Huge News!Announcing our $40M Series B led by Abstract Ventures.Learn More
Socket
Sign inDemoInstall
Socket

@spectrum-web-components/theme

Package Overview
Dependencies
Maintainers
5
Versions
280
Alerts
File Explorer

Advanced tools

Socket logo

Install Socket

Detect and block malicious and high-risk dependencies

Install

@spectrum-web-components/theme

`sp-theme` sets the rendering theme for all child components, and also sets a number of default sizes & colors for any child content. The Spectrum design system provides four color themes (`lightest`, `light`, `dark`, and `darkest`) and two different scal

  • 0.6.4-alpha.178
  • Source
  • npm
  • Socket score

Version published
Maintainers
5
Created
Source

Description

sp-theme sets the rendering theme for all child components, and also sets a number of default sizes & colors for any child content. The Spectrum design system provides four color themes (lightest, light, dark, and darkest) and two different scales (medium and large) to support desktop & mobile UI.

When leveraging an sp-theme element, it will assume the role of managing the content direction applied to elements in its DOM scope from the document. By default, an sp-theme element will resolve its initial content direction from value of its dir attribute or to be e the same as its containing sp-theme parent or the document. Subsequent customization of content direction for that content will need to happen on the sp-theme element to be appropriately tracked by elements in that scope. This means that each part of your document scoped by an sp-theme element can specify individual content directions and that decedent sp-theme elements can override the content direction applied by ancestor elements.

Usage

See it on NPM! How big is this package in your project?

yarn add @spectrum-web-components/theme

Import the side effectful registration of <sp-theme> via:

import '@spectrum-web-components/theme/sp-theme.js';

When looking to leverage the Theme base class as a type and/or for extension purposes, do so via:

import { Theme } from '@spectrum-web-components/theme';

The various themes can be imported en masse:

import '@spectrum-web-components/theme/src/themes.js';

Or, individually:

import '@spectrum-web-components/theme/theme-darkest.js';
import '@spectrum-web-components/theme/theme-dark.js';
import '@spectrum-web-components/theme/theme-light.js';
import '@spectrum-web-components/theme/theme-lightest.js';
import '@spectrum-web-components/theme/scale-medium.js';
import '@spectrum-web-components/theme/scale-large.js';

Quick start

import '@spectrum-web-components/theme/sp-theme.js';
import '@spectrum-web-components/theme/src/themes.js';

The above import will get you started using the <sp-theme> wrapper element, and includes all four (4) color options (lightest, light, dark, and darkest) and both (2) scale options (medium and large). Having all of these options available together is the easiest way to get a handle on the theming possibilities offered by the package and empower you to prototype and test various deliveries of your application. However, reserving the download and parse time for all of the variants may not be required for all applications. See "Advanced usage" below for instructions on tuning the performance of an application that leverages this package.

Advanced usage

Once you've moved beyond the prototype phases of an application, it is likely that you will only use one combinatin of color and scale in your application, and even when you don't you will likely benefit from lazily loading variants that you don't leverage by default. For single combination applications or to power a default theme, the following imports can be used to ensure only the code your application requires is loaded:

// Power a site using <sp-theme color="darkest" scale="large">
import '@spectrum-web-components/theme/theme-darkest.js';
import '@spectrum-web-components/theme/scale-large.js';

import '@spectrum-web-components/theme/sp-theme.js';

When subsequent theme variants are needed you can ensure those are lazily loaded by leveraging dynamic imports via something like the following:

const themeElement = document.querySelector('sp-theme');

const updateTheme = async (color, scale) => {
    Promise.all([
        import(`@spectrum-web-components/theme/theme-${color}.js`),
        import(`@spectrum-web-components/theme/scale-${scale}.js`),
    ]).then(() => {
        themeElement.color = color;
        themeElement.scale = scale;
    });
};

updateTheme('light', 'medium');

When bundling your application, be sure to consult the documentation of your bundler for the correct way to ensure proper packaging of the sort of programattic dependancy graph that this will create.

Light theme

<style type="text/css">
    #example {
        max-width: 500px;
        padding: 3em;
        background-color: var(--spectrum-global-color-gray-100);
        color: var(--spectrum-global-color-gray-800);
    }

    #buttons {
        margin-top: 2em;
    }
</style>
<sp-theme color="light">
    <div id="example">
        <div>
            <sp-slider
                value="5"
                step="1"
                min="1"
                max="11"
                label="Volume"
                id="volume-slider"
            ></sp-slider>
        </div>
        <div><sp-switch>Overdrive</sp-switch></div>
        <sp-button-group id="buttons">
            <sp-button variant="primary">Cancel</sp-button>
            <sp-button variant="cta">Continue</sp-button>
        </sp-button-group>
    </div>
</sp-theme>

Dark theme

<style type="text/css">
    #example {
        max-width: 500px;
        padding: 3em;
        background-color: var(--spectrum-global-color-gray-100);
        color: var(--spectrum-global-color-gray-800);
    }

    #buttons {
        margin-top: 2em;
    }
</style>
<sp-theme color="dark">
    <div id="example">
        <div>
            <sp-slider
                value="5"
                step="1"
                min="1"
                max="11"
                label="Volume"
                id="volume-slider"
            ></sp-slider>
        </div>
        <div><sp-switch>Overdrive</sp-switch></div>
        <sp-button-group id="buttons">
            <sp-button variant="primary">Cancel</sp-button>
            <sp-button variant="cta">Continue</sp-button>
        </sp-button-group>
    </div>
</sp-theme>

Large scale

The large scale of <sp-theme> will switch to using Spectrum's larger mobile Platform Scale

<style type="text/css">
    #example {
        max-width: 500px;
        padding: 1em;
        background-color: var(--spectrum-global-color-gray-100);
        color: var(--spectrum-global-color-gray-800);
    }

    #buttons {
        margin-top: 2em;
    }
</style>
<sp-theme color="darkest" scale="large">
    <div id="example">
        <div>
            <sp-slider
                value="5"
                step="1"
                min="1"
                max="11"
                label="Volume"
                id="volume-slider"
            ></sp-slider>
        </div>
        <div><sp-switch>Overdrive</sp-switch></div>
        <sp-button-group id="buttons">
            <sp-button variant="primary">Cancel</sp-button>
            <sp-button variant="cta">Continue</sp-button>
        </sp-button-group>
    </div>
</sp-theme>

Embedding themes

There are a few cases where it is necessary to embed one theme within another. For example, if you have an application that is using a dark theme with a left to right text direction that is previewing or editing content that will be displayed in a light theme with a right to left text direction.

<style type="text/css">
    #outer {
        max-width: 500px;
        padding: 1em;
        background-color: var(--spectrum-global-color-gray-100);
        color: var(--spectrum-global-color-gray-800);
    }

    #inner {
        margin-top: 2em;
        padding: 1em;
        background-color: var(--spectrum-global-color-gray-100);
        color: var(--spectrum-global-color-gray-800);
    }

    #buttons {
        margin-top: 2em;
    }
</style>
<sp-theme color="dark" dir="ltr">
    <div id="outer">
        <div>
            <sp-slider
                value="5"
                step="1"
                min="1"
                max="11"
                label="Volume"
                id="volume-slider"
            ></sp-slider>
        </div>
        <div><sp-switch>Overdrive</sp-switch></div>
        <sp-button-group id="buttons">
            <sp-button variant="primary">Cancel</sp-button>
            <sp-button variant="cta">Continue</sp-button>
        </sp-button-group>
        <sp-theme color="light" dir="rtl">
            <div id="inner">
                <div>
                    <sp-slider
                        value="5"
                        step="1"
                        min="1"
                        max="11"
                        label="Volume"
                        id="volume-slider"
                    ></sp-slider>
                </div>
                <div><sp-switch>Overdrive</sp-switch></div>
                <sp-button-group id="buttons">
                    <sp-button variant="primary">Cancel</sp-button>
                    <sp-button variant="cta">Continue</sp-button>
                </sp-button-group>
            </div>
        </sp-theme>
    </div>
</sp-theme>

Keywords

FAQs

Package last updated on 13 Jan 2021

Did you know?

Socket

Socket for GitHub automatically highlights issues in each pull request and monitors the health of all your open source dependencies. Discover the contents of your packages and block harmful activity before you install or update your dependencies.

Install

Related posts

SocketSocket SOC 2 Logo

Product

  • Package Alerts
  • Integrations
  • Docs
  • Pricing
  • FAQ
  • Roadmap
  • Changelog

Packages

npm

Stay in touch

Get open source security insights delivered straight into your inbox.


  • Terms
  • Privacy
  • Security

Made with ⚡️ by Socket Inc