README.md in jsbundling-rails-0.2.1 vs README.md in jsbundling-rails-0.2.2

- old
+ new

@@ -36,10 +36,10 @@ The default build script for esbuild relies on the `app/javascript/*.*` glob pattern to compile multiple entrypoints automatically. This glob pattern is not available by default on Windows, so you need to change the build script in `package.json` to manually list the entrypoints you wish to compile. ## Why does esbuild overwrite my application.css? -If you [import CSS](https://esbuild.github.io/content-types/#css-from-js) in your application.js while using esbuild, you'll be creating both an `app/assets/builds/application.js` _and_ `app/assets/builds/application.css` file when bundling. The latter can conflict with the `app/assets/builds/application.js` produced by [cssbundling-rails](https://github.com/rails/cssbundling-rails). The solution is to either change the output file for esbuild (and the references for that) or for cssbundling. Both are specified in `package.json`. +If you [import CSS](https://esbuild.github.io/content-types/#css-from-js) in your application.js while using esbuild, you'll be creating both an `app/assets/builds/application.js` _and_ `app/assets/builds/application.css` file when bundling. The latter can conflict with the `app/assets/builds/application.css` produced by [cssbundling-rails](https://github.com/rails/cssbundling-rails). The solution is to either change the output file for esbuild (and the references for that) or for cssbundling. Both are specified in `package.json`. ## License JavaScript Bundling for Rails is released under the [MIT License](https://opensource.org/licenses/MIT).