Stylus Preprocessing

Basic Usage

Here's a quick example to get you started. Imagine that you have the following Stylus file that needs to be compiled to vanilla CSS.

// src/app.styl

$primary = grey

.app
    background: $primary

No problem. Let's add Stylus compilation to our webpack.mix.js file.

// webpack.mix.js
let mix = require('laravel-mix');

mix.stylus('src/app.styl', 'dist');

Compile this down as usual (npx mix), and you'll find a /dist/app.css file that contains:

.app {
    background: grey;
}

Easy!

Plugin Options

Behind the scenes, Laravel Mix of course defers to webpack's stylus-loader to load and compile your Stylus files. From time to time, you may need to override the default options that we pass to it. Use the third argument to mix.stylus() in these scenarios.

For a full list of supported options, please refer to the webpack documentation for stylus-loader.

Foe example, you may wish to install additional Stylus-specific plugins, such as Rupture. No problem. Simply install the plugin in question through NPM (npm install rupture), and then include it in your mix.stylus() call, like so:

mix.stylus('src/app.styl', 'dist', {
    stylusOptions: {
        use: [require('rupture')()]
    }
});

Should you wish to take it further and automatically import plugins globally, you may use the import option. Here's an example:

mix.stylus('resources/assets/stylus/app.styl', 'public/css', {
    use: [require('rupture')(), require('nib')(), require('jeet')()],
    import: ['~nib/index.styl', '~jeet/jeet.styl']
});

Multiple Outputs

Should you need to compile more than one root file, you may call mix.stylus() as many as times as necessary. For each call, webpack will output a new file with the relevant contents.

mix.stylus('src/app.styl', 'dist/') // creates 'dist/app.css'
    .stylus('src/forum.styl', 'dist/'); // creates 'dist/forum.css'