76

I'm new to vue js and trying to learn this. I installed a fresh new version of vue webpack in my system. I'm having a css, js and images of this a theme template which I want to include into the HTML so i tried adding it in index.html but I can see errors in console and the assets are not being added. While I searched I came to know that I can use require in main.js file. But I'm getting the error:

Following I've tried in my main.js file:

// The Vue build version to load with the `import` command
// (runtime-only or standalone) has been set in webpack.base.conf with an alias.
 import Vue from 'vue'
 import App from './App'
 import router from './router'

 require('./assets/styles/vendor.css');
 require('./assets/styles/main.css');
 require('./assets/scripts/vendor/modernizr.js');

 Vue.config.productionTip = false

 /* eslint-disable no-new */
 new Vue({
  el: '#app',
   router,
  template: '<App/>',
  components: { App }
 })

While I tried using import to use it but still I got error

// The Vue build version to load with the `import` command
// (runtime-only or standalone) has been set in webpack.base.conf with an alias.
 import Vue from 'vue'
 import App from './App'
 import router from './router'

 import('./assets/styles/vendor.css')
 // require('./assets/styles/vendor.css');
 // require('./assets/styles/main.css');
 // require('./assets/scripts/vendor/modernizr.js');

 Vue.config.productionTip = false

 /* eslint-disable no-new */
 new Vue({
  el: '#app',
   router,
  template: '<App/>',
  components: { App }
 })

Here is the error screenshot: Error message

Help me out in this.

zmag
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Nitish Kumar
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  • Where did you install vue webpack from? Where did the theme template come from? And what editor is that you're using ? – bbsimonbb May 04 '17 at 14:25
  • @user1585345 I installed vue through `vue-cli` we are having a `html template` which have stylesheets in css files. and I'm working on `WebStorm` editor – Nitish Kumar May 04 '17 at 15:00

6 Answers6

168

You can import the css file on App.vue, inside the style tag.

<style>
  @import './assets/styles/yourstyles.css';
</style>

Also, make sure you have the right loaders installed, if you need any.

zmag
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gedii
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    This works perfectly. I had also made it work importing styles in `index.js` file like this: `import '@/assets/css/styles.css`. Production generated css file appears to be the same. I wonder what solution is better... – hmartos Jun 03 '17 at 22:58
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    If you import the css inside a style tag in a .vue, you can make it scoped and only apply the styles in the specific component. That's one different thing you can do, but I'm also not quite sure about which solution better. – gedii Jun 08 '17 at 05:56
  • @Bsienn did it say what dependency? Could be a loader. – gedii Sep 20 '19 at 02:21
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    @GeraldineGolong Hi, Thanks for reply, Sorry for not mentioning before, It was path issue, i needed to use `@` sign before source and it worked. using vue-clie v3. – Bsienn Sep 20 '19 at 05:36
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    @GeraldineGolong Hi, Thanks for reply, Sorry for not mentioning before, It was path issue, i needed to use @ sign before source and it worked. using vue-clie v3. – Bsienn Sep 20 '19 at 05:36
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    @gedii just had to say, this fix made my morning!! wanted to share the love – ToddT Jan 21 '20 at 15:14
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    @ToddT You're welcome! Now you made MY day, I'm having a pretty tough one lol – gedii Feb 03 '20 at 02:07
  • This code does not scoped the css file. It will be share/accessible by all components – Farandole Jun 17 '20 at 08:52
  • I had to change it to ... @import url("https://....css"); ... to make it works – Patrice Flao Feb 19 '21 at 23:11
35

Try using the @ symbol before the url string. Import your css in the following manner:

import Vue from 'vue'

require('@/assets/styles/main.css')

In your App.vue file you can do this to import a css file in the style tag

<template>
  <div>
  </div>
</template>

<style scoped src="@/assets/styles/mystyles.css">
</style>
Sir Waithaka
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  • where does the require('...') go? Is it in the component file or in main.js or app.vue? There is import Vue from 'vue' in main.js Thanks – Shane G Jun 22 '19 at 10:45
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    The require('...') goes to your main.js file. Remember those are you 'main.css' styles. Meaning styles you would wish to be used anywhere. – Sir Waithaka Jun 24 '19 at 11:03
1

If you want to append this css file to header you can do it using mounted() function of the vue file. See the example.
Note: Assume you can access the css file as http://www.yoursite/assets/styles/vendor.css in the browser.

mounted() {
        let style = document.createElement('link');
        style.type = "text/css";
        style.rel = "stylesheet";
        style.href = '/assets/styles/vendor.css';
        document.head.appendChild(style);
    }
gihandilanka
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1

You can import CSS file on component inside script tag

<template>
</template>

<script>
import "@/assets/<file-name>.css";

export default {}
</script>

<style>
</style>
Hosein
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0

As you can see, the import command did work but is showing errors because it tried to locate the resources in vendor.css and couldn't find them

You should also upload your project structure and ensure that there aren't any path issues. Also, you could include the css file in the index.html or the Component template and webpack loader would extract it when built

iamareebjamal
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    I tried placing in `index.html` but it is not finding, I tried `` but is unable to find. I tried `./assets/styles/vendor.css` i am unable to get – Nitish Kumar May 04 '17 at 14:57
0

main.js

import "./assets/css/style.css"

style.css -- you can import multiple files.

@import './dev.css';
body{
    color: red
}

dev.css

body{
    font-size: 24px;
}
Hardik Raval
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