-
Notifications
You must be signed in to change notification settings - Fork 128
usage with bower
To use components from bower you need to add two things to webpack:
- Let webpack look in the
bower_components
folder. - Let webpack use the
main
field from thebower.json
file.
See configuration resolve.modulesDirectories
and list of plugins ResolverPlugin
.
var path = require("path");
var webpack = require("webpack");
module.exports = {
resolve: {
modulesDirectories: ["web_modules", "node_modules", "bower_components"]
},
plugins: [
new webpack.ResolverPlugin(
new webpack.ResolverPlugin.DirectoryDescriptionFilePlugin(".bower.json", ["main"])
)
]
}
In many cases modules from npm are better than the same module from bower. Bower mostly contain only concatenated/bundled files which are:
- More difficult to handle for webpack
- More difficult to optimize for webpack
- Sometimes only useable without a module system
So prefer to use the CommonJs-style module and let webpack build it.
bower package vs. npm package
Note: the bower package is built with browserify and envify (
NODE_ENV = "production"
)
So we compare four configurations:
a) webpack + bower package (DefinePlugin
makes no difference here as envify already removed debug code)
b) webpack + bower package + module.noParse
for react
c) webpack + npm package
d) webpack + npm package + DefinePlugin
with NODE_ENV = "production"
configuration | modules | bundle size | compilation time |
---|---|---|---|
a) | 1 | 136k | 100% |
b) | 1 | 136k | 73,6% |
c) | 136 | 130k | 89,9% |
d) | 135 | 127k | 85,3% |
(webpack 1.3.0-beta8, react 0.10.0, bundle size minimized)
webpack 👍