npm install radium
Radium is a set of tools to manage inline styles on React elements. It gives you powerful styling capabilities without CSS.
Inspired by React: CSS in JS by vjeux.
Eliminating CSS in favor of inline styles that are computed on the fly is a powerful approach, providing a number of benefits over traditional CSS:
- Scoped styles without selectors
- Avoids specificity conflicts
- Source order independence
- Dead code elimination
- Highly expressive
Despite that, there are some common CSS features and techniques that inline styles don't easily accommodate: media queries, browser states (:hover, :focus, :active) and modifiers (no more .btn-primary!). Radium offers a standard interface and abstractions for dealing with these problems.
When we say expressive, we mean it: math, concatenation, regex, conditionals, functions–JavaScript is at your disposal. Modern web applications demand that the display changes when data changes, and Radium is here to help.
For a short technical explanation, see How does Radium work?.
- Conceptually simple extension of normal inline styles
- Browser state styles to support
:hover
,:focus
, and:active
- Media queries
- Automatic vendor prefixing
- Keyframes animation helper
- ES6 class and
createClass
support
Start by adding the @Radium
decorator to your component class. Alternatively, wrap Radium()
around your component, like module.exports = Radium(Component)
, or Component = Radium(Component)
, which works with classes, createClass
, and stateless components (functions that take props and return a ReactElement). Then, write a style object as you normally would with inline styles, and add in styles for interactive states and media queries. Pass the style object to your component via style={...}
and let Radium do the rest!
<Button kind="primary">Radium Button</Button>
var Radium = require('radium');
var React = require('react');
var color = require('color');
@Radium
class Button extends React.Component {
static propTypes = {
kind: PropTypes.oneOf(['primary', 'warning']).isRequired
};
render() {
// Radium extends the style attribute to accept an array. It will merge
// the styles in order. We use this feature here to apply the primary
// or warning styles depending on the value of the `kind` prop. Since its
// all just JavaScript, you can use whatever logic you want to decide which
// styles are applied (props, state, context, etc).
return (
<button
style={[
styles.base,
styles[this.props.kind]
]}>
{this.props.children}
</button>
);
}
}
// You can create your style objects dynamically or share them for
// every instance of the component.
var styles = {
base: {
color: '#fff',
// Adding interactive state couldn't be easier! Add a special key to your
// style object (:hover, :focus, :active, or @media) with the additional rules.
':hover': {
background: color('#0074d9').lighten(0.2).hexString()
}
},
primary: {
background: '#0074D9'
},
warning: {
background: '#FF4136'
}
};
To see the universal examples:
npm install
npm run universal
To see local client-side only examples in action, do this:
npm install
npm run examples
Following is a short technical explanation of Radium's inner workings:
- Wrap the
render
function - Recurse into the result of the original
render
- For each element:
- Add handlers to props if interactive styles are specified, e.g.
onMouseEnter
for:hover
, wrapping existing handlers if necessary - If any of the handlers are triggered, e.g. by hovering, Radium calls
setState
to update a Radium-specific field on the components state object - On re-render, resolve any interactive styles that apply, e.g.
:hover
, by looking up the element's key or ref in the Radium-specific state
- Add handlers to props if interactive styles are specified, e.g.
You can find a list of other tools, components, and frameworks to help you build with Radium on our wiki. Contributions welcome!
Please see CONTRIBUTING