Creating themes
The unstable_moduleResolution
option needs to enabled in the StyleX Babel configuration to enable theming APIs.
Once variables have been defined, alternate “themes” can be created to override the values of those variables for specific UI sub-trees.
Creating Themes
Any variable group can be imported to create a theme like so:
import * as stylex from '@stylexjs/stylex';
import {colors, spacing} from './tokens.styles';
// A constant can be used to avoid repeating the media query
const DARK = '@media (prefers-color-scheme: dark)';
// Dracula theme
export const dracula = stylex.createTheme(colors, {
primaryText: {default: 'purple', [DARK]: 'lightpurple'},
secondaryText: {default: 'pink', [DARK]: 'hotpink'},
accent: 'red',
background: {default: '#555', [DARK]: 'black'},
lineColor: 'red',
borderRadius: '4px',
fontFamily: 'system-ui, sans-serif',
fontSize: '16px',
});
Applying Themes
A “theme” is a style object similar to the ones created with stylex.create()
.
They can be applied to an element using stylex.props()
to override variables
for that element and all its descendents.
import * as stylex from '@stylexjs/stylex';
import {colors, spacing} from '../tokens.styles';
import {dracula} from '../themes';
const styles = stylex.create({
container: {
color: colors.primaryText,
backgroundColor: colors.background,
padding: spacing.medium,
},
});
<div {...stylex.props(dracula, styles.container)}>{children}</div>;
NOTE: All variables in a variable group must be overridden when creating a theme. This choice has been to help catch accidental omissions. Even at the cost of occasional tedium.
Unlike when defining and using variables, themes can be created with
stylex.createTheme()
anywhere in a codebase, and passed around across files or
components.
If multiple themes for the same variable group are applied on the same HTML element, the last applied theme wins.