Motivation
I always wondered, if you can get a working solution for css-in-js with a smaller footprint. I started a project and wanted a to use styled-components. Looking at their sizes, it seems that I would rather not include ~16kB(styled-components) or ~11kB(emotion) just so I can use the styled
paradigm. So, I embarked in a mission to create a smaller alternative for these well established apis.
Usage
The API is inspired by emotion, styled
function. Meaning, you call it with your tagName
and returns a vDOM component for that tag. Note, setPragma
is needed to be run before the styled
function is used.
import { h } from "preact";
import { styled, setPragma } from "goober";
// Should be called here, and just once
setPragma(h);
const Icon = styled("i")`
display: flex;
flex: 1;
color: red;
`;
const Button = styled("button")`
background: dodgerblue;
color: white;
border: ${Math.random()}px solid white;
&:focus,
&:hover {
padding: 1em;
}
.otherClass {
margin: 0;
}
${Icon} {
color: black;
}
`;
Examples
SSR
You can get the critical CSS for SSR, via extractCss
. Take a look at this example: CodeSandbox: SSR with Preact and goober and read the full explanation for extractCSS
and targets
below.
API
As you can see it supports most of the syntaxes of CSS. If you find any issues, please submit a ticket or even a PR with a fix.
styled(tagName)
@param {String} tagName
The name of the dom element you'd like the styled to be applied to@returns {Function}
Returns the tag template function.
import { styled } from "goober";
const Btn = styled("button")`
border-radius: 4px;
`;
setPragma(pragma: Function)
Given the fact that react
uses createElement
for the transformed elements and preact
uses h
, setPragma
should be called with the proper pragma function. This was added to reduce the bundled size and being able to bundle esmodule version. At the moment I think it's the best tradeoff we can have.
import React from "react";
import { setPragma } from "goober";
setPragma(React.createElement);
css(taggedTemplate)
@returns {Function}
Returns the tag template function.
Same as styled
but without the tagName and vNode generation. In the end the output will be a className.
import { css } from "goober";
const BtnClassName = css`
border-radius: 4px;
`();
// (!) Note the empty param at the end. If you wanna use `props` throughout the syntax this is the place to put them
const btn = document.querySelector("#btn");
btn.classList.add(BtnClassName);
targets
By default, goober will append a style tag to the <head>
of a document. You might want to target a different node, for instance, when you want to use goober with web components (so you'd want it to append style tags to individual shadowRoots). For this purpose, you can .bind
a new target to the styled
and css
methods:
import * as goober from "goober";
const target = document.getElementById('target');
const css = goober.css.bind({target: target});
const styled = goober.styled.bind({target: target});
If you don't provide a target, goober always defaults to <head>
and in environments without a DOM (think certain SSR solutions), it will just use a plain string cache to store generated styles which you can extract with extractCSS
(see below).
extractCss(target?)
@returns {String}
Returns the <style>
tag that is rendered in a target and clears the style sheet. Defaults to <head>
.
const { extractCss } = require("goober");
// After your app has rendered, just call it:
const styleTag = extractCss();
glob
To create a global style, you need to call glob
with your global tagged template. Usually here's a good idea to place document wide styles.
import { glob } from "goober";
glob`
html,
body {
background: light;
}
* {
box-sizing: border-box;
}
`;
Features
- Basic CSS parsing
- Nested rules with pseudo selectors
- Nested styled components
- Media queries (@media)
- Keyframes (@keyframes)
- Smart(lazy) client-side hydration
- Vanilla(via
css
function) -
globalStyle
(viaglob
) so one would be able to create global styles - target/extract from elements other than
<head>
- Vendor prefixing
Browser support
goober
uses microbundle to bundle and transpile it's src into code that browsers can leverage. As you might figure it out, until now, Internet Explorer was the buggiest of them all. goober
works on IE9, as we've successfully test it.
IE 9
iOS 9.3
Chrome 42
FF 34
Safari 9
Contributing
Feel free to try it out and checkout the examples. If you wanna fix something feel free to open a issue or a PR.