In Node, you never see path strings concatenated together like this. This is a minor detail in Node that I want you guys to see. But check it out: for the output path, they use some path.resolve() thing. ![]() ![]() Under the main Concepts page, they talk about this configuration file. If there is already a new version when you're going through this tutorial, don't worry too much: there's a good chance the changes are minimal. and new versions of Webpack tend to come out fast. ![]() ![]() Make sure you're here, and not on - that's the old website for the old version 1 of Webpack. Using the path moduleīefore we celebrate too much, head to webpack.js.org.
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