Visual primitives for the component age. Use the best bits of ES6 and CSS to style your apps without stress π
npm install --save styled-components
Utilising tagged template literals (a recent addition to JavaScript) and the power of CSS, styled-components
allows you to write actual CSS code to style your components. It also removes the mapping between components and styles β using components as a low-level styling construct could not be easier!
styled-components
is compatible with both React (for web) and ReactNative β meaning it's the perfect choice even for truly universal apps! See the documentation about ReactNative for more information.
Note: If you're not using
npm
as your package manager, aren't using a module bundler or aren't sure about either of those jump to Alternative Installation Methods.
Made by Glen Maddern, Max Stoiber and Phil PlΓΌckthun, supported by Front End Center and Thinkmill. Thank you for making this project possible!
See the documentation at styled-components.com/docs for more information about using styled-components
!
Quicklinks to some of the most-visited pages:
There is (currently experimental) support for stylelint
β meaning you can take advantage of 150 rules to make sure your styled-components
CSS is solid!
See the stylelint-processor-styled-components
repository for installation instructions.
The one thing you lose when writing CSS in template literals is syntax highlighting. We're working hard on making proper syntax highlighting happening in all editors. We currently have support for Atom, Visual Studio Code, WebStorm, and soon Sublime Text.
This is what it looks like when properly highlighted:
@gandm, the creator of language-babel
, has added support for styled-components
in Atom!
To get proper syntax highlighting, all you have to do is install and use the language-babel
package for your JavaScript files!
There is an open PR by @garetmckinley to add support for styled-components
to babel-sublime
! (if you want the PR to land, feel free to π the initial comment to let the maintainers know there's a need for this!)
As soon as that PR is merged and a new version released, all you'll have to do is install and use babel-sublime
to highlight your JavaScript files!
@gandm's language-babel has been ported to VSCode under the name Babel JavaScript by Michael McDermott. It provides the same all-in-one solution for Babel syntax highlighting with styled-components included.
If you would like to keep your current JavaScript syntax highlighting, you can use the vscode-styled-components extension to provide styled-components syntax highlighting inside your Javascript files. You can install it as usual from the Marketplace.
The vim-styled-components
plugin gives you syntax highlighting inside your Javascript files. Install it with your usual plugin manager like Plug, Vundle, Pathogen, etc.
Also if you're looking for an awesome javascript syntax package you can never go wrong with YAJS.vim.
The webstorm-styled-components
plugin adds code completion and highlighting for CSS properties and values in the template strings. And it also provides code completion and navigation for JavaScript symbols in the interpolations. You can install it from the IDE: go to Preferences | Plugins
and search for Styled Components
.
We could use your help to get syntax highlighting support to other editors! If you want to start working on syntax highlighting for your editor, open an issue to let us know.
Along with sytnax highlighting, you can install the TypeScript styled plugin to get error reporting and code completeion for styled components in your editor. The plugin supports styled components in both JavaScript and TypeScript files, and works in Visual Studio Code, Sublime, and Atom.
A lot of hard work goes into community libraries, projects, and guides. A lot of them make it easier to get started or help you with your next project! Thereβs also a whole lot of interesting apps and sites that people have built using styled-components.
Make sure to head over to awesome-styled-components to see them all! And please contribute and add your own work to the list so others can find it.
If you're not using a module bundler or not using npm
as your package manager, we also have a global ("UMD") build!
You can use that via the unpkg
CDN to get styled-components
, the URL is https://unpkg.com/styled-components/dist/styled-components.min.js
.
To install styled-components
with bower you'd do:
bower install styled-components=https://unpkg.com/styled-components/dist/styled-components.min.js
To use it from your HTML, add this at the bottom of your index.html
, and you'll have access to the global window.styled
variable:
<script src="https://unpkg.com/styled-components/dist/styled-components.min.js" type="text/javascript"></script>
If styled-components
isn't quite what you're looking for, maybe something in this list is:
glamorous
- basicallystyled-components
but using JS objects and functions instead of strings.
Licensed under the MIT License, Copyright Β© 2017 Glen Maddern and Maximilian Stoiber.
See LICENSE for more information.
This project builds on a long line of earlier work by clever folks all around the world. We'd like to thank Charlie Somerville, Nik Graf, Sunil Pai, Michael Chan, Andrey Popp, Jed Watson & Andrey Sitnik who contributed ideas, code or inspiration.
Special thanks to @okonet for the fantastic logo.