2.0.1 • Published 4 months ago

next-purge-css-modules v2.0.1

Weekly downloads
-
License
MIT
Repository
github
Last release
4 months ago

Contents

Installation

next-purge-css-modules can be installed using your favourite JavaScript package manager.

yarn add next-purge-css-modules --dev
npm install next-purge-css-modules --save-dev

Example Usage

If your Next.js project does not already contain one, create a next.config.js file in the root of your project directory.

const withPurgeCSSModules = require('next-purge-css-modules');

/** @type {import('next-purge-css-modules').PurgeConfig} */
const purgeConfig = { ... };

module.exports = withPurgeCSSModules(purgeConfig);

You can read more about the advanced configuration of Next.js on the official documentation site.

Configuration

This plugin comes preconfigured with some sensible defaults options. However, you are free to alter this configuration to suit your project needs with the use of the custom purge config object via the next.config.js file.

Additionally, you can also pass your custom next config object as the function's second argument.

interface PurgeCSSModulesOptions {
  content?: string | string[];
  enableDevPurge?: boolean;
  fontFace?: boolean;
  keyframes?: boolean;
  safelist?: UserDefinedSafelist;
  variables?: boolean;
}
const path = require('path');
const withPurgeCSSModules = require('next-purge-css-modules');

/** @type {import('next').NextConfig} */
const nextConfig = {
  ...
};

/** @type {import('next-purge-css-modules').PurgeConfig} */
const purgeConfig = {
  content: path.join(__dirname, 'src/**/*.{js,jsx,ts,tsx}'),
  enableDevPurge: true,
  safelist: ['body', 'html'],
};

module.exports = withPurgeCSSModules(purgeConfig, nextConfig);

content

This option tells next-purge-css-modules which files to look through to check for unused css-modules. You can either supply these files as absolute paths or as file path globs and they can either be a single path or an array.

The default value looks at all JavaScript/TypeScript files in the default Next.js pages directories (app/**/*.{js,jsx,ts,tsx}, pages/**/*.{js,jsx,ts,tsx}, src/app/**/*.{js,jsx,ts,tsx} and src/pages/**/*.{js,jsx,ts,tsx}).

enableDevPurge

By default, your css-module code will only be purged when a production build is generated. You can set this flag to true to enable css-modules purging when running your Next.js project in development mode.

fontFace

If there are any unused @font-face rules, setting this flag to true will purge them from the final output. By default is false.

keyframes

Any unused animation keyframes found within your css-module code will be purged from the final output when this flag is set to true. By default is false.

safelist

By supplying an array of CSS selectors to the safelist option, you can tell next-purge-css-modules which selectors you wish to ensure are not purged. By default is ['body', 'html']

To read more about the safelist configuration option, you can refer to the official PurgeCSS documentation.

variables

When you are using Custom Properties (CSS variables), or a library using them such as Bootstrap, setting this flag to true will purge them from the final output.

Usage With Sass

next-purge-css-modules works directly out of the box with Next.js projects set up to use Sass.

You can refer to the official Next.js Sass documentation to ensure your project is set up correctly.

Contributing

Thanks for taking the time to contribute! Before you get started, please take a moment to read through our contributing guide. The focus area for next-purge-css-modules right now is fixing potential bugs.

However, all issues and PRs are welcome!

License

MIT - see the LICENSE.md file for details