You may have noticed that few webpack configurations look exactly alike. This is because webpack's configuration file is a JavaScript file that exports a webpack configuration. This configuration is then processed by webpack based upon its defined properties.
Because it's a standard Node.js CommonJS module, you can do the following:
require(...)
require(...)
?:
operatorUse these features when appropriate.
While they are technically feasible, the following practices should be avoided:
--env
)The most important part to take away from this document is that there are many different ways to format and style your webpack configuration. The key is to stick with something consistent that you and your team can understand and maintain.
The examples below describe how webpack's configuration can be both expressive and configurable because it is code:
webpack.config.js
var path = require('path');
module.exports = {
mode: 'development',
entry: './foo.js',
output: {
path: path.resolve(__dirname, 'dist'),
filename: 'foo.bundle.js'
}
};
See: Configuration section for all supported configuration options
Along with exporting a single configuration as an object, function or Promise, you can export multiple configurations.
See: Exporting multiple configurations
webpack accepts configuration files written in multiple programming and data languages.