webpack loader for Vue Single-File Components
-
refSugar: boolean
: enable experimental ref sugar. -
customElement: boolean | RegExp
: enable custom elements mode. An SFC loaded in custom elements mode inlines its<style>
tags as strings under the component'sstyles
option. When used withdefineCustomElement
from Vue core, the styles will be injected into the custom element's shadow root.- Default is
/\.ce\.vue$/
- Setting to
true
will process all.vue
files in custom element mode.
- Default is
vue-loader
is a loader for webpack that allows you to author Vue components in a format called Single-File Components (SFCs):
<template>
<div class="example">{{ msg }}</div>
</template>
<script>
export default {
data() {
return {
msg: 'Hello world!',
}
},
}
</script>
<style>
.example {
color: red;
}
</style>
There are many cool features provided by vue-loader
:
- Allows using other webpack loaders for each part of a Vue component, for example Sass for
<style>
and Pug for<template>
; - Allows custom blocks in a
.vue
file that can have custom loader chains applied to them; - Treat static assets referenced in
<style>
and<template>
as module dependencies and handle them with webpack loaders; - Simulate scoped CSS for each component;
- State-preserving hot-reloading during development.
In a nutshell, the combination of webpack and vue-loader
gives you a modern, flexible and extremely powerful front-end workflow for authoring Vue.js applications.
The following section is for maintainers and contributors who are interested in the internal implementation details of
vue-loader
, and is not required knowledge for end users.
vue-loader
is not a simple source transform loader. It handles each language blocks inside an SFC with its own dedicated loader chain (you can think of each block as a "virtual module"), and finally assembles the blocks together into the final module. Here's a brief overview of how the whole thing works:
-
vue-loader
parses the SFC source code into an SFC Descriptor using@vue/compiler-sfc
. It then generates an import for each language block so the actual returned module code looks like this:// code returned from the main loader for 'source.vue' // import the <template> block import render from 'source.vue?vue&type=template' // import the <script> block import script from 'source.vue?vue&type=script' export * from 'source.vue?vue&type=script' // import <style> blocks import 'source.vue?vue&type=style&index=1' script.render = render export default script
Notice how the code is importing
source.vue
itself, but with different request queries for each block. -
We want the content in
script
block to be treated like.js
files (and if it's<script lang="ts">
, we want to to be treated like.ts
files). Same for other language blocks. So we want webpack to apply any configured module rules that matches.js
also to requests that look likesource.vue?vue&type=script
. This is whatVueLoaderPlugin
(src/plugins.ts
) does: for each module rule in the webpack config, it creates a modified clone that targets corresponding Vue language block requests.Suppose we have configured
babel-loader
for all*.js
files. That rule will be cloned and applied to Vue SFC<script>
blocks as well. Internally to webpack, a request likeimport script from 'source.vue?vue&type=script'
Will expand to:
import script from 'babel-loader!vue-loader!source.vue?vue&type=script'
Notice the
vue-loader
is also matched becausevue-loader
are applied to.vue
files.Similarly, if you have configured
style-loader
+css-loader
+sass-loader
for*.scss
files:<style scoped lang="scss">
Will be returned by
vue-loader
as:import 'source.vue?vue&type=style&index=1&scoped&lang=scss'
And webpack will expand it to:
import 'style-loader!css-loader!sass-loader!vue-loader!source.vue?vue&type=style&index=1&scoped&lang=scss'
-
When processing the expanded requests, the main
vue-loader
will get invoked again. This time though, the loader notices that the request has queries and is targeting a specific block only. So it selects (src/select.ts
) the inner content of the target block and passes it on to the loaders matched after it. -
For the
<script>
block, this is pretty much it. For<template>
and<style>
blocks though, a few extra tasks need to be performed:- We need to compile the template using the Vue template compiler;
- We need to post-process the CSS in
<style scoped>
blocks, aftercss-loader
but beforestyle-loader
.
Technically, these are additional loaders (
src/templateLoader.ts
andsrc/stylePostLoader.ts
) that need to be injected into the expanded loader chain. It would be very complicated if the end users have to configure this themselves, soVueLoaderPlugin
also injects a global Pitching Loader (src/pitcher.ts
) that intercepts Vue<template>
and<style>
requests and injects the necessary loaders. The final requests look like the following:// <template lang="pug"> import 'vue-loader/template-loader!pug-loader!source.vue?vue&type=template' // <style scoped lang="scss"> import 'style-loader!vue-loader/style-post-loader!css-loader!sass-loader!vue-loader!source.vue?vue&type=style&index=1&scoped&lang=scss'