Use webpack to generate your static bundles without django's static files or opaque wrappers. Django webpack loader consumes the output generated by webpack-bundle-tracker and lets you use the generated bundles in Django. Test cases cover Django>=2.0 on Python>=3.5. 100% code coverage is the target so we can be sure everything works anytime. It should probably work on older versions of Django as well but the package does not ship any test cases for them. Before configuring django-webpack-loader, let's first configure what's necessary on the webpack-bundle-tracker side. Update your Webpack configuration file (it's usually on webpack.config.js in the project root). Make sure your file looks like this (adapt to your needs). The generated compiled files will be placed inside the /assets/webpack_bundles/ directory and the file with the information regarding the bundles and assets (webpack-stats.json) will be stored in the project root.
Features
- Compile the front-end assets
- Configure the settings file
- Render the front-end code into the Django templates
- You must generate the front-end bundle using webpack-bundle-tracker
- Test cases cover Django>=2.0 on Python>=3.5
- Django webpack loader consumes the output generated by webpack-bundle-tracker