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 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.