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API

The API reference of @material-ui/core/styles.

createGenerateClassName([options]) => class name generator

A function which returns a class name generator function.

Arguments

  1. options (Object [optional]):
    • options.disableGlobal (Boolean [optional]): Defaults to false. Disable the generation of deterministic class names.
    • options.productionPrefix (String [optional]): Defaults to 'jss'. The string used to prefix the class names in production.
    • options.seed (String [optional]): Defaults to ''. The string used to uniquely identify the generator. It can be used to avoid class name collisions when using multiple generators in the same document.

Returns

class name generator: The generator should be provided to JSS.

Examples

import React from 'react';
import { StylesProvider, createGenerateClassName } from '@material-ui/core/styles';

const generateClassName = createGenerateClassName({
  productionPrefix: 'c',
});

export default function App() {
  return (
    <StylesProvider generateClassName={generateClassName}>...</StylesProvider>
  );
}

createStyles(styles) => styles

This function doesn't really "do anything" at runtime, it's just the identity function. Its only purpose is to defeat TypeScript's type widening when providing style rules to makeStyles/withStyles which are a function of the Theme.

Arguments

  1. styles (Function | Object): A function generating the styles or a styles object.

Returns

styles: A function generating the styles or a styles object.

Examples

import { makeStyles, createStyles } from '@material-ui/core/styles';

const useStyles = makeStyles((theme: Theme) => createStyles({
  root: {
    backgroundColor: theme.color.red,
  },
}));

export default function MyComponent {
  const classes = useStyles();
  return <div className={classes.root} />;
}

makeStyles(styles, [options]) => hook

Link a style sheet with a function component using the hook pattern.

Arguments

  1. styles (Function | Object): A function generating the styles or a styles object. It will be linked to the component. Use the function signature if you need to have access to the theme. It's provided as the first argument.
  2. options (Object [optional]):
    • options.defaultTheme (Object [optional]): The default theme to use if a theme isn't supplied through a Theme Provider.
    • options.name (String [optional]): The name of the style sheet. Useful for debugging. If the value isn't provided, it will try to fallback to the name of the component.
    • options.flip (Boolean [optional]): When set to false, this sheet will opt-out the rtl transformation. When set to true, the styles are inversed. When set to null, it follows theme.direction.
    • The other keys are forwarded to the options argument of jss.createStyleSheet([styles], [options]).

Returns

hook: A hook. This hook can be used in a function component. The documentation often calls this returned hook useStyles. It accepts one argument: the properties that will be used for "interpolation" in the style sheet.

Examples

import React from 'react';
import { makeStyles } from '@material-ui/core/styles';

const useStyles = makeStyles({
  root: {
    backgroundColor: 'red',
    color: props => props.color,
  },
});

export default function MyComponent(props) {
  const classes = useStyles(props);
  return <div className={classes.root} />;
}

ServerStyleSheets

This is a class helper to handle server-side rendering. You can follow this guide for a practical approach.

import ReactDOMServer from 'react-dom/server';
import { ServerStyleSheets } from '@material-ui/core/styles';

const sheets = new ServerStyleSheets();
const html = ReactDOMServer.renderToString(sheets.collect(<App />));
const cssString = sheets.toString();

const response = `
<!DOCTYPE html>
<html>
  <head>
    <style id="jss-server-side">${cssString}</style>
  </head>
  <body>${html}</body>
</html>
`;

new ServerStyleSheets([options])

The instantiation accepts an options object as a first argument.

  1. options (Object [optional]): The options are spread as props to the StylesProvider component.

sheets.collect(node) => React element

The method wraps your React node in a provider element. It collects the style sheets during the rendering so they can be later sent to the client.

sheets.toString() => CSS string

The method returns the collected styles.

⚠️ You must call .collect() before using this method.

sheets.getStyleElement() => CSS React element

The method is an alternative to .toString() when you are rendering the whole page with React.

⚠️ You must call .collect() before using this method.

styled(Component)(styles, [options]) => Component

Link a style sheet with a function component using the styled components pattern.

Arguments

  1. Component: The component that will be wrapped.
  2. styles (Function | Object): A function generating the styles or a styles object. It will be linked to the component. Use the function signature if you need to have access to the theme. It's provided as property of the first argument.
  3. options (Object [optional]):
    • options.defaultTheme (Object [optional]): The default theme to use if a theme isn't supplied through a Theme Provider.
    • options.withTheme (Boolean [optional]): Defaults to false. Provide the theme object to the component as a property.
    • options.name (String [optional]): The name of the style sheet. Useful for debugging. If the value isn't provided, it will try to fallback to the name of the component.
    • options.flip (Boolean [optional]): When set to false, this sheet will opt-out the rtl transformation. When set to true, the styles are inversed. When set to null, it follows theme.direction.
    • The other keys are forwarded to the options argument of jss.createStyleSheet([styles], [options]).

Returns

Component: The new component created.

Examples

import React from 'react';
import { styled } from '@material-ui/core/styles';

const MyComponent = styled('div')({
  backgroundColor: 'red',
});

const MyThemeComponent = styled('div')(({
  theme
}) => ({
  padding: theme.spacing(1),
}));

export default function StyledComponents() {
  return (
    <MyThemeComponent>
      <MyComponent />
    </MyThemeComponent>
  );
}

StylesProvider

This component allows you to change the behavior of the styling solution. It makes the options available down the React tree thanks to the context.

It should preferably be used at the root of your component tree.

Props

Name Type Default Description
children * node Your component tree.
disableGeneration bool false You can disable the generation of the styles with this option. It can be useful when traversing the React tree outside of the HTML rendering step on the server. Let's say you are using react-apollo to extract all the queries made by the interface server-side. You can significantly speed up the traversal with this property.
generateClassName func JSS's class name generator.
injectFirst bool false By default, the styles are injected last in the element of the page. As a result, they gain more specificity than any other style sheet. If you want to override Material-UI's styles, set this prop.
jss object JSS's instance.

Examples

import React from 'react';
import ReactDOM from 'react-dom';
import { StylesProvider } from '@material-ui/core/styles';

function App() {
  return (
    <StylesProvider jss={jss}>...</StylesProvider>
  );
}

ReactDOM.render(<App />, document.querySelector('#app'));

ThemeProvider

This component takes a theme property, and makes it available down the React tree thanks to the context. It should preferably be used at the root of your component tree.

Props

Name Type Default Description
children * node Your component tree.
theme * union: object | func A theme object. You can provide a function to extend the outer theme.

Examples

import React from 'react';
import ReactDOM from 'react-dom';
import { ThemeProvider } from '@material-ui/core/styles';

const theme = {};

function App() {
  return (
    <ThemeProvider theme={theme}>...</ThemeProvider>
  );
}

ReactDOM.render(<App />, document.querySelector('#app'));

useTheme() => theme

This hook returns the theme object so it can be used inside a function component.

Returns

theme: The theme object previously injected in the context.

Examples

import React from 'react';
import { useTheme } from '@material-ui/core/styles';

export default function MyComponent() {
  const theme = useTheme();

  return <div>{`spacing ${theme.spacing}`}</div>;
}

withStyles(styles, [options]) => higher-order component

Link a style sheet with a component using the higher-order component pattern. It does not modify the component passed to it; instead, it returns a new component with a classes property. This classes object contains the name of the class names injected in the DOM.

Some implementation details that might be interesting to being aware of:

  • It adds a classes property so you can override the injected class names from the outside.
  • It forwards refs to the inner component.
  • The innerRef prop is deprecated. Use ref instead.
  • It does not copy over statics. For instance, it can be used to defined a getInitialProps() static method (next.js).

Arguments

  1. styles (Function | Object): A function generating the styles or a styles object. It will be linked to the component. Use the function signature if you need to have access to the theme. It's provided as the first argument.
  2. options (Object [optional]):
    • options.defaultTheme (Object [optional]): The default theme to use if a theme isn't supplied through a Theme Provider.
    • options.withTheme (Boolean [optional]): Defaults to false. Provide the theme object to the component as a property.
    • options.name (String [optional]): The name of the style sheet. Useful for debugging. If the value isn't provided, it will try to fallback to the name of the component.
    • options.flip (Boolean [optional]): When set to false, this sheet will opt-out the rtl transformation. When set to true, the styles are inversed. When set to null, it follows theme.direction.
    • The other keys are forwarded to the options argument of jss.createStyleSheet([styles], [options]).

Returns

higher-order component: Should be used to wrap a component.

Examples

import React from 'react';
import { withStyles } from '@material-ui/core/styles';

const styles = {
  root: {
    backgroundColor: 'red',
  },
};

function MyComponent(props) {
  return <div className={props.classes.root} />;
}

export default withStyles(styles)(MyComponent);

Also, you can use as decorators like so:

import React from 'react';
import { withStyles } from '@material-ui/core/styles';

const styles = {
  root: {
    backgroundColor: 'red',
  },
};

@withStyles(styles)
class MyComponent extends React.Component {
  render () {
    return <div className={this.props.classes.root} />;
  }
}

export default MyComponent

withTheme(Component) => Component

Provide the theme object as a property of the input component so it can be used in the render method.

Arguments

  1. Component: The component that will be wrapped.

Returns

Component: The new component created. Does forward refs to the inner component.

Examples

import React from 'react';
import { withTheme } from '@material-ui/core/styles';

function MyComponent(props) {
  return <div>{props.theme.direction}</div>;
}

export default withTheme(MyComponent);