@material-ui/styles
You can use Material-UI's styling solution in your app, whether or not you are using Material-UI components.
Material-UI aims to provide a strong foundation for building dynamic UIs.
For the sake of simplicity, we expose the styling solution used in Material-UI components as the @material-ui/styles
package.
You can use it, but you don't have to, since Material-UI is also interoperable with all the other major styling solutions.
Why use Material-UI's styling solution?
In previous versions, Material-UI has used LESS, then a custom inline-style solution to write the component styles, but these approaches have proven to be limited. A CSS-in-JS solution overcomes many of those limitations, and unlocks many great features (theme nesting, dynamic styles, self-support, etc.).
Material-UI's styling solution is inspired by many other styling libraries such as styled-components and emotion.
- 💅 You can expect the same advantages as styled-components.
- 🚀 It's blazing fast.
- 🧩 It's extensible via a plugin API.
- ⚡️ It uses JSS at its core – a high performance JavaScript to CSS compiler which works at runtime and server-side.
- 📦 Less than 15 KB gzipped; and no bundle size increase if used alongside Material-UI.
Installation
To install and save in your package.json
dependencies, run:
// with npm
npm install @material-ui/styles
// with yarn
yarn add @material-ui/styles
Getting started
There are 3 possible APIs you can use to generate and apply styles, however they all share the same underlying logic.
Hook API
import React from 'react';
import { makeStyles } from '@material-ui/core/styles';
import Button from '@material-ui/core/Button';
const useStyles = makeStyles({
root: {
background: 'linear-gradient(45deg, #FE6B8B 30%, #FF8E53 90%)',
border: 0,
borderRadius: 3,
boxShadow: '0 3px 5px 2px rgba(255, 105, 135, .3)',
color: 'white',
height: 48,
padding: '0 30px',
},
});
export default function Hook() {
const classes = useStyles();
return <Button className={classes.root}>Hook</Button>;
}
Styled components API
Note: this only applies to the calling syntax – style definitions still use a JSS object. You can also change this behavior, with some limitations.
import React from 'react';
import { styled } from '@material-ui/core/styles';
import Button from '@material-ui/core/Button';
const MyButton = styled(Button)({
background: 'linear-gradient(45deg, #FE6B8B 30%, #FF8E53 90%)',
border: 0,
borderRadius: 3,
boxShadow: '0 3px 5px 2px rgba(255, 105, 135, .3)',
color: 'white',
height: 48,
padding: '0 30px',
});
export default function StyledComponents() {
return <MyButton>Styled Components</MyButton>;
}
Higher-order component API
import React from 'react';
import PropTypes from 'prop-types';
import { withStyles } from '@material-ui/core/styles';
import Button from '@material-ui/core/Button';
const styles = {
root: {
background: 'linear-gradient(45deg, #FE6B8B 30%, #FF8E53 90%)',
border: 0,
borderRadius: 3,
boxShadow: '0 3px 5px 2px rgba(255, 105, 135, .3)',
color: 'white',
height: 48,
padding: '0 30px',
},
};
function HigherOrderComponent(props) {
const { classes } = props;
return <Button className={classes.root}>Higher-order component</Button>;
}
HigherOrderComponent.propTypes = {
classes: PropTypes.object.isRequired,
};
export default withStyles(styles)(HigherOrderComponent);
Nesting selectors
You can nest selectors to target elements inside the current class or component. The following example uses the Hook API, but it works the same way with the other APIs.
const useStyles = makeStyles({
root: {
padding: 16,
color: 'red',
'& p': {
color: 'green',
'& span': {
color: 'blue'
}
}
},
});
This is green since it is inside the paragraph and this is blue since it is inside the span
<Paper className={classes.root}>
This is red since it is inside the paper.
<p>
This is green since it is inside the paragraph{' '}
<span>and this is blue since it is inside the span</span>
</p>
</Paper>
Adapting based on props
You can pass a function to makeStyles
("interpolation")
in order to adapt the generated value based on the component's props.
The function can be provided at the style rule level, or at the CSS property level:
const useStyles = makeStyles({
// style rule
foo: props => ({
backgroundColor: props.backgroundColor,
}),
bar: {
// CSS property
color: props => props.color,
},
});
function MyComponent() {
// Simulated props for the purpose of the example
const props = { backgroundColor: 'black', color: 'white' };
// Pass the props as the first argument of useStyles()
const classes = useStyles(props);
return <div className={`${classes.foo} ${classes.bar}`} />
}
This button component has a color property that changes its color:
Adapting the hook API
<React.Fragment>
<MyButton color="red">Red</MyButton>
<MyButton color="blue">Blue</MyButton>
</React.Fragment>
<React.Fragment>
<MyButton color="red">Red</MyButton>
<MyButton color="blue">Blue</MyButton>
</React.Fragment>
<React.Fragment>
<MyButton color="red">Red</MyButton>
<MyButton color="blue">Blue</MyButton>
</React.Fragment>
Stress test
In the following stress test, you can update the theme color and the background-color property live:
const useStyles = makeStyles(theme => ({
root: props => ({
backgroundColor: props.backgroundColor,
color: theme.color,
}),
}));
@material-ui/core/styles vs @material-ui/styles
Material-UI's styles are powered by the @material-ui/styles package, (built with JSS). This solution is isolated. It doesn't have a default theme, and can be used to style React applications that are not using Material-UI components.
To reduce the number of packages to install when using Material-UI, and to simplify the imports, @material-ui/styles
modules are re-exported from @material-ui/core/styles
.
To remove the need to systematically supply a theme, the default Material-UI theme is applied to the re-exported makeStyles
, styled
, withTheme
, useTheme
, and withStyles
modules.
For instance:
// Re-export with a default theme
import { makeStyles } from '@material-ui/core/styles';
// Original module with no default theme
import { makeStyles } from '@material-ui/styles';