Static Assets
In general, every website needs assets: images, stylesheets, favicons and etc. In such cases, you can create a directory named static
at the root of your project. Every file you put into that directory will be copied into the the root of the generated build
folder with the directory hierarchy preserved. E.g. if you add a file named sun.jpg
to the static folder, it’ll be copied to build/sun.jpg
.
This means that if the site's baseUrl
is /
, an image in /static/img/docusaurus_keytar.svg
is available at /img/docusaurus_keytar.svg
.
Referencing your static asset
You can reference assets from the static
folder in your code. You could use hardcoded absolute paths, i.e. starting with a slash /, but remember to include the baseUrl
if it is not /
. However, this will break if you change your baseUrl
in the config.
A better way would be to use the useBaseUrl
utility function which appends the baseUrl
to paths for you.
JSX example
You can also import SVG images, which will be transformed into React components.
Markdown example
Thanks to MDX, you can also use useBaseUrl
utility function in Markdown files! You'd have to use <img>
tags instead of the Markdown image syntax though. The syntax is exactly the same as in JSX.
You could also just use Markdown image syntax, but you would have to manually maintain the image paths yourself and isn't recommended.
Caveats
Keep in mind that:
- By default, none of the files in
static
folder will be post-processed or minified. - Missing files references via hardcoded absolute paths will not be detected at compilation time, and will result in a 404 error.
- By default, GitHub Pages runs published files through Jekyll. Since Jekyll will discard any files that begin with
_
, it is recommended that you disable Jekyll by adding an empty file named.nojekyll
file to yourstatic
directory if you are using GitHub pages for hosting.