A command line tool to help you extract react-toolbox style modules to static files so you can integrate it in nearly any stack.
$ yarn add --dev react-toolbox-themr react-toolbox@2.0.0-beta.6
Note it only works with React Toolbox 2.0 beta. The output path shown in the GIF is outdated, now by default the assets are generated at src/toolbox
.
React Toolbox 2.0 styles have been rewritten using postcss. This gives us more flexibility and makes the library more powerful allowing things like live transforming in the browser. We still use CSS Modules thought, and some people find difficult to integrate the library in their current stack, specially when Webpack is not included or accessible.
Sometimes it's annoying to configure react-toolbox to import CSS so this package will help you making easier to try out the library and providing an easy integration with tools like react-create-app. It will help you extracting the CSS modules into static files you can import in your application, making react-toolbox very easy to adopt.
First of all you have to add react-toolbox-themr
to your project as a development package. You can either use npm
or yarn
.
$ yarn add --dev react-toolbox-themr
Once installed you can define the configuration in the package.json
file of your project or through the --config <path/to/json>
option. If you want to use your package.json
to store configuration, the reactToolbox
key should be used on the top level to find your settings:
"reactToolbox": {
"include": [
"BUTTON",
"DATE_PICKER"
],
"customProperties": {
"animation-duration": "0.3s",
"color-accent": "var(--palette-pink-a200)",
"color-accent-dark": "var(--palette-pink-700)",
"color-primary-contrast": "var(--color-dark-contrast)",
"color-accent-contrast": "var(--color-dark-contrast)"
},
"output": "assets/react-toolbox"
}
Then you must add a script in your package.json
to run the builder.
"scripts": {
"toolbox": "react-toolbox-themr"
}
After this, you can run from the console the command yarn run toolbox
and the script will create an assets/react-toolbox
folder and two different files:
theme.css
includes all CSS from react-toolbox for the components you have specified in the configuration.theme.js
implements a javascript object (a css module) that tells react-toolbox components what are theclassNames
each included component needs to use.
As a final step you have to include the generated CSS file in your document just like any other CSS asset. Also, you have to use react-css-themr ThemeProvider
at the top of your app passing the theme.
import theme from 'assets/react-toolbox/theme'
import ThemeProvider from 'react-toolbox/lib/ThemeProvider';
const App = ({ children }) => (
<ThemeProvider theme={theme}>
{children}
</ThemeProvider>
);
export default App;
Although ThemeProvider
is exposed by react-toolbox, you can add your own importing directly from react-css-themr.
Finally, make sure the components you use from react-toolbox are imported without bundled css:
- import {Button} from 'react-toolbox/lib/button';
+ import Button from 'react-toolbox/lib/button/Button';
Otherwise your build will break.
That's all!
As react-toolbox-themr
is a command line utility, you can use it from the command line passing options inline like:
$ react-toolbox-themr -i BUTTON DATE_PICKER -o my-theme/
But we really encourage you to use either package.json
or a custom configuration file so it's more clear to visualize your configuration. Passing configuration variables is allowed only via package of custom config file.
All of these options have the same name if you use them in your package.json
, a custom json
file or directly through the command line. Some of them are aliased to be used from the command line but passing configuration variables is only allowed from a package of custom json file configuration. Everything is optional.
config
: Path to a custom configurationjson
file. Should be used only via command line.path
: Path toreact-toolbox
. Usually you don't need to change but you can set your own if your setup is more complex. Aliased as-p
.include
: Array of components that will be included in the theme. Aliased as-i
. Accepted values are 'AUTOCOMPLETE', 'AVATAR', 'BUTTON', 'CARD', 'CHECKBOX', 'CHIP', 'DATE_PICKER', 'DIALOG', 'DRAWER', 'DROPDOWN', 'INPUT', 'LAYOUT', 'LINK', 'LIST', 'MENU', 'NAVIGATION', 'OVERLAY', 'PROGRESS_BAR', 'RADIO', 'RIPPLE', 'SLIDER', 'SNACKBAR', 'SWITCH', 'TABLE', 'TABS', 'TIME_PICKER' and 'TOOLTIP'.output
: Path where both Javascript and CSS files will be generated. Aliased as-o
. Defaults tosrc/toolbox
.javascript
: Path where the Javascript theme file will be generated. You can optionally include the name of the file. Takes precedence overoutput
, aliased as-j
.styles
: Path where the CSS theme file will be generated. You can optionally include the name of the file. Takes precedence overoutput
, aliased as-s
.customProperties
: An object where keys are custom properties names defined in react toolbox and values are references to other variables of absolute values. It can't be used from the command line. These variables override the defaults defined in React Toolbox.
The project is originally authored by Javi Velasco as an effort of providing a better adoption experience for React Toolbox. Any comments, improvements or feedback are highly appreciated.
This project is licensed under the terms of the MIT license.