A browserify plugin to load CSS Modules.
Please note that this is still highly experimental.
Normally you need to use a strict naming convention like BEM to ensure that one component's CSS doesn't collide with another's. CSS Modules are locally scoped, which allows you to use names that are meaningful within the context of the component, without any danger of name collision.
Read Mark Dalgleish's excellent "End of Global CSS" and check out css-modules for more context.
First install the package: npm install --save css-modulesify
Then you can use it as a browserify plugin, eg: browserify -p [ css-modulesify -o dist/main.css ] example/index.js
Inside example/index.js
you can now load css into your scripts. When you do var box1 = require('./box1.css')
, box1
will be an object to lookup the localized classname for one of the selectors in that file.
So to apply a class to an element you can do something like:
var styles = require('./styles.css');
var div = `<div class="${styles.inner}">...</div>`;
The generated css will contain locally-scoped versions of any css you have require
'd, and will be written out to the file you specify in the --output
or -o
option.
var b = require('browserify')();
b.add('./main.js');
b.plugin(require('css-modulesify'), {
rootDir: __dirname,
output: './path/to/my.css'
});
b.bundle();
// or, get the output as a stream
var b = require('browserify')();
var fs = require('fs');
b.add('./main.js');
b.plugin(require('css-modulesify'), {
rootDir: __dirname
});
var bundle = b.bundle()
bundle.on('css stream', function (css) {
css.pipe(fs.createWriteStream('mycss.css'));
});
rootDir
: absolute path to your project's root directory. This is optional but providing it will result in better generated classnames.output
: path to write the generated css. If not provided, you'll need to listen to the'css stream'
event on the bundle to get the output.jsonOutput
: optional path to write a json manifest of classnames.use
: optional array of postcss plugins (by default we use the css-modules core plugins).generateScopedName
: (API only) a function to override the default behaviour of creating locally scoped classnames.
b.bundle().on('css stream', callback)
The callback is called with a readable stream containing the compiled CSS. You can write this to a file.
If you want to use CSS Modules in server-generated templates there are a couple of options:
-
Option A (nodejs only): register the require-hook so that
var styles = require('./foo.css')
operates the same way as on the frontend. Make sure that therootDir
option matches to guarantee that the classnames are the same. -
Option B: configure the
jsonOutput
option with a file path andcss-modulesify
will generate a JSON manifest of classnames.
The following PostCSS plugins are enabled by default:
- postcss-modules-local-by-default
- postcss-modules-extract-imports
- postcss-modules-scope
- postcss-modules-values
(i.e. the CSS Modules specification).
You can override the default PostCSS Plugins (and add your own) by passing --use|-u
to css-modulesify
.
Or if you just want to add some extra plugins to run after the default, add them to the postcssAfter
array option (API only at this time).
In addition you may also wish to configure defined PostCSS plugins by passing --plugin.option true
.
An example of this would be:
browserify -p [css-modulesify \
--after autoprefixer --autoprefixer.browsers '> 5%' \
-o dist/main.css] -o dist/index.js src/index.js
If you set NODE_ENV=production
then css-modulesify
will generate shorter (though less useful) classnames.
You can also manually switch to short names by setting the generateScopedName
option. Eg:
browserify.plugin(cssModulesify, {
rootDir: __dirname,
output: './dist/main.css',
generateScopedName: cssModulesify.generateShortName
})
An example implementation can be found here.
MIT
- Tobias Koppers
- Mark Dalgleish
- Glen Maddern
Josh Johnston, 2015.