webpack accepts configuration files written in multiple programming and data languages. The list of supported file extensions can be found at the node-interpret package. Using node-interpret, webpack can handle many different types of configuration files.
To write the webpack configuration in TypeScript, you would first install the necessary dependencies:
npm install --save-dev typescript ts-node @types/node @types/webpack
and then proceed to write your configuration:
webpack.config.ts
import path from 'path';
import webpack from 'webpack';
const config: webpack.Configuration = {
entry: './foo.js',
output: {
path: path.resolve(__dirname, 'dist'),
filename: 'foo.bundle.js'
}
};
export default config;
Above sample assumes version >= 2.7 or newer of TypeScript is used with the new esModuleInterop
and allowSyntheticDefaultImports
compiler options in your tsconfig.json
file.
Note that you'll also need to check your tsconfig.json
file. If the module in compilerOptions
in tsconfig.json
is commonjs
, the setting is complete, else webpack will fail with an error. This occurs because ts-node
does not support any module syntax other than commonjs
.
There are two solutions to this issue:
tsconfig.json
.tsconfig-paths
.The first option is to open your tsconfig.json
file and look for compilerOptions
. Set target
to "ES5"
and module
to "CommonJS"
(or completely remove the module
option).
The second option is to install the tsconfig-paths
package:
npm install --save-dev tsconfig-paths
And create a separate TypeScript configuration specifically for your webpack configs:
tsconfig-for-webpack-config.json
{
"compilerOptions": {
"module": "commonjs",
"target": "es5"
}
}
ts-node
can resolve atsconfig.json
file using the environment variable provided bytsconfig-path
.
Then set the environment variable process.env.TS_NODE_PROJECT
provided by tsconfig-path
like so:
package.json
{
"scripts": {
"build": "TS_NODE_PROJECT=\"tsconfig-for-webpack-config.json\" webpack"
}
}
Similarly, to use CoffeeScript, you would first install the necessary dependencies:
npm install --save-dev coffee-script
and then proceed to write your configuration:
webpack.config.coffee
HtmlWebpackPlugin = require('html-webpack-plugin')
webpack = require('webpack')
path = require('path')
config =
entry: './path/to/my/entry/file.js'
output:
path: path.resolve(__dirname, 'dist')
filename: 'my-first-webpack.bundle.js'
module: rules: [ {
test: /\.(js|jsx)$/
use: 'babel-loader'
} ]
plugins: [
new (webpack.optimize.UglifyJsPlugin)
new HtmlWebpackPlugin(template: './src/index.html')
]
module.exports = config
In the example below JSX (React JavaScript Markup) and Babel are used to create a JSON Configuration that webpack can understand.
Courtesy of Jason Miller
First install the necessary dependencies:
npm install --save-dev babel-register jsxobj babel-preset-es2015
.babelrc
{
"presets": [ "es2015" ]
}
webpack.config.babel.js
import jsxobj from 'jsxobj';
// example of an imported plugin
const CustomPlugin = config => ({
...config,
name: 'custom-plugin'
});
export default (
<webpack target="web" watch>
<entry path="src/index.js" />
<resolve>
<alias {...{
react: 'preact-compat',
'react-dom': 'preact-compat'
}} />
</resolve>
<plugins>
<uglify-js opts={{
compression: true,
mangle: false
}} />
<CustomPlugin foo="bar" />
</plugins>
</webpack>
);
If you are using Babel elsewhere and havemodules
set tofalse
, you will have to either maintain two separate.babelrc
files or useconst jsxobj = require('jsxobj');
andmodule.exports
instead of the newimport
andexport
syntax. This is because while Node does support many new ES6 features, they don't yet support ES6 module syntax.