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@emotion/css

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    @emotion/css

The Next Generation of CSS-in-JS.


Version published
Weekly downloads
2.7M
decreased by-3.59%
Maintainers
4
Install size
6.39 MB
Created
Weekly downloads
 

Package description

What is @emotion/css?

The @emotion/css package is a powerful library for writing CSS styles in JavaScript. It allows developers to style their applications efficiently with JavaScript and leverage the full power of CSS in their applications. It supports dynamic styling, which is particularly useful for theming, adjusting styles based on props, and more.

What are @emotion/css's main functionalities?

Basic Styling

This feature allows you to create basic CSS styles using template literals. The styles are then compiled into class names that can be applied to your components.

import { css } from '@emotion/css';

const className = css`
  color: hotpink;
  font-size: 20px;
`;

Dynamic Styling

Dynamic styling enables the creation of styles that can change based on inputs, such as props in a component. This is useful for theming or any situation where styles need to change based on user input or application state.

import { css } from '@emotion/css';

const dynamicStyle = (color) => css`
  color: ${color};
  font-size: 20px;
`;

Composition

Composition allows you to build complex styles by combining multiple simple ones. This promotes reusability and modularity in your style definitions.

import { css } from '@emotion/css';

const base = css`color: darkgray;`;
const override = css`
  ${base};
  font-size: 16px;
`;

Other packages similar to @emotion/css

Readme

Source

@emotion/css

The @emotion/css package is framework agnostic and the simplest way to use Emotion.

Table of Contents

Quick Start

Get up and running with a single import.

npm install --save @emotion/css
import { css } from '@emotion/css'

const app = document.getElementById('root')
const myStyle = css`
  color: rebeccapurple;
`
app.classList.add(myStyle)

API

css

The css function accepts styles as a template literal, object, or array of objects and returns a class name. It is the foundation of emotion.

String Styles
// @live
import { css } from '@emotion/css'

const color = 'darkgreen'

render(
  <div
    className={css`
      background-color: hotpink;
      &:hover {
        color: ${color};
      }
    `}
  >
    This has a hotpink background.
  </div>
)
Object Styles
// @live
import { css } from '@emotion/css'

const color = 'darkgreen'

render(
  <div
    className={css({
      backgroundColor: 'hotpink',
      '&:hover': {
        color
      }
    })}
  >
    This has a hotpink background.
  </div>
)
Array of Object Styles
// @live
import { css } from '@emotion/css'

const color = 'darkgreen'
const isDanger = true

render(
  <div
    className={css([
      {
        backgroundColor: 'hotpink',
        '&:hover': {
          color
        }
      },
      isDanger && {
        color: 'red'
      }
    ])}
  >
    This has a hotpink background.
  </div>
)

Global Styles

injectGlobal injects styles into the global scope and is useful for applications such as css resets or font faces.

import { injectGlobal } from '@emotion/css'

injectGlobal`
  * {
    box-sizing: border-box;
  }
  @font-face {
    font-family: 'Patrick Hand SC';
    font-style: normal;
    font-weight: 400;
    src: local('Patrick Hand SC'),
      local('PatrickHandSC-Regular'),
      url(https://fonts.gstatic.com/s/patrickhandsc/v4/OYFWCgfCR-7uHIovjUZXsZ71Uis0Qeb9Gqo8IZV7ckE.woff2)
        format('woff2');
    unicode-range: U+0100-024f, U+1-1eff,
      U+20a0-20ab, U+20ad-20cf, U+2c60-2c7f,
      U+A720-A7FF;
  }
`

Animation Keyframes

keyframes generates a unique animation name that can be used to animate elements with CSS animations.

String Styles

// @live
import { css, keyframes } from '@emotion/css'

const bounce = keyframes`
  from, 20%, 53%, 80%, to {
    transform: translate3d(0,0,0);
  }

  40%, 43% {
    transform: translate3d(0, -30px, 0);
  }

  70% {
    transform: translate3d(0, -15px, 0);
  }

  90% {
    transform: translate3d(0,-4px,0);
  }
`

render(
  <img
    className={css`
      width: 96px;
      height: 96px;
      border-radius: 50%;
      animation: ${bounce} 1s ease infinite;
      transform-origin: center bottom;
    `}
    src={logoUrl}
  />
)

Object Styles

// @live
import { css, keyframes } from '@emotion/css'

const bounce = keyframes({
  'from, 20%, 53%, 80%, to': {
    transform: 'translate3d(0,0,0)'
  },
  '40%, 43%': {
    transform: 'translate3d(0, -30px, 0)'
  },
  '70%': {
    transform: 'translate3d(0, -15px, 0)'
  },
  '90%': {
    transform: 'translate3d(0, -4px, 0)'
  }
})

render(
  <img
    src={logoUrl}
    className={css({
      width: 96,
      height: 96,
      borderRadius: '50%',
      animation: `${bounce} 1s ease infinite`,
      transformOrigin: 'center bottom'
    })}
  />
)

cx

cx is emotion's version of the popular classnames library. The key advantage of cx is that it detects emotion generated class names ensuring styles are overwritten in the correct order. Emotion generated styles are applied from left to right. Subsequent styles overwrite property values of previous styles.

Combining class names

import { cx, css } from '@emotion/css'

const cls1 = css`
  font-size: 20px;
  background: green;
`
const cls2 = css`
  font-size: 20px;
  background: blue;
`

<div className={cx(cls1, cls2)} />

Conditional class names

const cls1 = css`
  font-size: 20px;
  background: green;
`
const cls2 = css`
  font-size: 20px;
  background: blue;
`

const foo = true
const bar = false


<div
  className={cx(
    { [cls1]: foo },
    { [cls2]: bar }
  )}
/>

Using class names from other sources

const cls1 = css`
  font-size: 20px;
  background: green;
`

<div
  className={cx(cls1, 'profile')}
/>

Custom Instances

With @emotion/css/create-instance, you can provide custom options to Emotion's cache.

The main @emotion/css entrypoint can be thought of as a call to @emotion/css/create-instance with sensible defaults for most applications.

import createEmotion from '@emotion/css/create-instance'

export const {
  flush,
  hydrate,
  cx,
  merge,
  getRegisteredStyles,
  injectGlobal,
  keyframes,
  css,
  sheet,
  cache
} = createEmotion()

Upside

  • Calling it directly will allow for some low level customization.

  • Create custom names for emotion APIs to help with migration from other, similar libraries.

  • Could set custom key to something other than css

Downside

  • Introduces some amount of complexity to your application that can vary depending on developer experience.

  • Required to keep up with changes in the repo and API at a lower level than if using @emotion/css directly

Primary use cases

  • Using emotion in embedded contexts such as an <iframe/>

  • Setting a nonce on any <style/> tag emotion creates for security purposes

  • Use emotion with a container different than document.head for style elements

  • Using emotion with custom stylis plugins

Multiple instances in a single app example

import createEmotion from '@emotion/css/create-instance'

export const {
  flush,
  hydrate,
  cx,
  merge,
  getRegisteredStyles,
  injectGlobal,
  keyframes,
  css,
  sheet,
  cache
} = createEmotion({
  // The key option is required when there will be multiple instances in a single app
  key: 'some-key'
})

Options

createEmotion accepts the same options as createCache from @emotion/cache.

Keywords

FAQs

Last updated on 16 Jun 2023

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