Skip to content

egoist/styled-vue

Folders and files

NameName
Last commit message
Last commit date

Latest commit

da70135 · May 20, 2020

History

40 Commits
Jan 18, 2020
Jan 18, 2020
Jan 18, 2020
Jan 18, 2020
Jan 18, 2020
Jan 8, 2019
Jan 18, 2020
Jan 8, 2019
Jan 8, 2019
Jan 18, 2020
Jan 8, 2019
Jan 8, 2019
May 20, 2020
Jan 26, 2019
Jan 8, 2019
Jan 18, 2020
Jan 18, 2020

Repository files navigation

ATTENTION: this project is not actively maintained for now (I still push some code once in a while), if you want to see improvements or get support, please consider sponsoring me.

styled-vue


NPM version NPM downloads CircleCI chat

Please consider donating to this project's author, EGOIST, to show your ❤️ and support.

Features

  • Zero-runtime CSS-in-JS for Vue SFC without compromise
  • Scoped CSS by default
  • CSS preprocessors support
  • Dynamic style just works (no IE support)
  • Working with SSR out-of-the-box
  • Hot module replacement still works
  • You get all the features without any config!

Table of Contents

Install

yarn add styled-vue --dev

Then register the Vue plugin (optional):

import Vue from 'vue'
import { StyledVue } from 'styled-vue'

Vue.use(StyledVue)

So far the plugin is only required for globalStyle, if you only need scoped style, you can safely skip this.

Example

<template>
  <div><h1 class="title">hello there!</h1></div>
</template>

<script>
import { css } from 'styled-vue'
import { modularScale } from 'polished'

export default {
  style: css`
    .title {
      /* You can access component's "this" via "vm" */
      color: ${vm => vm.$store.state.themeColor};
      font-size: ${modularScale(2)};
      margin: 0;
    }
  `
}
</script>

And that's it, it's like writing .vue file's scoped CSS in the <script> tag.

How to use

Using with webpack

I did say that styled-vue works without config, that might be a clickbait because you do need a single line of config in your webpack.config.js:

module.exports = {
  module: {
    rules: [
      {
        test: /\.vue$/,
        loader: 'vue-loader',
        options: {
          compiler: require('styled-vue/compiler') // <- here
        }
      }
    ]
  }
}

Using with Vue CLI

In your vue.config.js:

module.exports = {
  chainWebpack(config) {
    config.module
      .rule('vue')
      .use('vue-loader')
      .tap(options => {
        options.compiler = require('styled-vue/compiler') // <- here
        return options
      })
  }
}

Using with Poi

In your poi.config.js:

module.exports = {
  plugins: ['styled-vue/poi']
}

Using with Nuxt.js

In your nuxt.config.js:

export default {
  modules: ['styled-vue/nuxt']
}

How does it work

Input:

<template>
  <h1>hello</h1>
</template>

<script>
import { css } from 'styled-vue'

export default {
  style: css`
    h1 {
      color: ${vm => vm.color};
      width: ${200 + 1}px;
    }
  `
}
</script>

Output:

<template>
  <h1 :style="$options.style(this)">hello</h1>
</template>

<script>
export default {
  style: function(vm) {
    var v0 = vm => vm.color
    var v1 = 200 + 1
    return {
      '--v0': v0(vm),
      '--v1': v1 + 'px'
    }
  }
}
</script>

<style scoped>
h1 {
  color: var(--v0);
  width: var(--v1);
}
</style>

Under the hood, it uses CSS variables for dynamic styles, that's why this feature is not supported in IE.

CSS Preprocessors

import { less, sass, scss, stylus } from 'styled-vue'

Just use corresponding exports from styled-vue.

The CSS will be passed to vue-loader and parsed by PostCSS if a postcss.config.js exists in your project, so it really just works like <style scoped>.

Global Styles

Use globalStyle instead of style on your component:

import { css } from 'styled-vue'

export default {
  globalStyle: css`
    body {
      color: ${vm => vm.bodyColor};
    }
  `
}

globalStyle relies on the Vue plugin, make sure to register it first:

import Vue from 'vue'
import { StyledVue } from 'styled-vue'

Vue.use(StyledVue)

For Nuxt users we automatically register it for you.

This only adds ~100 bytes to your application.

TypeScript

We use Babel to parse your code, so TypeScript should work out-of-the-box, however there're some caveats.

Editor Plugins

VSCode

Atom

Inspirations

Contributing

  1. Fork it!
  2. Create your feature branch: git checkout -b my-new-feature
  3. Commit your changes: git commit -am 'Add some feature'
  4. Push to the branch: git push origin my-new-feature
  5. Submit a pull request :D

Author

styled-vue © EGOIST, Released under the MIT License.
Authored and maintained by EGOIST with help from contributors (list).

Website · GitHub @EGOIST · Twitter @_egoistlily