@material-ui/system
Style functions for building powerful design systems.
⚠️
@material-ui/system
is experimental (alpha version). We are working on making it stable for Material-UI v4.
Getting Started
@material-ui/system
provides low-level utility functions called "style functions" for building powerful design systems. Some of the key features:
- ⚛️ Access the theme values directly from the component props.
- 🦋 Encourage UI consistency.
- 🌈 Write responsive style effortlessly.
- 🦎 Work with any theme object.
- 💅 Work with the most popular CSS-in-JS solutions.
- 📦 Less than 4 KB gzipped.
- 🚀 Fast enough not to be a bottleneck at runtime.
It's important to understand that this package exposes pure (side-effect free) style functions with this signature: ({ theme, ...style }) => style
, that's it.
Demo
In the rest of this Getting Started section we are using styled-components as the reference example (to emphasize the universality of this package). Alternatively, you can use JSS. The demos are also based on the default Material-UI theme object.
import { palette, spacing, typography } from '@material-ui/system';
import styled from 'styled-components';
const Box = styled.div`${palette}${spacing}${typography}`;
// or import { unstable_Box as Box } from '@material-ui/core/Box';
<Box
color="primary.main"
bgcolor="background.paper"
fontFamily="h6.fontFamily"
fontSize={{ xs: 'h6.fontSize', sm: 'h4.fontSize', md: 'h3.fontSize' } }
p={{ xs: 2, sm: 3, md: 4} }
>
@material-ui/system
</Box>
Installation
// with npm
npm install @material-ui/system
// with yarn
yarn add @material-ui/system
Create a component
In order to use the Box
component, you first need to create it.
To start with, add a spacing
and palette
function to the style argument.
import styled from 'styled-components';
import { spacing, palette } from '@material-ui/system';
const Box = styled.div`${spacing}${palette}`;
export default Box;
This Box component now supports new spacing properties and color properties.
For instance, you can provide a padding property: p
and a color property: color
.
<Box p="1rem" color="grey">Give me some space!</Box>
The component can be styled providing any valid CSS values.
Theming
But most of the time, you want to rely on a theme's values to increase the UI consistency. It's preferable to have a predetermined set of padding and color values. Import the theme provider of your styling solution.
import React from 'react'
import { ThemeProvider } from 'styled-components'
const theme = {
spacing: 4,
palette: {
primary: '#007bff',
},
};
function App() {
return (
<ThemeProvider theme={theme}>
{/* children */}
</ThemeProvider>
)
}
export default App
Now, you can provide a spacing multiplier value:
<Box p={1}>4px</Box>
<Box p={2}>8px</Box>
<Box p={-1}>-4px</Box>
and a primary color:
<Box color="primary">blue</Box>
All-inclusive
To make the Box component more useful, we have been building a collection of style functions, here is the full list:
If you are already using @material-ui/core
, you can use our prepackaged Box component (using JSS internally):
import { unstable_Box as Box } from '@material-ui/core/Box';
Interoperability
@material-ui/system
works with most CSS-in-JS libraries, including JSS, styled-components, and emotion.
If you are already using @material-ui/core
, we encourage you to start with the JSS solution to minimize bundle size.
JSS
import { palette, spacing, compose } from '@material-ui/system';
import { styled } from '@material-ui/styles';
const Box = styled(compose(spacing, palette));
Styled components
import { palette, spacing } from '@material-ui/system';
import styled from 'styled-components';
const Box = styled.div`${palette}${spacing}`;
Emotion
import { spacing, palette } from '@material-ui/system';
import styled from '@emotion/styled';
const Box = styled.div`${palette}${spacing}`;
Responsive
All the properties are responsive, we support 3 different APIs. It uses this default, but customizable, breakpoints theme structure:
const values = {
xs: 0,
sm: 600,
md: 960,
lg: 1280,
xl: 1920,
};
const theme = {
breakpoints: {
keys: ['xs', 'sm', 'md', 'lg', 'xl'],
up: key => `@media (min-width:${values[key]}px)`,
},
};
Array
<Box p={[2, 3, 4]} />
/**
* Outputs:
*
* padding: 16px;
* @media (min-width: 600px) {
* padding: 24px;
* }
* @media (min-width: 960px) {
* padding: 32px;
* }
*/
Object
<Box p={{ xs: 2, sm: 3, md: 4 }} />
/**
* Outputs:
*
* padding: 16px;
* @media (min-width: 600px) {
* padding: 24px;
* }
* @media (min-width: 960px) {
* padding: 32px;
* }
*/
Collocation
If you want to group the breakpoint values, you can use our breakpoints()
helper.
import { compose, spacing, palette, breakpoints } from '@material-ui/system';
import styled from 'styled-components';
const Box = styled.div`
${breakpoints(
compose(
spacing,
palette,
),
)}
`;
<Box
p={2}
sm={{ p: 3 } }
md={{ p: 4 } }
/>
/**
* Outputs:
*
* padding: 16px;
* @media (min-width: 600px) {
* padding: 24px;
* }
* @media (min-width: 960px) {
* padding: 32px;
* }
*/
Custom style props
style(options) => style function
Use this helper to create your own style function.
We don't support all the CSS properties. It's possible that you want to support new ones. It's also possible that you want to change the theme path prefix.
Arguments
options
(Object):options.prop
(String): The property the style function will be triggered on.options.cssProperty
(String|Boolean [optional]): Defaults tooptions.prop
. The CSS property used. You can disabled this option by providingfalse
. When disabled, the property value will handle as a style object on it's own. It can be used for rendering variants.options.themeKey
(String [optional]): The theme path prefix.options.transform
(Function [optional]): Apply a transformation before outputing a CSS value.
Returns
style function
: The style function created.
Examples
import { style } from '@material-ui/system'
const borderColor = style({
prop: 'bc',
cssProperty: 'borderColor',
themeKey: 'palette',
transform: value => `${value} !important`,
});
compose(...style functions) => style function
Merge multiple style functions into one.
Returns
style function
: The style function created.
Examples
import { style, compose } from '@material-ui/system'
export const textColor = style({
prop: 'color',
themeKey: 'palette',
});
export const bgcolor = style({
prop: 'bgcolor',
cssProperty: 'backgroundColor',
themeKey: 'palette',
});
const palette = compose(textColor, bgcolor);
Variants
The style()
helper can also be used to maps properties to style objects in a theme.
In this example, the variant
property supports all the keys present in theme.typography
.
import React from 'react';
import styled, { ThemeProvider } from 'styled-components';
import { style, typography } from '@material-ui/system';
const variant = style({
prop: 'variant',
cssProperty: false,
themeKey: 'typography',
});
// ⚠ Text is already defined in the global context:
// https://developer.mozilla.org/en-US/docs/Web/API/Text/Text.
const Text = styled.span`
font-family: Helvetica;
${variant}
${typography}
`;
const theme = {
typography: {
h1: {
fontSize: 30,
lineHeight: 1.5,
},
h2: {
fontSize: 25,
lineHeight: 1.5,
},
},
};
// Renders the theme.typography.h1 style object.
<Text variant="h1">variant=h1</Text>
CSS property
If you want to support custom CSS values, you can use our css()
helper.
It will process the css
property.
import { compose, spacing, palette, css } from '@material-ui/system';
import styled from 'styled-components';
const Box = styled.div`
${css(
compose(
spacing,
palette,
),
)}
`;
<Box color="white" css={{ bgcolor: 'palevioletred', p: 1, textTransform: 'uppercase' }}>
CssProp
</Box>
How it works
styled-system has done a great job at explaining how it works. It can help building a mental model for this "style function" concept.
Real-world use case
In practice, a Box component can save you a lot of time. In this example, we demonstrate how to reproduce a Banner component.
Prior art
@material-ui/system
synthesizes ideas & APIs from several different sources:
- Tachyons was one of the first (2014) CSS libraries to promote the Atomic CSS pattern (or Functional CSS).
- Tachyons was later on (2017) followed by Tailwind CSS. They have made Atomic CSS more popular.
- Twitter Bootstrap has slowly introduced atomic class names in v2, v3, and v4. We have used the way they group their "Helper classes" as inspiration.
- In the React world, Styled System was one of the first (2017) to promote the style functions. It can be used as a generic Box component replacing the atomic CSS helpers as well as helpers to write new components.
- Large companies like Pinterest, GitHub, and Segment.io are using the same approach in different flavours:
- The actual implementation and the object responsive API was inspired by the Smooth-UI's system.