create-emotion
Create distinct instances of emotion.
The main emotion repo can be thought of as a call to createEmotion
with sensible defaults for most applications.
import createEmotion from 'create-emotion'
const context = typeof global !== 'undefined' ? global : {}
export const {
flush,
hydrate,
cx,
merge,
getRegisteredStyles,
injectGlobal,
keyframes,
css,
sheet,
caches
} = createEmotion(context)
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 👩🎤
, 🥞
, ⚛️
, 👩🎨
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
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 developer defined <style/>
tag
-
Using emotion with custom stylis plugins
Advanced use cases
- Using emotion in component libraries to sync up multiple intances of emotion together
import createEmotion from 'create-emotion'
const context = typeof global !== 'undefined' ? global : {}
export const {
flush,
hydrate,
cx,
merge,
getRegisteredStyles,
injectGlobal,
keyframes,
css,
sheet,
caches
} = createEmotion(context)
create-emotion
accepts a context
and a set of options.
Context
emotion
requires a global object for server-side rendering to ensure that even if a module is calling an emotion instance from two paths(e.g. the same emotion instance in multiple node_modules, this can happen often with linking #349) they'll still both work with SSR. If you aren't using SSR, context
can be an empty object. This isn't required in the browser because your bundler should deduplicate modules.
Multiple instances in a single app example
import createEmotion from 'create-emotion'
const context = typeof global !== 'undefined' ? global : {}
if (context.__MY_EMOTION_INSTANCE__ === undefined) {
context.__MY_EMOTION_INSTANCE__ = {}
}
export const {
flush,
hydrate,
cx,
merge,
getRegisteredStyles,
injectGlobal,
keyframes,
css,
sheet,
caches
} = createEmotion(context.__MY_EMOTION_INSTANCE__, {
key: 'some-key'
})
Note: calling createEmotion
twice with the same context
will use the same instance, so options provided in another call of createEmotion
with the same context will be ignored.
Options
nonce: string
A nonce that will be set on each style tag that emotion inserts for Content Security Policies.
stylisPlugins: Function | Array
A Stylis plugin or plugins that will be run by stylis during preprocessing. Read Stylis' docs to find out more. This can for be used for many purposes such as RTL.
prefix: boolean | Function
Allows changing Stylis' prefixing settings, this defaults to true
. It can be a boolean or a function to dynamicly set which properties are prefixed. More information can be found in Stylis' docs
key: string
The prefix before class names, this defaults to css
. It will also be set as the value of the data-emotion
attribute on the style tags that emotion inserts and it's used in the attribute name that marks style elements in renderStylesToString
and renderStylesToNodeStream
. This is required if using multiple emotion instances in the same app.
container: HTMLElement
A DOM Node that emotion will insert all of it's style tags into, this is useful for inserting styles into iframes.