You will notice in the project structure we have two directories for static assets: src/assets
and static/
. What is the difference between them?
To answer this question, we first need to understand how Webpack deals with static assets. In *.vue
components, all your templates and CSS are parsed by vue-html-loader
and css-loader
to look for asset URLs. For example, in <img src="./logo.png">
and background: url(./logo.png)
, "./logo.png"
is a relative asset path and will be resolved by Webpack as a module dependency.
Because logo.png
is not JavaScript, when treated as a module dependency, we need to use url-loader
and file-loader
to process it. This boilerplate has already configured these loaders for you, so you basically get features such as filename fingerprinting and conditional base64 inlining for free, while being able to use relative/module paths without worrying about deployment.
Since these assets may be inlined/copied/renamed during build, they are essentially part of your source code. This is why it is recommended to place Webpack-processed static assets inside /src
, along side other source files. In fact, you don't even have to put them all in /src/assets
: you can organize them based on the module/component using them. For example, you can put each component in its own directory, with its static assets right next to it.
-
Relative URLs, e.g.
./assets/logo.png
will be interpreted as a module dependency. They will be replaced with an auto-generated URL based on your Webpack output configuration. -
Non-prefixed URLs, e.g.
assets/logo.png
will be treated the same as the relative URLs and translated into./assets/logo.png
. -
URLs prefixed with
~
are treated as a module request, similar torequire('some-module/image.png')
. You need to use this prefix if you want to leverage Webpack's module resolving configurations. For example if you have a resolve alias forassets
, you need to use<img src="~assets/logo.png">
to ensure that alias is respected. -
Root-relative URLs, e.g.
/assets/logo.png
are not processed at all.
In order for Webpack to return the correct asset paths, you need to use require('./relative/path/to/file.jpg')
, which will get processed by file-loader
and returns the resolved URL. For example:
computed: {
background () {
return require('./bgs/' + this.id + '.jpg')
}
}
Note the above example will include every image under ./bgs/
in the final build. This is because Webpack cannot guess which of them will be used at runtime, so it includes them all.
In comparison, files in static/
are not processed by Webpack at all: they are directly copied to their final destination as-is, with the same filename. You must reference these files using absolute paths, which is determined by joining build.assetsPublicPath
and build.assetsSubDirectory
in config.js
.
As an example, with the following default values:
// config.js
module.exports = {
// ...
build: {
assetsPublicPath: '/',
assetsSubDirectory: 'static'
}
}
Any file placed in static/
should be referenced using the absolute URL /static/[filename]
. If you change assetSubDirectory
to assets
, then these URLs will need to be changed to /assets/[filename]
.
We will learn more about the config file in the section about backend integration.