Sass loader for webpack
npm install sass-loader
Starting with 1.0.0
, the sass-loader requires node-sass as peerDependency
. Thus you are able to specify the required version accurately.
var css = require("!raw!sass!./file.scss");
// => returns compiled css code from file.scss, resolves imports
var css = require("!css!sass!./file.scss");
// => returns compiled css code from file.scss, resolves imports and url(...)s
Use in tandem with the style-loader
to add the css rules to your document:
require("!style!css!sass!./file.scss");
It's recommended to adjust your webpack.config
so style!css!sass!
is applied automatically on all files ending on .scss
:
module.exports = {
module: {
loaders: [
{
test: /\.scss$/,
loader: "style!css!sass"
}
]
}
};
Then you only need to write: require("./file.scss")
.
You can pass any Sass specific configuration options through to the render function via query parameters.
module.exports = {
module: {
loaders: [
{
test: /\.scss$/,
loader: "style!css!sass?outputStyle=expanded&" +
"includePaths[]=" +
(path.resolve(__dirname, "./bower_components")) + "&" +
"includePaths[]=" +
(path.resolve(__dirname, "./node_modules"))
}
]
}
};
See node-sass for all available options.
webpack provides an advanced mechanism to resolve files. The sass-loader uses node-sass' custom importer feature to pass all queries to the webpack resolving engine. Thus you can import your sass-modules from node_modules
. Just prepend them with a ~
which tells webpack to look-up the modulesDirectories
@import "~bootstrap/less/bootstrap";
It's important to only prepend it with ~
, because ~/
resolves to the home-directory. webpack needs to distinguish between bootstrap
and ~bootstrap
because CSS- and Sass-files have no special syntax for importing relative files. Writing @import "file"
is the same as @import "./file";
For requiring .sass
files, add indentedSyntax
as a loader option:
module.exports = {
module: {
loaders: [
{
test: /\.sass$/,
// Passing indentedSyntax query param to node-sass
loader: "style!css!sass?indentedSyntax"
}
]
}
};
Importing a file written in the other language style, like importing a .sass
file from a .scss
file, requires the file extension to be set explicitly. If no extension is specified, the extension is inherited from the importing file.
Because of browser limitations, source maps are only available in conjunction with the extract-text-webpack-plugin. Use that plugin to extract the CSS code from the generated JS bundle into a separate file (which even improves the perceived performance because JS and CSS are downloaded in parallel).
Then your webpack.config.js
should look like this:
var ExtractTextPlugin = require('extract-text-webpack-plugin');
module.exports = {
...
// must be 'source-map' or 'inline-source-map'
devtool: 'source-map',
module: {
loaders: [
{
test: /\.scss$/,
loader: ExtractTextPlugin.extract(
// activate source maps via loader query
'css?sourceMap!' +
'sass?sourceMap'
)
}
]
},
plugins: [
// extract inline css into separate 'styles.css'
new ExtractTextPlugin('styles.css')
]
};
If you want to view the original Sass files inside Chrome and even edit it, there's a good blog post. Checkout test/sourceMap for a running example. Make sure to serve the content with an HTTP server.