[![Deploy to now](https://deploy.now.sh/static/button.svg)](https://deploy.now.sh/?repo=https://github.com/zeit/next.js/tree/master/examples/with-global-stylesheet) # Global Stylesheet example This is an example of how you can include a global stylesheet in a next.js webapp. ## How to use ### Using `create-next-app` Download [`create-next-app`](https://github.com/segmentio/create-next-app) to bootstrap the example: ``` npm i -g create-next-app create-next-app --example with-global-stylesheet with-global-stylesheet-app ``` ### Download manually Download the example [or clone the repo](https://github.com/zeit/next.js): ```bash curl https://codeload.github.com/zeit/next.js/tar.gz/canary | tar -xz --strip=2 next.js-canary/examples/with-global-stylesheet cd with-global-stylesheet ``` To get this example running you just need to npm install . npm run dev Visit [http://localhost:3000](http://localhost:3000) and try to modify `styles/index.scss` changing color. Your changes should be picked up instantly. Also see it working with plain css here ![example](example.gif) Deploy it to the cloud with [now](https://zeit.co/now) ([download](https://zeit.co/download)) ```bash now ``` ## The idea behind the example The strategy here is to transpile the stylesheet file to a css-in-js file so that it can be loaded and hot reloaded both on the server and the client. For this purpose I created a babel loader plugin called [babel-loader-wrap-in-js](https://github.com/davibe/babel-plugin-wrap-in-js). Another babel plugin [module-resolver](https://github.com/tleunen/babel-plugin-module-resolver) enables us to import stylesheets from js (e.g. pages or components) through a `styles` directory alias rather than relative paths. The `sass-loader` is configured with `includePaths: ['styles', 'node_modules']` so that your scss can `@import` from those places, again without relative paths, for maximum convenience and ability to use npm-published libraries. Furthermore, `glob` paths are also supported, so one could for example add `'node_modules/@material/*'` to the `includePaths`, which would make [material-components-web](https://github.com/material-components/material-components-web) (if you'd like) even easier to work with. Furthermore, PostCSS is used to [pre-process](https://medium.com/@ddprrt/deconfusing-pre-and-post-processing-d68e3bd078a3) both `css` and `scss` stylesheets, the latter after Sass pre-processing. This is to illustrate `@import 'normalize.css';` from `node_modules` thanks to `postcss-easy-import`. [Autoprefixer](https://github.com/postcss/autoprefixer) is also added as a "best practice". Consider [cssnext](http://cssnext.io) instead, which includes `autoprefixer` as well as many other CSS spec features. This project shows how you can set it up. Have a look at: - .babelrc - next.config.js - pages/index.js - postcss.config.js - styles/index.scss Please, report any issue on enhancement related to this example to its original github repository https://github.com/davibe/next.js-css-global-style-test ## If your stylesheets import fonts Install `postcss-url` and insert `require('postcss-url')({ url: 'inline' })` as the 2nd element of the `plugins` array in `postcss.config.js`.