sass-all-variable-loader
Loads sass files and extracts all variable declarations includingfrom the imported sass files.
About
This webpack loader helps to get variable values from the SASS file in the JavaScript file as a JSON object with the property names corresponding to variable names.Installation
npm
``` $ npm install --save-dev sass-all-variable-loader ```yarn
``` $ yarn add sass-all-variable-loader -D ```Usage
It's better to create a SASS file which imports all variable declaration files you need. For example,variables.scss
:
```
@import "./common-variables";
@import "./bootstrap-variables";
@import "~bootstrap/scss/functions";
@import "~bootstrap/scss/variables";
```
Suppose bootstrap-variables.scss declares variables as follows:
```
$gray-800: #29363d;
$body-color: $gray-800;
```
Then declare a loader in your webpack config:
```
module.exports = {
module: {
rules: [
{
oneOf: [
{
test: /variables\.scss/,
use: [
'sass-all-variable-loader',
]
},
```
Important thing: this entry should be before any other .scss loaders.
Then you can import variables in your .js/.ts file:
```
import as reactstrap from 'reactstrap';
import styled from 'styled-components';
const variables = require('../../scss/variables.scss');
export const Pimpochka = styled(reactstrap.Button)`
background-color: ${variables'$body-color'};
`;
```
If you don't want to declare a separate entry in webpack config, you
can import the sass file with the exclamation mark syntax:
```
import variables from '!!sass-all-variable-loader!./variables.scss';
```
However I don't recommend it because it is weird and it breaks
navigation in your favorite IDE.
Limitations
This loader was created because of critical limitations of similar ones out there. For example sass-variable-loader can't handle any multiline statements or declarations such as sass maps or functions. Even though this loader still has it's own limitations:- The current implementation neglects the content from the previous
- The resulting map preserves the variable names (see usage example