This package provides seamless integration between Next.js and Linaria, a zero-runtime CSS-in-JS solution. It allows you to use Linaria's powerful styling capabilities directly in your Next.js applications, with full support for both the App Router and Pages Router.
npm
npm install next-with-linaria @wyw-in-js/babel-preset @linaria/core @linaria/react
pnpm
pnpm install next-with-linaria @wyw-in-js/babel-preset @linaria/core @linaria/react
yarn
yarn add next-with-linaria @wyw-in-js/babel-preset @linaria/core @linaria/react
// next.config.ts
import withLinaria, { LinariaConfig } from 'next-with-linaria';
const config: LinariaConfig = {
// ...your next.js config
linaria: {
// Linaria options
},
};
export default withLinaria(config);
To use Rspack instead of Webpack, you can combine this package with next-rspack
:
// next.config.ts
import withRspack from 'next-rspack';
import withLinaria, { LinariaConfig } from 'next-with-linaria';
const config: LinariaConfig = {
// ...your next.js config
linaria: {
// Linaria options
},
};
export default withRspack(withLinaria(config));
Now you can use linaria in all the places where Next.js also allows you to use CSS Modules. That currently means in every file in the app
directory and the pages
directory.
The fastCheck
option is enabled by default to improve build performance. This optimization skips the Linaria transform process for files that don't contain Linaria syntax, which can reduce build times for large projects.
If you experience any issues with the optimization, you can disable it:
// next.config.js
const withLinaria = require('next-with-linaria');
/** @type {import('next-with-linaria').LinariaConfig} */
const config = {
// ...your next.js config
linaria: {
// Disable performance optimization if needed
fastCheck: false,
},
};
module.exports = withLinaria(config);
If you want to use linaria for global styling, you need to place those styles into a file with the suffix .linaria.global.(js|jsx|ts|tsx)
:
// app/style.linaria.global.tsx
import { css } from '@linaria/core';
export const globals = css`
:global() {
html {
box-sizing: border-box;
}
*,
*:before,
*:after {
box-sizing: inherit;
}
@font-face {
font-family: 'MaterialIcons';
src: url(../assets/fonts/MaterialIcons.ttf) format('truetype');
}
}
`;
// app/layout.tsx
import './style.linaria.global';
export default function RootLayout({
children,
}: {
children: React.ReactNode;
}) {
return (
<html lang="en">
<body>{children}</body>
</html>
);
}
This convention is needed because the loader needs to know which files contain global styles and which don't.
- In Webpack and Rspack you can not use linaria styles in server-only files or in server components that import server-only files due to the way HMR works in dev mode.
// app/components/ServerOnlyComponent.tsx
import 'server-only';
import { styled } from '@linaria/react';
const Container = styled.div`
color: red;
`;
export default function ServerOnlyComponent() {
return <Container>Hello World</Container>;
}
In such a case you need to use the following approach:
// app/components/Container.tsx
import { styled } from '@linaria/react';
export const Container = styled.div`
color: red;
`;
// app/components/ServerOnlyComponent.tsx
import 'server-only';
import { Container } from './Container';
export default function ServerOnlyComponent() {
return <Container>Hello World</Container>;
}