JavaScript:

const ExtractTextPlugin = require("extract-text-webpack-plugin");

const extractLess = new ExtractTextPlugin({
    filename: "[name].[contenthash].css",
    disable: process.env.NODE_ENV === "development"
});

module.exports = {
    ...
    module: {
        rules: [{
            test: /\.less$/,
            use: extractLess.extract({
                use: [{
                    loader: "css-loader"
                }, {
                    loader: "less-loader"
                }],
                // use style-loader in development
                fallback: "style-loader"
            })
        }]
    },
    plugins: [
        extractLess
    ]
};

Plugins

In order to use plugins, simply set the lessPlugins option like this:

// webpack.config.js
const CleanCSSPlugin = require("less-plugin-clean-css");

module.exports = {
    ...
            {
                loader: "less-loader", options: {
                    lessPlugins: [
                        new CleanCSSPlugin({ advanced: true })
                    ]
                }
            }]
    ...
};

Extracting style sheets

Bundling CSS with webpack has some nice advantages like referencing images and fonts with hashed urls or hot module replacement in development. In production, on the other hand, it's not a good idea to apply your style sheets depending on JS execution. Rendering may be delayed or even a FOUC might be visible. Thus it's often still better to have them as separate files in your final production build.

There are two possibilities to extract a style sheet from the bundle:

Source maps

To enable CSS source maps, you'll need to pass the sourceMap option to the less-loader and the css-loader. Your webpack.config.js should look like this:

module.exports = {
    ...
    devtool: "source-map", // any "source-map"-like devtool is possible
    module: {
        rules: [{
            test: /\.less$/,
            use: [{
                loader: "style-loader"
            }, {
                loader: "css-loader", options: {
                    sourceMap: true
                }
            }, {
                loader: "less-loader", options: {
                    sourceMap: true
                }
            }]
        }]
    }
};

If you want to edit the original Less files inside Chrome, there's a good blog post. The blog post is about Sass but it also works for Less.