@fluentui/react-theme-provider
React theming component and hook for Fluent UI React
Installation
yarn add @fluentui/react-theme-provider
Example usage
Use the theme with Fluent UI by wrapping content within the provider. If theme
is not provided, default (Fluent) theme will be provided:
import { ThemeProvider } from '@fluentui/react-theme-provider';
export const App = () => (
<ThemeProvider>
<>...app</>
</ThemeProvider>
);
You can also customize your own theme:
import { ThemeProvider, PartialTheme } from '@fluentui/react-theme-provider';
const appTheme: PartialTheme = {
palette: {
themePrimary: 'red'
...
}
};
export const App = () => (
<ThemeProvider theme={appTheme}>
App content ...
</ThemeProvider>
);
You can also nest ThemeProvider
s:
import { ThemeProvider, PartialTheme } from '@fluentui/react-theme-provider';
const appTheme: PartialTheme = {
palette: {
themePrimary: 'red'
...
}
};
const headerTheme: PartialTheme = {
palette: {
themePrimary: 'orange'
...
}
};
export const App = () => (
<ThemeProvider theme={appTheme}>
<ThemeProvider theme={headerTheme}>
<MyHeader />
</ThemeProvider>
App content ...
</ThemeProvider>
);
You can apply component-level styles:
import { Checkbox } from '@fluentui/react';
import { ThemeProvider, createTheme } from '@fluentui/react-theme-provider';
export const App = () => (
<ThemeProvider
theme={{
components: { Checkbox: { styles: { root: { background: 'red' } } } },
}}
>
<Checkbox />
</ThemeProvider>
);
Accessing theme
useTheme
Theme can be accessed using useTheme
hook. If you are specifically accessing theme to create classes/styles, you can use makeStyles
described below.
import { useTheme } from '@fluentui/react-theme-provider';
const Content = () => {
const theme = useTheme();
...
};
export const App = () => (
<ThemeProvider>
<Content />
</ThemeProvider>
);
ThemeContext.Consumer
Theme can be accessed in Class Component using ThemeContext.Consumer
.
import { Theme, ThemeContext } from '@fluentui/react-theme-provider';
class Content extends React.Component {
public render() {
return (
<ThemeContext.Consumer>
{(theme: Theme | undefined) => {
...
}}
</ThemeContext.Consumer>
);
}
}
export const App = () => (
<ThemeProvider>
<Content />
</ThemeProvider>
);
Create classes for React components based on theme
Theme can be accessed using the makeStyles
hook. This hook abstracts rendering css given the theme object:
import { makeStyles } from '@fluentui/react-theme-provider';
const useFooStyles = makeStyles(theme => ({
root: {
background: theme.semanticColors.bodyBackground,
':hover': {
background: theme.semanticColors.bodyBackgroundHovered
},
}));
const Foo = props => {
const classes = useFooStyles();
return <div className={classes.root} />;
};
How does this change other existing ways of theming Fluent UI components?
Customizer
Customizer
is now deprecated and you should replace it with ThemeProvider
.
CustomizerContext
is now deprecated and you should replace it with ThemeContext
or useTheme
hook.
Deprecations remain to be functional as is but they will be removed in Fluent UI v9 release.
Replace settings prop
Before:
<Customizer settings={{ theme }} />
After:
<ThemeProvider theme={theme} />
Replace scopedSettings prop
Before:
<Customizer
scopedSettings={{
Checkbox: {
styles: CheckboxStyles,
},
}}
/>
After:
<ThemeProvider
theme={{
components: { Checkbox: { styles: CheckboxStyles } },
}}
/>
Replace CustomizerContext
Before:
<CustomizerContext.Consumer>
{(parentContext: ICustomizerContext) => {
const theme = parentContext.customizations.settings;
...
}
</CustomizerContext.Consumer>
After:
See options in Accessing theme.
loadTheme
loadTheme
remains to work as is. However, you are recommended to replace loadTheme
with ThemeProvider
. That way, your application consistently has one way of providing theme.
To do that, instead of calling loadTheme(your_theme)
, you will simply wrap the root component of your React application once with ThemeProvider
:
<ThemeProvider theme={your_theme}>
<App />
</ThemeProvider>
One caveat here is that if you app has styles which relies on @microsoft/load-themed-styles
, ThemeProvider
won't be able to replace loadTheme
in this case.
Fabric component
Instead of using Fabric
component, you can now replace it fully with ThemeProvider
. Here is how to replace each prop usage:
Fabric | ThemeProvider |
---|
componentRef | ref |
as | as |
theme | theme |
styles | Not longer support styles prop. If you need to style the root element, you can do that using (inline) style or className prop. Setting arbitrary styles for document body is no longer supported. |
applyTheme | This is now applied by default, or by setting applyTo="element" . If you don't want any body styles to be applied on root element, you can set applyTo="none" . |
applyThemeToBody | applyTo="body" |
dir | set rtl in theme prop |
Other call-outs
ThemeProvider
by default sets background-color
for the root element using theme.semanticColors.bodyBackground
. If you find the background color being incorrect after switching to ThemeProvider
, the right fix is likely that you need to update your theme definition to have the correct bodyBackground
. Or, if you don't want any default stylings applied to the root element, you can set applyTo
prop to "none"
.ThemeProvider
does not set font-family: inherit
on all native button
, input
, textArea
elements. If you find any Fluent UI component having incorrect fonts after switching to ThemeProvider
, please report an issue.