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Imports reference

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Astro supports most static assets with zero configuration required. You can use the import statement anywhere in your project JavaScript (including your Astro frontmatter) and Astro will include a built, optimized copy of that static asset in your final build. @import is also supported inside of CSS & <style> tags.

The following file types are supported out-of-the-box by Astro:

  • Astro Components (.astro)
  • Markdown (.md, .markdown, etc.)
  • JavaScript (.js, .mjs)
  • TypeScript (.ts)
  • NPM Packages
  • JSON (.json)
  • CSS (.css)
  • CSS Modules (.module.css)
  • Images & Assets (.svg, .jpg, .png, etc.)

Additionally, you can extend Astro to add support for different UI Frameworks like React, Svelte and Vue components. You can also install the Astro MDX integration or the Astro Markdoc integration to use .mdx or .mdoc files in your project.

You can place any static asset in the public/ directory of your project, and Astro will copy it directly into your final build untouched. public/ files are not built or bundled by Astro, which means that any type of file is supported.

You can reference a public/ file by a URL path directly in your HTML templates.

// To link to /public/reports/annual/2024.pdf
Download the <a href="/reports/annual/2024.pdf">2024 annual statement as a PDF</a>.
// To display /public/assets/cats/ginger.jpg
<img src="/assets/cats/ginger.jpg" alt="An orange cat sleeping on a bed.">

Astro uses ESM, the same import and export syntax supported in the browser.

import { getUser } from './user.js';

JavaScript can be imported using normal ESM import & export syntax.

import { getUser } from './user';
import type { UserType } from './user';

Astro includes built-in support for TypeScript. You can import .ts and .tsx files directly in your Astro project, and even write TypeScript code directly inside your Astro component script and any script tags.

Astro doesn’t perform any type checking itself. Type checking should be taken care of outside of Astro, either by your IDE or through a separate script. For type checking Astro files, the astro check command is provided.

Read more about TypeScript support in Astro.

If you’ve installed an NPM package, you can import it in Astro.

---
import { Icon } from 'astro-icon';
---

If a package was published using a legacy format, Astro will try to convert the package to ESM so that import statements work. In some cases, you may need to adjust your vite config for it to work.

// Load the JSON object via the default export
import json from './data.json';

Astro supports importing JSON files directly into your application. Imported files return the full JSON object in the default import.

// Load and inject 'style.css' onto the page
import './style.css';

Astro supports importing CSS files directly into your application. Imported styles expose no exports, but importing one will automatically add those styles to the page. This works for all CSS files by default, and can support compile-to-CSS languages like Sass & Less via plugins.

Read more about advanced CSS import use cases such as a direct URL reference for a CSS file, or importing CSS as a string in the Styling guide.
// 1. Converts './style.module.css' classnames to unique, scoped values.
// 2. Returns an object mapping the original classnames to their final, scoped value.
import styles from './style.module.css';
// This example uses JSX, but you can use CSS Modules with any framework.
return <div className={styles.error}>Your Error Message</div>;

Astro supports CSS Modules using the [name].module.css naming convention. Like any CSS file, importing one will automatically apply that CSS to the page. However, CSS Modules export a special default styles object that maps your original classnames to unique identifiers.

CSS Modules help you enforce component scoping & isolation on the frontend with uniquely-generated class names for your stylesheets.

import imgReference from './image.png'; // imgReference === '/src/image.png'
import svgReference from './image.svg'; // svgReference === '/src/image.svg'
import txtReference from './words.txt'; // txtReference === '/src/words.txt'
// This example uses JSX, but you can use import references with any framework.
<img src={imgReference.src} alt="image description" />;

All other assets not explicitly mentioned above can be imported via ESM import and will return a URL reference to the final built asset. This can be useful for referencing non-JS assets by URL, like creating an image element with a src attribute pointing to that image.

It can also be useful to place images in the public/ folder as explained on the project-structure page.

Read more about appending Vite import parameters (e.g. ?url, ?raw) in Vite’s static asset handling guide.

An alias is a way to create shortcuts for your imports.

Aliases can help improve the development experience in codebases with many directories or relative imports.

src/pages/about/company.astro
---
import Button from '../../components/controls/Button.astro';
import logoUrl from '../../assets/logo.png?url';
---

In this example, a developer would need to understand the tree relationship between src/pages/about/company.astro, src/components/controls/Button.astro, and src/assets/logo.png. And then, if the company.astro file were to be moved, these imports would also need to be updated.

You can add import aliases in tsconfig.json.

tsconfig.json
{
"compilerOptions": {
"baseUrl": ".",
"paths": {
"@components/*": ["src/components/*"],
"@assets/*": ["src/assets/*"]
}
}
}

The development server will automatically restart after this configuration change. You can now import using the aliases anywhere in your project:

src/pages/about/company.astro
---
import Button from '@components/controls/Button.astro';
import logoUrl from '@assets/logo.png?url';
---

These aliases are also integrated automatically into VS Code and other editors.

Vite’s import.meta.glob() is a way to import many files at once using glob patterns to find matching file paths.

import.meta.glob() takes a relative glob pattern matching the local files you’d like to import as a parameter. It returns an array of each matching file’s exports. To load all matched modules up front, pass { eager: true } as the second argument:

src/components/my-component.astro
---
// imports all files that end with `.md` in `./src/pages/post/`
const matches = import.meta.glob('../pages/post/*.md', { eager: true });
const posts = Object.values(matches);
---
<!-- Renders an <article> for the first 5 blog posts -->
<div>
{posts.slice(0, 4).map((post) => (
<article>
<h2>{post.frontmatter.title}</h2>
<p>{post.frontmatter.description}</p>
<a href={post.url}>Read more</a>
</article>
))}
</div>

Astro components imported using import.meta.glob are of type AstroInstance. You can render each component instance using its default property:

src/pages/component-library.astro
---
// imports all files that end with `.astro` in `./src/components/`
const components = Object.values(import.meta.glob('../components/*.astro', { eager: true }));
---
<!-- Display all of our components -->
{components.map((component) => (
<div>
<component.default size={24} />
</div>
))}

Vite’s import.meta.glob() function only supports static string literals. It does not support dynamic variables and string interpolation.

A common workaround is to instead import a larger set of files that includes all the files you need, then filter them:

src/components/featured.astro
---
const { postSlug } = Astro.props;
const pathToMyFeaturedPost = `src/pages/blog/${postSlug}.md`;
const posts = Object.values(import.meta.glob("../pages/blog/*.md", { eager: true }));
const myFeaturedPost = posts.find(post => post.file.includes(pathToMyFeaturedPost));
---
<p>
Take a look at my favorite post, <a href={myFeaturedPost.url}>{myFeaturedPost.frontmatter.title}</a>!
</p>

Markdown files loaded with import.meta.glob() return the following MarkdownInstance interface:

export interface MarkdownInstance<T extends Record<string, any>> {
/* Any data specified in this file's YAML frontmatter */
frontmatter: T;
/* The absolute file path of this file */
file: string;
/* The rendered path of this file */
url: string | undefined;
/* Astro Component that renders the contents of this file */
Content: AstroComponentFactory;
/** (Markdown only) Raw Markdown file content, excluding layout HTML and YAML frontmatter */
rawContent(): string;
/** (Markdown only) Markdown file compiled to HTML, excluding layout HTML */
compiledContent(): string;
/* Function that returns an array of the h1...h6 elements in this file */
getHeadings(): Promise<{ depth: number; slug: string; text: string }[]>;
default: AstroComponentFactory;
}

You can optionally provide a type for the frontmatter variable using a TypeScript generic.

---
import type { MarkdownInstance } from 'astro';
interface Frontmatter {
title: string;
description?: string;
}
const posts = Object.values(import.meta.glob<MarkdownInstance<Frontmatter>>('./posts/**/*.md', { eager: true }));
---
<ul>
{posts.map(post => <li>{post.frontmatter.title}</li>)}
</ul>

Astro files have the following interface:

export interface AstroInstance {
/* The file path of this file */
file: string;
/* The URL for this file (if it is in the pages directory) */
url: string | undefined;
default: AstroComponentFactory;
}

Other files may have various different interfaces, but import.meta.glob() accepts a TypeScript generic if you know exactly what an unrecognized file type contains.

---
interface CustomDataFile {
default: Record<string, any>;
}
const data = import.meta.glob<CustomDataFile>('../data/**/*.js');
---

A glob pattern is a file path that supports special wildcard characters. This is used to reference multiple files in your project at once.

For example, the glob pattern ./pages/**/*.{md,mdx} starts within the pages subdirectory, looks through all of its subdirectories (/**), and matches any filename (/*) that ends in either .md or .mdx (.{md,mdx}).

To use with import.meta.glob(), the glob pattern must be a string literal and cannot contain any variables.

Additionally, glob patterns must begin with one of the following:

  • ./ (to start in the current directory)
  • ../ (to start in the parent directory)
  • / (to start at the root of the project)

Read more about the glob pattern syntax.

import.meta.glob() vs getCollection()

Section titled import.meta.glob() vs getCollection()

Content collections provide a getCollection() API for loading multiple files instead of import.meta.glob(). If your content files (e.g. Markdown, MDX, Markdoc) are located in collections within the src/content/ directory, use getCollection() to query a collection and return content entries.

// Loads and initializes the requested WASM file
const wasm = await WebAssembly.instantiateStreaming(fetch('/example.wasm'));

Astro supports loading WASM files directly into your application using the browser’s WebAssembly API.

We encourage Astro users to avoid Node.js builtins (fs, path, etc.) whenever possible. Astro is compatible with multiple runtimes using adapters. This includes Deno and Cloudflare Workers which do not support Node builtin modules such as fs.

Our aim is to provide Astro alternatives to common Node.js builtins. However, no such alternatives exist today. So, if you really need to use these builtin modules we don’t want to stop you. Astro supports Node.js builtins using Node’s newer node: prefix. If you want to read a file, for example, you can do so like this:

src/components/MyComponent.astro
---
// Example: import the "fs/promises" builtin from Node.js
import fs from 'node:fs/promises';
const url = new URL('../../package.json', import.meta.url);
const json = await fs.readFile(url, 'utf-8');
const data = JSON.parse(json);
---
<span>Version: {data.version}</span>

With Vite and compatible Rollup plugins, you can import file types which aren’t natively supported by Astro. Learn where to find the plugins you need in the Finding Plugins section of the Vite Documentation.

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