Fela is a small, high-performant and framework-agnostic toolbelt to handle state-driven styling in JavaScript.
It is dynamic by design and renders your styles depending on your application state.
It generates atomic CSS and supports all common CSS features such as media queries, pseudo classes, keyframes and font-faces. Fela ships with a powerful plugin API adding e.g. vendor prefixing or fallback value support.
Fela can be used with React or with any other view library. It even supports React Native.
Support Us
Support Robin Weser's work on Fela and its ecosystem directly via Patreon.
Installation
yarn add fela
You may alternatively use npm i --save fela
.
Benefits
- Predictable Styling
- Scoped Atomic CSS
- Minimal Bundle Size
- No Specificity Issues
- No Naming Conflicts
- Framework-Agnostic
- Huge Ecosystem
- RTL Support
The Gist
Fela's core principle is to consider style as a function of state.
The whole API and all plugins and bindings are built on that idea.
It is reactive and auto-updates once registered to the DOM.
The following example illustrates the key parts of Fela though it only shows the very basics.
import { createRenderer } from 'fela'
const rule = state => ({
textAlign: 'center',
padding: '5px 10px',
fontSize: state.fontSize + 'pt',
borderRadius: 5,
':hover': {
fontSize: state.fontSize + 2 + 'pt',
boxShadow: '0 0 2px rgb(70, 70, 70)'
}
})
const renderer = createRenderer()
const className = renderer.renderRule(rule, {
fontSize: 14
})
The generated CSS output would look like this:
.a { text-align: center }
.b { padding: 5px 10px }
.c { font-size: 14pt }
.d { border-radius: 5px }
.e:hover { font-size: 16pt }
.f:hover { box-shadow: 0 0 2px rgb(70, 70, 70) }
Primitive Components
If you're using Fela, you're most likely also using React.
Using the React bindings, you get powerful APIs to create primitive components.
Read: Usage with React for a full guide.
import React from 'react'
import { RendererProvider, useFela } from 'react-fela'
import { createRenderer } from 'fela';
import { render } from 'react-dom'
const rule = state => ({
textAlign: 'center',
padding: '5px 10px',
fontSize: state.fontSize + 'pt',
borderRadius: 5,
':hover': {
fontSize: state.fontSize + 2 + 'pt',
boxShadow: '0 0 2px rgb(70, 70, 70)'
}
})
const Button = ({ children, ...props }) => {
const { css } = useFela(props)
return <button className={css(rule)}>{children}</button>;
}
const renderer = createRenderer()
render(
<RendererProvider renderer={renderer}>
<>
<Button>Basic Button</Button>
<Button fontSize={18}>Big Button</Button>
</>
</RendererProvider>,
document.body
)
Check this example on CodeSandbox
Examples
Documentation
Workshop
If you are coming from CSS and want to learn JavaScript Styling with Fela, there is a full-feature fela-workshop which demonstrates typical Fela use cases. It teaches all important parts, step by step with simple examples. If you already know other CSS in JS solutions and are just switching to Fela, you might not need to do the whole workshop, but it still provides useful information to get started quickly.
Talks
Posts
Ecosystem
There are tons of useful packages maintained within this repository including plugins, enhancers, bindings and tools that can be used together with Fela. Check the Ecosystem documentation for a quick overview.
Apart from all the packages managed within this repository, there are many community third-party projects that are worth mentioning:
Support
Got a question? Come and join us on Spectrum!
We'd love to help out. We also highly appreciate any feedback.
Don't want to miss any update? Follow us on Twitter.
Who's using Fela?
Your company is using Fela, but is not listed yet? Add your company / organisation
Contributing
This project exists thanks to all the people who contribute.
We highly appreciate any contribution.
For more information follow the contribution guide.
Also, please read our code of conduct.
License
Fela is licensed under the MIT License.
Documentation is licensed under Creative Commons License.
Created with ♥ by @robinweser and all the great contributors.