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A simple and flexibile css-in-js implementation for Svelte

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Vehmloewff/shineup

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No longer maintained

shineup

A simple and flexible css-in-js implementation for Svelte.

Installation

npm i shineup

Brief Overview

No complex setup or installation is neccesary. Just import and go:

<script>
	import { createStyles } from "shineup";

	$: css = createStyles({
		color: "red",
	});
</script>

<div class="{css}" />

If you have more than one component it is recomended that you scope them:

<script>
	import { createScope, ready } from "shineup";

	const scope = createScope();

	$: css = scope.style({
		color: "red",
	});

	ready();
</script>

<div class="{css}" />

or

<script>
	import { createStyles } from "shineup";

	$: css = createStyles(
		{
			color: "red",
		},
		"something-that-is-different-with-each-component"
	);

	ready();
</script>

<div class="{css}" />

You can define as many classes as you need:

<script>
	import { createScope } from "shineup";

	const scope = createScope();

	$: css = scope.style({
		background: {
			height: "50px",
			width: "200px",
		},
		foreground: {
			background: "green",
			transition: "background 0.5s",
			$h1: {
				color: "red",
			},
			":hover": {
				background: "red",
			},
		},
	});

	ready();
</script>

<div class="{css.background}" />
<!-- or -->
<div class="{css.get('background')}" />

<div class="{css.foreground}">
	<h1>Hello World!</h1>
</div>

API

createScope(): object

Returns a { style } object.

style(obj: object): object|string

Creates a stylesheet and appends it to the DOM. If this function is called after the stylesheet has been added to the DOM that stylesheet will just be updated.

obj is passed directly to parseJS.

The result of this function will be either a string, or an object with each key as a string and a get(class: string) method. These strings are intended to be plugged right into your template as the class name of the element you want to modify.

Example with a string returned:

<script>
	import { createScope } from "shineup";

	const scope = createScope();

	$: css = scope.style({
		color: "red",
	});
</script>

<div class="{css}" />

Example with an object returned:

<script>
	import { createScope } from "shineup";

	const scope = createScope();

	$: css = scope.style(
		header: {
			color: "red",
		},
		button: {
			color: "blue",
		}
	);

	ready();
</script>

<div class="{css.header}">Header</div>
<button class="{css.button}">Button</button>

createStyles(obj: object, key?: string): object|string

Almost the same as createScope().style. The only difference is that with this method, a key option is passed in.

key is an string used to for scoping. Default is "my-component".

parseJS(obj: object): object

Parses obj into an object whose keys and values are valid css.

shineup revolves around the use of classes. While traditional CSS frameworks provide a myrmaid of classes that you can assign to your elements, this package is aimed at making it easy to have one class per component, and then you can dynamicly assign styles to that class.

All keys are allowed to be in the camel case (boxShadow) or hyphenated (box-shadow) formats.

Returns a { css, classes } object.

  • css is just a valid css version of obj.
  • classes is an object that contains all of the classes in obj (if obj does not contain an classes shineup will assign it to default class) linked to their selector.

Examples:

{
	"headerInner": {
		"color": "red"
	}
}

// ->
{
	".header-inner": {
		"color": "red"
	}
}

Any keys values of type object will be appended onto the parent selector ($ can optionally replace the space character ``).

{
	"headerInner": {
		"color": "red",
		"$h1": {
			"color": "green"
		},
		":hover": {
			"boxShadow": "2px 2px 2px 2px black"
		}
	}
}

// ->
{
	".header-inner": {
		"color": "red"
	},
	".header-inner h1": {
		"color": "green"
	}
}

Any values of type function will be called with a { obj: object, parent: object, key: string, id: string, className: string, querySelector: string } paramater.

{
	"headerInner": {
		color: "red",
		boxShadow: ({ parent, key }) => {
			if (!parent.boxShadow && !parent["box-shadow"]) {
				return "2px 2px 2px 2px black";
			}
		}
	}
}

// ->
{
	".header-inner": {
		"color": "red",
		"box-shadow": "2px 2px 2px 2px black",
	}
}

Any keys that start with an & symbol and whose value is of type function will be called just like in the previous example, except, the returned value will be merged into the parent value.

This example will produce the same output as the above example:

{
	"headerInner": {
		color: "red",
		"&boxShadow": ({ parent, key }) => {
			if (!parent.boxShadow && !parent["box-shadow"]) {
				return {
					boxShadow: "2px 2px 2px 2px black",
				}
			}
		}
	}
}

attachStyles(obj: object, key: string): void

Stringifys the obj paramater, which should be valid css keys and values, to the head. If this function is called twice with the same key, it will override an existing style element instead of creating a new one.

Example:

attachStyles({
	".something": {
		border: "1px solid black",
	}
	".other": {
		border: "1px solid blue",
	}
}, "some-key")

Can I contribute?

Sure!

Fork repo. Then...

git clone https://github.com/[your-username]/shineup
cd shineup
npm setup

npm test -- --watch

To run the test app:

npm run test:browser

Issues and PR's are welcome!

Don't forget to npm run lint before commiting!

License

MIT