Use CSS-in-JavaScript for your React components without being tightly coupled to one implementation (e.g. Aphrodite, Radium, or React Native). Easily access shared theme information (e.g. colors, fonts) when defining your styles.
- eslint-plugin-react-with-styles: ESLint plugin for react-with-styles.
Create a module that exports an object with shared theme information like colors.
export default {
color: {
primary: '#FF5A5F',
secondary: '#00A699',
},
};
Register your theme and interface. For example, if your theme is exported by MyTheme.js
, and you want to use Aphrodite, you can set this up in your own withStyles.js
file.
import ThemedStyleSheet from 'react-with-styles/lib/ThemedStyleSheet';
import aphroditeInterface from 'react-with-styles-interface-aphrodite';
import { css, withStyles } from 'react-with-styles';
import MyTheme from './MyTheme';
ThemedStyleSheet.registerTheme(MyTheme);
ThemedStyleSheet.registerInterface(aphroditeInterface);
export { css, withStyles, ThemedStyleSheet };
It is convenient to pass through css
and withStyles
from react-with-styles
here so that everywhere you use them you can be assured that the theme and interface have been registered. You could likely also set this up as an initializer that is added to the top of your bundles and then use react-with-styles
directly in your components.
In your component, from our withStyles.js
file above, use withStyles()
to define styles and css()
to consume them.
import React from 'react';
import PropTypes from 'prop-types';
import { css, withStyles } from './withStyles';
function MyComponent({ styles }) {
return (
<div>
<a
href="/somewhere"
{...css(styles.firstLink)}
>
A link to somewhere
</a>
{' '}
and
{' '}
<a
href="/somewhere-else"
{...css(styles.secondLink)}
>
a link to somewhere else
</a>
</div>
);
}
MyComponent.propTypes = {
styles: PropTypes.object.isRequired,
};
export default withStyles(({ color }) => ({
firstLink: {
color: color.primary,
},
secondLink: {
color: color.secondary,
},
}))(MyComponent);
Registers themes and interfaces.
Registers the theme. theme
is an object with properties that you want to be made available when styling your components.
import ThemedStyleSheet from 'react-with-styles/lib/ThemedStyleSheet';
ThemedStyleSheet.registerTheme({
color: {
primary: '#FF5A5F',
secondary: '#00A699',
},
});
Instructs react-with-styles how to process your styles.
import ThemedStyleSheet from 'react-with-styles/lib/ThemedStyleSheet';
import aphroditeInterface from 'react-with-styles-interface-aphrodite';
ThemedStyleSheet.registerInterface(aphroditeInterface);
This is a higher-order function that returns a higher-order component used to wrap React components to add styles using the theme. We use this to make themed styles easier to work with.
stylesThunk
will receive the theme as an argument, and it should return an object containing the styles for the component.
The wrapped component will receive a styles
prop containing the processed styles for this component and a theme
prop with the theme object. Most of the time you will only need the styles
prop. Reliance on the theme
prop should be minimized.
import React from 'react';
import { css, withStyles } from './withStyles';
function MyComponent({ styles }) {
return (
<div {...css(styles.container)}>
Try to be a rainbow in someone's cloud.
</div>
);
}
export default withStyles(({ color, unit }) => ({
container: {
color: color.primary,
marginBottom: 2 * unit,
},
}))(MyComponent);
Or, as a decorator:
import React from 'react';
import { css, withStyles } from './withStyles';
@withStyles(({ color, unit }) => ({
container: {
color: color.primary,
marginBottom: 2 * unit,
},
}))
export default function MyComponent({ styles }) {
return (
<div {...css(styles.container)}>
Try to be a rainbow in someone's cloud.
</div>
);
}
By default withStyles()
will create a component that extends React.Component
. If you want to apply the shouldComponentUpdate()
optimization offered by React.PureComponent
, you can set the pureComponent
option to true
. Note that React.PureComponent
was introduced in React 15.3.0, so this will only work if you are using that version or later.
By default, withStyles()
will pass down the styles to the wrapped component in the styles
prop, but the name of this prop can be customized by setting the stylesPropName
option. This is useful if you already have a prop called styles
and aren't able to change it.
import React from 'react';
import { css, withStyles } from './withStyles';
function MyComponent({ withStylesStyles }) {
return (
<div {...css(withStylesStyles.container)}>
Try to be a rainbow in someone's cloud.
</div>
);
}
export default withStyles(({ color, unit }) => ({
container: {
color: color.primary,
marginBottom: 2 * unit,
},
}), { stylesPropName: 'withStylesStyles' })(MyComponent);
Likewise, the theme prop name can also be customized by setting the themePropName
option.
import React from 'react';
import { css, withStyles } from './withStyles';
function MyComponent({ styles, withStylesTheme }) {
return (
<div {...css(styles.container)}>
<Background color={withStylesTheme.color.primary}>
Try to be a rainbow in someone's cloud.
</Background>
</div>
);
}
export default withStyles(({ color, unit }) => ({
container: {
color: color.primary,
marginBottom: 2 * unit,
},
}), { themePropName: 'withStylesTheme' })(MyComponent);
Some components depend on previous styles to be ready in the component tree when mounting (e.g. dimension calculations). Some interfaces add styles to the page asynchronously, which is an obstacle for this. So, we provide the option of flushing the buffered styles before the rendering cycle begins. It is up to the interface to define what this means.
This function takes styles that were processed by withStyles()
, plain objects, or arrays of these things. It returns an object with an opaque structure that must be spread into a JSX element.
import React from 'react';
import { css, withStyles } from './withStyles';
function MyComponent({ bold, padding, styles }) {
return (
<div {...css(styles.container, { padding })}>
Try to be a rainbow in{' '}
<a
href="/somewhere"
{...css(styles.link, bold && styles.link_bold)}
>
someone's cloud
</a>
</div>
);
}
export default withStyles(({ color, unit }) => ({
container: {
color: color.primary,
marginBottom: 2 * unit,
},
link: {
color: color.secondary,
},
link_bold: {
fontWeight: 700,
},
}))(MyComponent);
className
and style
props must not be used on the same elements as css()
.
React Router's <Link/>
and <IndexLink/>
components accept activeClassName='...'
and activeStyle={{...}}
as props. As previously stated, css(...styles)
must spread to JSX, so simply passing styles.thing
or even css(styles.thing)
directly will not work. In order to mimic activeClassName
/activeStyles
you can use React Router's withRouter()
Higher Order Component to pass router
as prop to your component and toggle styles based on router.isActive(pathOrLoc, indexOnly)
. This works because <Link />
passes down the generated className
from css(..styles)
down through to the final leaf.
import React from 'react';
import { withRouter, Link } from 'react-router';
import { css, withStyles } from '../withStyles';
function Nav({ router, styles }) {
return (
<div {...css(styles.container)}>
<Link
to="/"
{...css(styles.link, router.isActive('/', true) && styles.link_bold)}
>
home
</Link>
<Link
to="/somewhere"
{...css(styles.link, router.isActive('/somewhere', true) && styles.link_bold)}
>
somewhere
</Link>
</div>
);
}
export default withRouter(withStyles(({ color, unit }) => ({
container: {
color: color.primary,
marginBottom: 2 * unit,
},
link: {
color: color.primary,
},
link_bold: {
fontWeight: 700,
}
}))(Nav));