Generating CSS using JS with considerable flexibility and extensibility, at both server side and client side.
npm install css-renderGenerating CSS using JS with considerable flexibility and extensibility, at both server side and client side.
It's mainly built for library builders (who wants make their library work without css import at small overhead). It's not recommend to use it in a webapp.
It is not designed to totally replace other style-related solutions, but to be a progressive tool which can just work as a supplementary of your style files or totally replace your .css files.
sass-like or less-like css-in-js (eg. mixin in sass or less).Main differences between css-render and styled-component, jss or emotion:
1. It doesn't do the bindings between components and styles. It is more like a style generator with low level mount and unmount API.
2. It's easier to write like a sass mixin or less mixin.
bash
$ npm install --save-dev css-render
`
`js
import CssRender from 'css-render'
/**
* CommonJS:
* const { CssRender } = require('css-render')
*/const {
c
} = CssRender()
const style = c('body', ({ props }) => ({
margin: 0,
backgroundColor: props.backgroundColor
}), [
c('&.dark', {
backgroundColor: 'black'
}),
c('.container', {
width: '100%'
})
])
/* use it as string /
console.log(style.render({ backgroundColor: 'white' }))
/**
* or mount on document.head. (the following lines only work in the browser.)
*/
style.mount()
// ...
style.unmount()
`
`css
body {
margin: 0;
background-color: white;
}body.dark {
background-color: black;
}
body .container {
width: 100%;
}
`$3
`bash
$ npm install --save-dev css-render @css-render/plugin-bem
`You can use bem plugin to generate bem CSS like this:
`js
import CssRender from 'css-render'
import bem from '@css-render/plugin-bem'
/**
* CommonJS:
* const { CssRender } = require('css-render')
* const { plugin: bem } = require('@css-render/plugin-bem')
*/const cssr = CssRender()
const plugin = bem({
blockPrefix: '.c-'
})
cssr.use(plugin) // bind the plugin with the cssr instance
const {
cB, cE, cM
} = plugin
const style = cB(
'container',
[
cE(
'left, right',
{
width: '50%'
}
),
cM(
'dark',
[
cE(
'left, right',
{
backgroundColor: 'black'
}
)
]
)
]
)
/* use it as string /
console.log(style.render())
/**
* or mount on document.head
* the following lines only works in browser, don't call them in node.js
*/
style.mount()
// ...
style.unmount()
`
`css
.c-container .c-container__left, .c-container .c-container__right {
width: 50%;
}.c-container.c-container--dark .c-container__left, .c-container.c-container--dark .c-container__right {
background-color: black;
}
`Vue3 SSR
`bash
$ npm install --save-dev css-render @css-render/vue3-ssr
`To make ssr works, you need to make
`tsx
import { h, createSSRApp, defineComponent } from 'vue'
import { renderToString } from '@vue/server-renderer'import { CssRender } from 'css-render'
import { SsrContext, ssrAdapter } from '@css-render/vue3-ssr'
const Child = defineComponent({
setup () {
c('div', {
color: 'red'
}).mount({
id: 'mount-id',
// You need to pass the ssrAdapter to
mount function
// to make ssr work.
// If you want it work with CSR, just set it to undefined
ssr: ssrAdapter
})
},
render () {
return 'Child'
}
})const App = defineComponent({
render () {
// Wrap the SsrContext at the root of your app
return h(SsrContext, null, {
default: () => h(Child)
})
}
})
const app = createSSRApp(App)
renderToString(app).then(v => { console.log(v) })
``Finally you will find the rendered SSR HTML includes mounted style.