Astro Script is a simple component to make it easier to manage script tags in your Astro components and pages.
Once you have setup your Astro project simply run the following command:
# yarn
yarn add astro-script
# npm
npm i astro-script
You can then import the component like this:
---
import { AstroScript } from "astro-script";
// or import Spa from 'astro-spa/Spa.astro'
---
<AstroScript src="/script.js" />
And that's it, you're now ready to go!
There are two ways to add scripts to AstroScript. You can either add them to the src
prop or put them inside the <AstroScript></AstroScript>
tags. The following example shows both ways:
---
import { AstroScript } from "astro-script";
---
// Add script to src prop
<AstroScript src="/script.js" />
<AstroScript src={Astro.resolve("../relative/path/to/script.js")} />
// Add script to <AstroScript />
<AstroScript>
<script> console.log("Hello World"); </script>
</AstroScript>
The src prop also supports an array of paths. The following example shows how to add multiple scripts:
---
import { AstroScript } from "astro-script";
---
// Add multiple scripts to src prop
<AstroScript src={["/script1.js", "/script2.js"]} />
You can also pass multiple script tags inside the <AstroScript></AstroScript>
tag. The following example shows how to add multiple scripts:
---
import { AstroScript } from "astro-script";
---
// Add multiple scripts to <AstroScript />
<AstroScript>
<script> console.log("Hello World"); </script>
<script> console.log("Hello World"); </script>
</AstroScript>
AstroScript also works with external scripts. The following example shows how to add an external script:
---
import { AstroScript } from "astro-script";
---
// Add external script to src prop
<AstroScript src="https://example.com/script.js" />
<AstroScript src={["https://example.com/script1.js", "https://example.com/script2.js"]} />
If the src
prop is present, AstroScript will first fetch the external scripts and read the internal scripts from the filesystem referenced in the src
prop. It'll then merge the scripts and minify & inline them if enabled. If inline
is set to false
, it'll create a .js
file at ${publicPath}/astro-script
. The name of the file will a 8 digit truncated hash of the scripts.
If you have passed the scripts inside the <AstroScript></AstroScript>
tag, AstroScript will read the scripts from the <script>
tags and merge them & minify them if enabled. Any elements other than <script>
tags will be ignored.
By default, AstroScript won't run in development mode. If the src
prop is present, it'll loop through them and create a script
tag for each script. And if you have passed the scripts inside the <AstroScript></AstroScript>
tag, the scripts will be left as is.
Starting with v0.20.2
, Astro provides the ability to hoist your script tags to the top of the page and bundle them. On the other hand, AstroScript will not hoist the scripts to the top of the page. Instead it will allow you to bundle them at the exact point you want them to be bundled. It also allows you to bundle external scripts.
Type: string
or string[]
Default: undefined
The source(s) of the script(s). You can resolve the sources using the Astro.resolve
API or you can pass a path relative to the public folder. If the path is relative to the public folder, it must start with /
.
Type: boolean
Default: true
Whether or not the scripts should be inline.
Type: boolean
Default: true
Whether or not the scripts should be minified. If true the scripts will be minified using terser
.
Type: MinifyOptions
(check the link below)
Default: {}
The minify configuration options supported by terser
. For more info check the minify options supported by terser.
Type: string
Default: public
The public path of the project.
Type: boolean
Default: import.meta.env !== "development"
Whether or not the optimizations will be performed in development mode.
- If the
src
prop is present, any<script>
tags inside the<AstroScript></AstroScript>
tag will be ignored. - Files resolved with
Astro.resolve
can't have extensions other than.js
. Because AstroScript doesn't have ability to perform transformation of.jsx
,.ts
,.tsx
,.mjs
,.cjs
files. - You may encounter issues with HMR if you have set
dev
totrue
. - If you have set
dev
to true you should add the${publicPath}/astro-script
directory to your.gitignore
file. Otherwise, you may end up pushing lots of redundant files to your Github repo and CI.