Emotion is our default-to-be approach to styling React components. It provides a way for styles to be a consequence of properties and state of a component.
For styling components use Emotion's css
function
import { css } from 'emotion';
const ComponentA = () => {
return (
<div className={css`background: red;`}>
As red as you can ge
</div>
);
}
In more complex cases, especially when you need to style multiple DOM elements in one component or when your styles that depend on properties and/or state, you should create a helper function that returns an object with desired stylesheet. This function should also be wrapped in stylesFactory
helper function that will provide basic memoization.
Let's say you need to style a component that has different background depending on the theme:
import { css, cx } from 'emotion';
import { GrafanaTheme, useTheme, selectThemeVariant, stylesFactory } from '@grafana/ui';
const getStyles = stylesFactory((theme: GrafanaTheme) => {
const backgroundColor = selectThemeVariant({ light: theme.colors.red, dark: theme.colors.blue }, theme.type);
return {
wrapper: css`
background: ${backgroundColor};
`,
icon: css`font-size:${theme.typography.size.sm}`;
};
}
const ComponentA = () => {
const theme = useTheme();
const styles = getStyles(theme);
return (
<div className={styles.wrapper}>
As red as you can get
<i className={styles.icon} />
</div>
);
});
For more information about themes at Grafana please see themes guide
For class composition use Emotion's cx
function
import { css, cx } from 'emotion';
interface Props {
className?: string;
}
const ComponentA: React.FC<Props> = ({ className }) => {
const finalClassName = cx(
className,
css`background: red`,
)
return (
<div className={finalClassName}>
As red as you can ge
</div>
);
}