styled-components-theme v1.0.5
styled-components-theme
styled-components-theme generates
selectors for colors in your
styled-components theme that allows
color manipulation, using the color library via calls on the
selectors themselves.
A selector, in this context, is defined as a function that looks like
(props) => props.theme.myColor that the styled-components library accepts as a template
variable.
Why?
styled-components is an awesome library, and their React context-based theming scheme is great,
but:
Having
${(props) => props.theme.highlight}functions all over your template literals to use any of your theme colors is both hard to read and cumbersome to type.In migrating from SASS and CSS Modules, I missed the ability to
lighten()ordarken()ortransparentize()a theme color at will to make subtle gradients or overlays.
Installation
Using npm:
$ npm install --save styled-components-themeUsing yarn:
$ yarn add styled-components-themeUsage
1) Define your theme colors
// colors.js
const colors = {
main: '#393276',
dark: '#0D083B',
light: '#837EB1'
}
export default colors2) Apply your theme with ThemeProvider
import { ThemeProvider } from 'styled-components';
import colors from './colors' // from Step #1
const App = props =>
<ThemeProvider theme={colors}>
{props.children}
</ThemeProvider>3) Create an importable theme object using styled-components-theme
// theme.js
import createTheme from 'styled-components-theme';
import colors from './colors' // from Step #1
const theme = createTheme(...Object.keys(colors))
export default theme4) Use the theme colors in your components
import styled from 'styled-components'
import theme from './theme' // from Step #3
const Header = styled.div`
background: ${theme.dark};
color: ${theme.light};
`
const Button = styled.button`
background-image: linear-gradient(${theme.light}, ${theme.light.darken(0.3));
color: ${theme.dark};
padding: 10px;
`Available manipulation functions
This library uses the color manipulation provided by the
color library.
theme.color.negate() // rgb(0, 100, 255) -> rgb(255, 155, 0)
theme.color.lighten(0.5) // hsl(100, 50%, 50%) -> hsl(100, 50%, 75%)
theme.color.darken(0.5) // hsl(100, 50%, 50%) -> hsl(100, 50%, 25%)
theme.color.saturate(0.5) // hsl(100, 50%, 50%) -> hsl(100, 75%, 50%)
theme.color.desaturate(0.5) // hsl(100, 50%, 50%) -> hsl(100, 25%, 50%)
theme.color.greyscale() // #5CBF54 -> #969696
theme.color.whiten(0.5) // hwb(100, 50%, 50%) -> hwb(100, 75%, 50%)
theme.color.blacken(0.5) // hwb(100, 50%, 50%) -> hwb(100, 50%, 75%)
theme.color.fade(0.5) // rgba(10, 10, 10, 0.8) -> rgba(10, 10, 10, 0.4)
theme.color.opaquer(0.5) // rgba(10, 10, 10, 0.8) -> rgba(10, 10, 10, 1.0)
theme.color.rotate(180) // hsl(60, 20%, 20%) -> hsl(240, 20%, 20%)
theme.color.rotate(-90) // hsl(60, 20%, 20%) -> hsl(330, 20%, 20%)FAQ
Why use color? Why not other color manipulation library?
Because color's manipulation methods were so influenced by SASS, LESS and
Stylus, they are already familiar to CSS coders.
Isn't Color mutable? Don't I need to clone()?
Yes, Color is mutable, but this library handles the cloning for you, so
you can chain the manipulation methods together to your heart's content
without mutating the original theme color. e.g.
theme.primary.saturate(0.3).lighten(0.2).fade(0.4).
The manipulation methods in styled-components-theme are immutable.
Made with ❤️ in 🇪🇸 by @erikras.
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