Inline CSS styles in React: how to implement a:hover? - reactjs

I quite like the inline CSS pattern in React and decided to use it.
However, you can't use the :hover and similar selectors. So what's the best way to implement highlight-on-hover while using inline CSS styles?
One suggestion from #reactjs is to have a Clickable component and use it like this:
<Clickable>
<Link />
</Clickable>
The Clickable has a hovered state and passes it as props to the Link. However, the Clickable (the way I implemented it) wraps the Link in a div so that it can set onMouseEnter and onMouseLeave to it. This makes things a bit complicated though (e.g. span wrapped in a div behaves differently than span).
Is there a simpler way?

I think onMouseEnter and onMouseLeave are the ways to go, but I don't see the need for an additional wrapper component. Here is how I implemented it:
var Link = React.createClass({
getInitialState: function(){
return {hover: false}
},
toggleHover: function(){
this.setState({hover: !this.state.hover})
},
render: function() {
var linkStyle;
if (this.state.hover) {
linkStyle = {backgroundColor: 'red'}
} else {
linkStyle = {backgroundColor: 'blue'}
}
return(
<div>
<a style={linkStyle} onMouseEnter={this.toggleHover} onMouseLeave={this.toggleHover}>Link</a>
</div>
)
}
You can then use the state of hover (true/false) to change the style of the link.

Late to party but come with solution. You can use "&" to defines styles for hover nth Child etc:
day: {
display: "flex",
flex: "1",
justifyContent: "center",
alignItems: "center",
width: "50px",
height: "50px",
transition: "all 0.2s",
borderLeft: "solid 1px #cccccc",
"&:hover": {
background: "#efefef"
},
"&:last-child": {
borderRight: "solid 1px #cccccc"
}
},

I'm in the same situation. Really like the pattern of keeping the styling in the components but the hover states seems like the last hurdle.
What I did was writing a mixin that you can add to your component that needs hover states.
This mixin will add a new hovered property to the state of your component. It will be set to true if the user hovers over the main DOM node of the component and sets it back to false if the users leaves the element.
Now in your component render function you can do something like:
<button style={m(
this.styles.container,
this.state.hovered && this.styles.hover,
)}>{this.props.children}</button>
Now each time the state of the hovered state changes the component will rerender.
I've also create a sandbox repo for this that I use to test some of these patterns myself. Check it out if you want to see an example of my implementation.
https://github.com/Sitebase/cssinjs/tree/feature-interaction-mixin

You can use Radium - it is an open source tool for inline styles with ReactJS. It adds exactly the selectors you need. Very popular, check it out - Radium on npm

Here's my solution using React Hooks. It combines the spread operator and the ternary operator.
style.js
export default {
normal:{
background: 'purple',
color: '#ffffff'
},
hover: {
background: 'red'
}
}
Button.js
import React, {useState} from 'react';
import style from './style.js'
function Button(){
const [hover, setHover] = useState(false);
return(
<button
onMouseEnter={()=>{
setHover(true);
}}
onMouseLeave={()=>{
setHover(false);
}}
style={{
...style.normal,
...(hover ? style.hover : null)
}}>
MyButtonText
</button>
)
}

Full CSS support is exactly the reason this huge amount of CSSinJS libraries, to do this efficiently, you need to generate actual CSS, not inline styles. Also inline styles are much slower in react in a bigger system. Disclaimer - I maintain JSS.

Made Style It -- in part -- because of this reason (others being disagreements with implementation of other libs / syntax and inline stylings lack of support for prefixing property values). Believe we should be able to simply write CSS in JavaScript and have fully self contained components HTML-CSS-JS. With ES5 / ES6 template strings we now can and it can be pretty too! :)
npm install style-it --save
Functional Syntax (JSFIDDLE)
import React from 'react';
import Style from 'style-it';
class Intro extends React.Component {
render() {
return Style.it(`
.intro:hover {
color: red;
}
`,
<p className="intro">CSS-in-JS made simple -- just Style It.</p>
);
}
}
export default Intro;
JSX Syntax (JSFIDDLE)
import React from 'react';
import Style from 'style-it';
class Intro extends React.Component {
render() {
return (
<Style>
{`
.intro:hover {
color: red;
}
`}
<p className="intro">CSS-in-JS made simple -- just Style It.</p>
</Style>
);
}
}
export default Intro;

I found a clean way to do this with a wrapper around useState, which I call useHover.
No additional libraries/frameworks needed.
const App = () => {
const hover = useHover({backgroundColor: "LightBlue"})
return <p {...hover}>Hover me!</p>
}
Code for the wrapper:
function useHover(styleOnHover: CSSProperties, styleOnNotHover: CSSProperties = {})
{
const [style, setStyle] = React.useState(styleOnNotHover);
const onMouseEnter = () => setStyle(styleOnHover)
const onMouseLeave = () => setStyle(styleOnNotHover)
return {style, onMouseEnter, onMouseLeave}
}
Note that useHover has an optional second parameter for a style when the component is not hovered.
Try it out here

Heres is another option using CSS variables . This requires a css hover definition ahead of time so I guess its not pure inline, but is very little code and flexible.
css (setup a hover state) :
.p:hover:{
color:var(--hover-color) !important,
opacity:var(--hover-opacity)
}
react:
<p style={{'color':'red','--hover-color':'blue','--hover-opacity':0.5}}>

Adding on to Jonathan's answer, here are the events to cover the focus and active states, and a using onMouseOver instead of onMouseEnter since the latter will not bubble if you have any child elements within the target the event is being applied to.
var Link = React.createClass({
getInitialState: function(){
return {hover: false, active: false, focus: false}
},
toggleHover: function(){
this.setState({hover: !this.state.hover})
},
toggleActive: function(){
this.setState({active: !this.state.active})
},
toggleFocus: function(){
this.setState({focus: !this.state.focus})
},
render: function() {
var linkStyle;
if (this.state.hover) {
linkStyle = {backgroundColor: 'red'}
} else if (this.state.active) {
linkStyle = {backgroundColor: 'blue'}
} else if (this.state.focus) {
linkStyle = {backgroundColor: 'purple'}
}
return(
<div>
<a style={linkStyle}
onMouseOver={this.toggleHover}
onMouseOut={this.toggleHover}
onMouseUp={this.toggleActive}
onMouseDown={this.toggleActive}
onFocus={this.toggleFocus}>
Link
</a>
</div>
)
}

onMouseEnter={(e) => {
e.target.style.backgroundColor = '#e13570';
e.target.style.border = '2px solid rgb(31, 0, 69)';
e.target.style.boxShadow = '-2px 0px 7px 2px #e13570';
}}
onMouseLeave={(e) => {
e.target.style.backgroundColor = 'rgb(31, 0, 69)';
e.target.style.border = '2px solid #593676';
e.target.style.boxShadow = '-2px 0px 7px 2px #e13570';
}}
Set default properties in the style or class then call onMouseLeave() and onMouseEnter() to create a hover functionality.

Checkout Typestyle if you are using React with Typescript.
Below is a sample code for :hover
import {style} from "typestyle";
/** convert a style object to a CSS class name */
const niceColors = style({
transition: 'color .2s',
color: 'blue',
$nest: {
'&:hover': {
color: 'red'
}
}
});
<h1 className={niceColors}>Hello world</h1>

In regards to styled-components and react-router v4 you can do this:
import {NavLink} from 'react-router-dom'
const Link = styled(NavLink)`
background: blue;
&:hover {
color: white;
}
`
...
<Clickable><Link to="/somewhere">somewhere</Link></Clickable>

This can be a nice hack for having inline style inside a react component (and also using :hover CSS function):
...
<style>
{`.galleryThumbnail.selected:hover{outline:2px solid #00c6af}`}
</style>
...

The simple way is using ternary operator
var Link = React.createClass({
getInitialState: function(){
return {hover: false}
},
toggleHover: function(){
this.setState({hover: !this.state.hover})
},
render: function() {
var linkStyle;
if (this.state.hover) {
linkStyle = {backgroundColor: 'red'}
} else {
linkStyle = {backgroundColor: 'blue'}
}
return(
<div>
<a style={this.state.hover ? {"backgroundColor": 'red'}: {"backgroundColor": 'blue'}} onMouseEnter={this.toggleHover} onMouseLeave={this.toggleHover}>Link</a>
</div>
)
}

You can use css modules as an alternative, and additionally react-css-modules for class name mapping.
That way you can import your styles as follows and use normal css scoped locally to your components:
import React from 'react';
import CSSModules from 'react-css-modules';
import styles from './table.css';
class Table extends React.Component {
render () {
return <div styleName='table'>
<div styleName='row'>
<div styleName='cell'>A0</div>
<div styleName='cell'>B0</div>
</div>
</div>;
}
}
export default CSSModules(Table, styles);
Here is a webpack css modules example

onMouseOver and onMouseLeave with setState at first seemed like a bit of overhead to me - but as this is how react works, it seems the easiest and cleanest solution to me.
rendering a theming css serverside for example, is also a good solution and keeps the react components more clean.
if you dont have to append dynamic styles to elements ( for example for a theming ) you should not use inline styles at all but use css classes instead.
this is a traditional html/css rule to keep html / JSX clean and simple.

This can be easily achived with material-ui makeStyles invocation:
import { makeStyles } from '#material-ui/core/styles';
makeStyles({
root: {
/* … */
'&:hover': { /* … */ }
},
});

This is a universal wrapper for hover written in typescript. The component will apply style passed via props 'hoverStyle' on hover event.
import React, { useState } from 'react';
export const Hover: React.FC<{
style?: React.CSSProperties;
hoverStyle: React.CSSProperties;
}> = ({ style = {}, hoverStyle, children }) => {
const [isHovered, setHovered] = useState(false);
const calculatedStyle = { ...style, ...(isHovered ? hoverStyle : {}) };
return (
<div
style={calculatedStyle}
onMouseEnter={() => setHovered(true)}
onMouseLeave={() => setHovered(false)}
>
{children}
</div>
);
};

I did something similar to this, but I do not use material-ui or makeStyles. I added the hover as a condition in my css in a style object:
const styles = {
hoverStyle: {
color: 'grey',
'&:hover': { color: 'blue !important' },
}
};
var NavBar = (props) => {
const menuOptions = ['home', 'blog', 'projects', 'about'];
return (
<div>
<div>
{menuOptions.map((page) => <div style={styles.hoverStyle} key={page}>{page}</div> )}
</div>
</div>
);
};
This worked for me.

You can just create an abstract hovering class e.g. for the color.
.hoverClassColor:hover {
color:var(--hover-color) !important;
}
Then for all Elements you wanna changes the color to red on hovering:
render() {
return <a className={'hoverClassColor'} style={{'--hover-color':'red'}}>Test</a>
}
For me its like inline, cause the classes are abstract and can be reused for all of your elements you wanna implement a color hovering.

I use this trick, a mix between inline-style and css:
//inline-style:
const button = {
fontSize: "2em",
};
return (
<div style={button} data-hover="button">
<style>{`[data-hover="button"]:hover {
font-size: 2.1em !important;
}`}</style>
{this.props.text}
</div>
);

Easiest way 2022:
useRef + inline onMouseOver/onMouseOut
example:
var bottomAtag = useRef(null)
...then inside return (
<a ref={bottomAtag} onMouseOver={() => bottomAtag.current.style.color='#0F0'} ...></a>

With a using of the hooks:
const useFade = () => {
const [ fade, setFade ] = useState(false);
const onMouseEnter = () => {
setFade(true);
};
const onMouseLeave = () => {
setFade(false);
};
const fadeStyle = !fade ? {
opacity: 1, transition: 'all .2s ease-in-out',
} : {
opacity: .5, transition: 'all .2s ease-in-out',
};
return { fadeStyle, onMouseEnter, onMouseLeave };
};
const ListItem = ({ style }) => {
const { fadeStyle, ...fadeProps } = useFade();
return (
<Paper
style={{...fadeStyle, ...style}}
{...fadeProps}
>
{...}
</Paper>
);
};

<Hoverable hoverStyle={styles.linkHover}>
<a href="https://example.com" style={styles.link}>
Go
</a>
</Hoverable>
Where Hoverable is defined as:
function Hoverable(props) {
const [hover, setHover] = useState(false);
const child = Children.only(props.children);
const onHoverChange = useCallback(
e => {
const name = e.type === "mouseenter" ? "onMouseEnter" : "onMouseLeave";
setHover(!hover);
if (child.props[name]) {
child.props[name](e);
}
},
[setHover, hover, child]
);
return React.cloneElement(child, {
onMouseEnter: onHoverChange,
onMouseLeave: onHoverChange,
style: Object.assign({}, child.props.style, hover ? props.hoverStyle : {})
});
}

I use a pretty hack-ish solution for this in one of my recent applications that works for my purposes, and I find it quicker than writing custom hover settings functions in vanilla js (though, I recognize, maybe not a best practice in most environments..) So, in case you're still interested, here goes.
I create a parent element just for the sake of holding the inline javascript styles, then a child with a className or id that my css stylesheet will latch onto and write the hover style in my dedicated css file. This works because the more granular child element receives the inline js styles via inheritance, but has its hover styles overridden by the css file.
So basically, my actual css file exists for the sole purpose of holding hover effects, nothing else. This makes it pretty concise and easy to manage, and allows me to do the heavy-lifting in my in-line React component styles.
Here's an example:
const styles = {
container: {
height: '3em',
backgroundColor: 'white',
display: 'flex',
flexDirection: 'row',
alignItems: 'stretch',
justifyContent: 'flex-start',
borderBottom: '1px solid gainsboro',
},
parent: {
display: 'flex',
flex: 1,
flexDirection: 'row',
alignItems: 'stretch',
justifyContent: 'flex-start',
color: 'darkgrey',
},
child: {
width: '6em',
textAlign: 'center',
verticalAlign: 'middle',
lineHeight: '3em',
},
};
var NavBar = (props) => {
const menuOptions = ['home', 'blog', 'projects', 'about'];
return (
<div style={styles.container}>
<div style={styles.parent}>
{menuOptions.map((page) => <div className={'navBarOption'} style={styles.child} key={page}>{page}</div> )}
</div>
</div>
);
};
ReactDOM.render(
<NavBar/>,
document.getElementById('app')
);
.navBarOption:hover {
color: black;
}
<script src="https://cdnjs.cloudflare.com/ajax/libs/react/15.1.0/react.min.js"></script>
<script src="https://cdnjs.cloudflare.com/ajax/libs/react/15.1.0/react-dom.min.js"></script>
<div id="app"></div>
Notice that the "child" inline style does not have a "color" property set. If it did, this would not work because the inline style would take precedence over my stylesheet.

I'm not 100% sure if this is the answer, but its the trick i use to simulate the CSS :hover effect with colours and images inline.
`This works best with an image`
class TestHover extends React.PureComponent {
render() {
const landingImage = {
"backgroundImage": "url(https://i.dailymail.co.uk/i/pix/2015/09/01/18/2BE1E88B00000578-3218613-image-m-5_1441127035222.jpg)",
"BackgroundColor": "Red", `this can be any color`
"minHeight": "100%",
"backgroundAttachment": "fixed",
"backgroundPosition": "center",
"backgroundRepeat": "no-repeat",
"backgroundSize": "cover",
"opacity": "0.8", `the hove trick is here in the opcaity slightly see through gives the effect when the background color changes`
}
return (
<aside className="menu">
<div className="menu-item">
<div style={landingImage}>SOME TEXT</div>
</div>
</aside>
);
}
}
ReactDOM.render(
<TestHover />,
document.getElementById("root")
);
CSS:
.menu {
top: 2.70em;
bottom: 0px;
width: 100%;
position: absolute;
}
.menu-item {
cursor: pointer;
height: 100%;
font-size: 2em;
line-height: 1.3em;
color: #000;
font-family: "Poppins";
font-style: italic;
font-weight: 800;
text-align: center;
display: flex;
flex-direction: column;
justify-content: center;
}
Before hover
.menu-item:nth-child(1) {
color: white;
background-color: #001b37;
}
On hover
.menu-item:nth-child(1):hover {
color: green;
background-color: white;
}
Example: https://codepen.io/roryfn/pen/dxyYqj?editors=0011

Here is how I do it with hooks in functional components. With onMouseEnter/Leave, im setting the color as state directly and consume it in the style prop of element (instead of setting hover state and using ternaries to change the state as shown in previous answers).
function App() {
const [col, setCol] = React.useState('white');
return (
<div className="App">
<button
style={{background: `${col}`}}
onMouseEnter={() => setCol("red")}
onMouseLeave={() => setCol("white")}
>
Red
</button>
</div>
);
}
ReactDOM.render(<App/>, document.getElementById('root'))
<script src="https://cdnjs.cloudflare.com/ajax/libs/react/16.8.6/umd/react.production.min.js" integrity="sha256-3vo65ZXn5pfsCfGM5H55X+SmwJHBlyNHPwRmWAPgJnM=" crossorigin="anonymous"></script>
<script src="https://cdnjs.cloudflare.com/ajax/libs/react-dom/16.8.6/umd/react-dom.production.min.js" integrity="sha256-qVsF1ftL3vUq8RFOLwPnKimXOLo72xguDliIxeffHRc=" crossorigin="anonymous"></script>
<div id='root'></div>

This solution does use stylesheets. However, If your application uses an index.css - i.e. has a stylesheet that gets imported into your top-level component, you could just write the following code in there
.hoverEffect:hover {
//add some hover styles
}
Then in your React component, just add the className "hoverEffect" to apply the hover effect "inline".
If the hover state is being passed down as a prop, and you only want it to be applied to the child component, remove the :hover in your index.css, and do this instead.
function Link(props) {
return (
<a className={props.isHovered ? "hoverEffect" : ""}>Hover me<a/>
)
}

Directly use tag in your component like this:
<Wrapper>
<style>
.custom-class{
// CSS here
}
.custom-class:hover{
//query selector
}
</style>
<div className="custom-class"></div>
</Wrapper>

Related

use of :hover as a simplepseudos in csstype for typescript/react

I am using csstype in a react component library. I want to add a hover effect, which is supported through simple pseudos. Unfortunately I cannot find any example of this being used and I can't get it to work.
I have included some code below that expressed the idea of what I want to do, but I have no idea really
import CSS from "csstype";
export const DropdownContainer: CSS.Properties = {
display: "grid",
gridTemplateColumns: "3fr 15fr 30fr",
};
export const DropdownText: CSS.Properties = {
placeSelf: 'start',
}
export const DropdownTextHov: { [P in CSS.SimplePseudos]?: CSS.Properties } = {
':hover': {
color: 'blue',
},
}
<snipped code>
return (
<div style={DropdownContainer}>
<p style={DropdownText}></p>
<p style={{DropdownText} + {DropdownTextHov}}>this is text</p>
</div>
);
I have tried a number of alternatives. I have added the hover to DropdownText, but that doesn't work.

custom style rules on html and body tags with react jss, #global does not get applied

i am attempting to apply custom style rules to: all elements, html, and body tags using react jss, in a React TS library.
when the component inspected in storybook the '#global' rules non present
here is the relevant code section:
import React from 'react';
import jss from 'jss';
import { AppShellProps } from '../interfaces/AppShellProps';
import { StyledThemeContextProvider } from 'ui-context';
const globalStyles = {
'#global': {
'*': {
margin: 0,
padding: 0,
boxSizing: 'border-box',
},
html: {
fontSize: '16px',
overflowY: 'hidden',
overflowX: 'hidden',
},
body: {
width: '100%',
minHeight: '100vh',
}
};
export const AppShell: React.FC<AppShellProps> = ({ ...props }) => {
const { classes } = jss
.createStyleSheet({
shellMain: {
border: '3px dashed purple',
},
...globalStyles,
})
.attach();
return (
<main className={classes.shellMain}>
<StyledThemeContextProvider themeName={props.themeName}>{props.children}</StyledThemeContextProvider>
</main>
);
};
and here is the result of the inspection:
Q: how would it be possible to achieve to apply the globalStyle style rules. and stay close to the react jss implementation? or simply just what do i do wrong :)
as it turns out i had left the jss import when i was experimenting, i replaced
import jss from 'jss';
with:
import { createUseStyles } from 'react-jss';
and the classes is implemented like such:
export const AppShell: React.FC<AppShellProps> = ({ ...props }) => {
const classes = createUseStyles({
shellMain: {
border: '3px dashed purple',
},
...globalStyles,
}).apply({});
return (
<main className={classes.shellMain}>
<StyledThemeContextProvider themeName={props.themeName}>{props.children}</StyledThemeContextProvider>
</main>
);
};
this implementation results in global style rules get applied:

React MaterialUI Theming | How to increase transition duration when switching theme?

I am making a light/dark theme using React MaterialUi.
Question: Is there any possibility to ease theme transition speed instead of instant transition ?
Problem:
I've already tried inline styling with style={{transition: "all 1s linear}} in the parent div but it only works on text color and not the background color (still switches instantly)
I also tried to override transitions duration in createMuiTheme({transitions: {/ /}}) but it has no effect
SOLVED
If you are using CssBaseline to reset global styling, you can also define new rules inside createMuiTheme({}) to define a global body {transition: "all
0.5s linear"}.
Global Css reset with CssBaseline
export default function Layout({ children }) {
const {
state: { darkMode },
} = useContext(AppContext);
const theme = darkTheme(darkMode);
return (
<ThemeProvider theme={theme}>
<CssBaseline />
<div
style={{
minHeight: '100vh',
boxSizing: 'border-box',
}}>
<Navbar />
{children}
</div>
</ThemeProvider>
);
}
New Global css "overrides" inside createMuiTheme()
export const darkTheme = (dark: boolean): ThemeOptions => {
const paletteColors = dark ? paletteColorsDark : paletteColorsLight;
return createMuiTheme({
palette: {
type: dark ? 'dark' : 'light',
primary: {
main: paletteColors.primary,
},
secondary: {
main: paletteColors.secondary,
},
/////// IMPORTANT PART //////////////////////////////////////////
},
overrides: {
MuiCssBaseline: {
'#global': {
body: {
transition: 'all 0.3s linear',
},
},
},
},
});
};
NB: you may need some extra inline styling for specific elements (AppBar in my case)
<AppBar
position='static'
color='default'
elevation={1}
style={{ transition: 'all 0.3s linear' }}>
{/* */}
</AppBar>
body {
transition: all 0.25s ease-in-out;
}
Add this to your top-level CSS import. This might be an index.css and then import "./index.css"; is in the main.jsx (or wherever you have stuff like: <React.StrictMode>).
I see this was covered in the comments in the original question.

React possible to change scss variable?

Is it possible to override scss variables in react. I have for example a theme.scss with some scss variables. Is it possible to change these scss variables with the props of the Container. I know I could change style={{
backgroundColor: style.backgroundColor }} into style={{ backgroundColor: this.props.backgroundColor }} but then the $primary-font-color would'nt change, because I set $primary-font-color: $item-color; in my theme.scss. Is it possible to OVERRIDE my scss variable $item-color so that also $primary-font-color change?
This is only some example-code to explain what i mean:
theme.scss
$background-color: white;
$item-color: gray;
$primary-font-color: $item-color; // I want to override $item-color so that also $primary-font-color changes
$secondary-font-color: darken($primary-font-color, 15%);
export: {
backgroundColor: $background-color;
itemColor: $item-color;
primaryFontColor: $primary-fonty-color;
secondaryFontColor: $secondary-font-color;
}
index.js
ReactDOM.render(
<Container
backgroundColor: 'gray,
itemColor: 'black' // I want to change my scss variable to this value
/>,
document.getElementById('root')
);
Container
import style from '../style/_theme.scss';
class Container extends Component {
render(){
<div style={{ backgroundColor: style.backgroundColor }} >
<div className='item' style={{ backgroundColor: style.itemColor }} >
<p style={{ backgroundColor: style.itemColor }} >Some Text.. </p>
</div>
</div>
}
As I said in the comment manipulating CSS (SCSS so on) with React is generally not a good idea, because it will become hard to maintain. The preferred way to do this would be using classes, as they are reusable and more readable.
In your case what you can do is to define different theme classes, for example:
.whiteTheme {
.backgroundColor {
color: white;
}
.itemColor {
color: white;
}
.primaryFontColor {
color: white;
}
}
.greyTheme {
.backgroundColor {
color: black;
}
.itemColor {
color: grey;
}
.primaryFontColor {
color: grey;
}
}
And then manipulate the theme class name with React (this can happen only once, or per component, if you need it):
class Container extends Component {
render() {
<div className={this.props.isWhiteTheme ? 'whiteTheme' : 'greyTheme'}>
<div style="backgroundColor">
<div className='item' style="itemColor">
<p style="primaryFontColor">Some Text.. </p>
</div>
</div>
</div>
}
}
P.S Naming props or CSS class backgroundColor is not desirable, it's just for general direction.

How to pass global CSS/JS to components?

I have components with some styles:
const styles = () => ({
rootPaper: {
marginBottom: '25px',
paddingTop: 0,
},
});
...
render() {
const { classes } = this.props;
<Paper className={styles.rootPaper} elevation={4}></Paper>
...
export default withStyles(styles)(...)
And it works. This code is repeated in some components so I want to exclude this as a separate JS file:
const globalCss = {
rootPaper: {
marginBottom: '25px',
paddingTop: 0,
},
hidden: {
display: 'none',
},
};
export default globalCss;
and import that file like that:
import globalCss from '../../styles/globalCss';
...
<Paper className={globalCss.rootPaper} elevation={4}>
But when I want to use this in className it doesn't work(no errors). Used React v16 and Material-ui-next beta 20. How Can I move the same classes to one file and use it in different components?
I'm not sure how your 1st example actually works (as you mentioned).
You are not really invoking the styles function.
You should pass this kind of object to the style prop and not to
the className prop (which accepts a string).
As for your second example, it should work if you will pass it to the style prop instead of the className prop, for reasons I mentioned above.
Running example:
const globalCss = {
rootPaper: {
marginBottom: '25px',
paddingTop: 0,
color: 'red'
},
hidden: {
display: 'none',
},
};
const App = () => (
<div style={globalCss.rootPaper}>
<h2>I got some styles!</h2>
</div>
);
ReactDOM.render(<App />, document.getElementById("root"));
<script src="https://cdnjs.cloudflare.com/ajax/libs/react/15.1.0/react.min.js"></script>
<script src="https://cdnjs.cloudflare.com/ajax/libs/react/15.1.0/react-dom.min.js"></script>
<div id="root"></div>

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