Style library interoperability
While you can use the Emotion-based styling solution provided by MUI to style your application, you can also use the one you already know and love (from plain CSS to styled-components).
Este guia tem como objetivo documentar as alternativas mais populares, mas você deve descobrir que os princípios aplicados aqui podem ser adaptados para outras bibliotecas. Existem exemplos para as seguintes soluções de estilo:
CSS puro
Nada extravagante, apenas CSS.
PlainCssSlider.css
.slider {
color: #20b2aa;
}
.slider:hover {
color: #2e8b57;
}
PlainCssSlider.js
import * as React from 'react';
import Slider from '@material-ui/core/Slider';
import './PlainCssSlider.css';
export default function PlainCssSlider() {
return (
<div>
<Slider defaultValue={30} />
<Slider defaultValue={30} className="slider" />
</div>
);
}
Ordem de injeção do CSS ⚠️
Nota: A maioria das soluções CSS-in-JS injetam seus estilos na parte inferior do HTML <head>
, que dá precedência ao Material-UI sobre seus estilos customizados. Para remover a necessidade de !important, você precisa alterar a ordem de injeção do CSS. Here's a demo of how it can be done in Material-UI:
import * as React from 'react';
import { StyledEngineProvider } from '@material-ui/core/styles';
export default function GlobalCssPriority() {
return (
<StyledEngineProvider injectFirst>
{/* Your component tree. Now you can override MUI's styles. */}
</CacheProvider>
);
}
Note: If you are using Emotion and have a custom cache in your app, that one will override the one coming from MUI. In order for the injection order to still be correct, you need to add the prepend option. Aqui está um exemplo:
import * as React from 'react';
import { StyledEngineProvider } from '@material-ui/core/styles';
export default function GlobalCssPriority() {
return (
<StyledEngineProvider injectFirst>
{/* Your component tree. Now you can override MUI's styles. */}
</CacheProvider>
);
}
Note: If you are using styled-components and have StyleSheetManager
with a custom target
, make sure that the target is the first element in the HTML <head>
. If you are curious to see how it can be done, you can take a look on the StylesProvider
implementation in the @material-ui/styled-engine-sc
package.
Elementos mais profundos
Se você tentar estilizar o Slider, você provavelmente gostaria de afetar alguns dos elementos filhos de Slider, por exemplo o thumb. No Material-UI, todos os elementos filhos têm uma especificidade aumentada de 2: .parent .child {}
. Ao escrever uma sobrescrita, você precisa fazer o mesmo.
Os exemplos a seguir substituem o estilo de thumb
do controle slider, além dos estilos customizados no slider em si.
PlainCssSliderDeep1.css
.slider {
color: #20b2aa;
}
.slider:hover {
color: #2e8b57;
}
.slider . MuiSlider-thumb {
border-radius: 1px;
}
PlainCssSliderDeep1.js
import * as React from 'react';
import Slider from '@material-ui/core/Slider';
import './PlainCssSliderDeep1.css';
export default function PlainCssSliderDeep1() {
return (
<div>
<Slider defaultValue={30} />
<Slider defaultValue={30} className="slider" />
</div>
);
}
The above demo relies on the default className
values, but you can provide your own class name with the componentsProps
API.
PlainCssSliderDeep2.css
.slider {
color: #20b2aa;
}
.slider:hover {
color: #2e8b57;
}
.slider .thumb {
border-radius: 1px;
}
PlainCssSliderDeep2.js
import * as React from 'react';
import Slider from '@material-ui/core/Slider';
import './PlainCssSliderDeep2.css';
export default function PlainCssSliderDeep2() {
return (
<div>
<Slider defaultValue={30} />
<Slider
defaultValue={30}
className="slider"
componentsProps={{ thumb: { className: 'thumb' } }}
/>
</div>
);
}
CSS global
Fornecer explicitamente os nomes das classes ao componente é um esforço excessivo? You can target the class names generated by MUI.
GlobalCssSlider.css
. MuiSlider-root {
color: #20b2aa;
}
. MuiSlider-root:hover {
color: #2e8b57;
}
GlobalCssSlider.js
import * as React from 'react';
import Slider from '@material-ui/core/Slider';
import './GlobalCssSlider.css';
export default function GlobalCssSlider() {
return <Slider defaultValue={30} />;
}
Ordem de injeção do CSS ⚠️
Para remover a necessidade de !important, você precisa alterar a ordem de injeção do CSS. Nota: A maioria das soluções CSS-in-JS injetam seus estilos na parte inferior do HTML <head>
, que dá precedência ao Material-UI sobre seus estilos customizados. Here's a demo of how it can be done in Material-UI:
import * as React from 'react';
import { StyledEngineProvider } from '@material-ui/core/styles';
export default function GlobalCssPriority() {
return (
<StyledEngineProvider injectFirst>
{/* Your component tree. Now you can override MUI's styles. import * as React from 'react';
import { CacheProvider } from '@emotion/react';
import createCache from '@emotion/cache';
const cache = createCache({
key: 'css',
prepend: true,
});
export default function CssModulesPriority() {
return (
<CacheProvider value={cache}>
{/* Sua árvore de componentes.
Note: If you are using Emotion and have a custom cache in your app, that one will override the one coming from MUI. In order for the injection order to still be correct, you need to add the prepend option. Aqui está um exemplo:
Agora você pode sobrescrever os estilos do Material-UI. import * as React from 'react';
import { StylesProvider } from '@material-ui/core';
export default function GlobalCssPriority() {
return (
<StylesProvider injectFirst>
{/* Your component tree. import * as React from 'react';
import { CacheProvider } from '@emotion/react';
import createCache from '@emotion/cache';
const cache = createCache({
key: 'css',
prepend: true,
});
export default function CssModulesPriority() {
return (
<CacheProvider value={cache}>
{/* Sua árvore de componentes. */}
</CacheProvider>
);
}
Note: If you are using styled-components and have StyleSheetManager
with a custom target
, make sure that the target is the first element in the HTML <head>
. If you are curious to see how it can be done, you can take a look on the StylesProvider
implementation in the @material-ui/styled-engine-sc
package.
Elementos mais profundos
Se você tentar estilizar o Slider, você provavelmente gostaria de afetar alguns dos elementos filhos de Slider, por exemplo o thumb. No Material-UI, todos os elementos filhos têm uma especificidade aumentada de 2: .parent .child {}
. Ao escrever uma sobrescrita, você precisa fazer o mesmo.
O exemplo a seguir substituem o estilo de thumb
do controle slider, além dos estilos customizados no slider em si.
GlobalCssSliderDeep.css
. MuiSlider-root {
color: #20b2aa;
}
. MuiSlider-root:hover {
color: #2e8b57;
}
. MuiSlider-root . MuiSlider-thumb {
border-radius: 1px;
}
GlobalCssSliderDeep.js
import * as React from 'react';
import Slider from '@material-ui/core/Slider';
import './GlobalCssSliderDeep.css';
export default function GlobalCssSliderDeep() {
return <Slider defaultValue={30} />;
}
Styled Components
Alterar o motor de estilo padrão
By default, MUI components come with Emotion as their style engine. If, however, you would like to use styled-components
, you can configure your app by following the styled engine guide or starting with one of the example projects:
After the style engine is configured properly, you can use the styled()
utility from @material-ui/core/styles
and have direct access to the theme.
After the style engine is configured properly, you can use the styled()
utility from @mui/material/styles
and have direct access to the theme.
import * as React from 'react';
import Slider from '@material-ui/core/Slider';
import { styled } from '@material-ui/core/styles';
const CustomizedSlider = styled(Slider)`
color: #20b2aa;
:hover {
color: #2e8b57;
}
`;
export default function StyledComponents() {
return <CustomizedSlider defaultValue={30} />;
}
Elementos mais profundos
Se você tentar estilizar o Slider, você provavelmente gostaria de afetar alguns dos elementos filhos de Slider, por exemplo o thumb. No Material-UI, todos os elementos filhos têm uma especificidade aumentada de 2: .parent .child {}
. Ao escrever uma sobrescrita, você precisa fazer o mesmo.
Os exemplos a seguir substituem o estilo de thumb
do controle slider, além dos estilos customizados no slider em si.
The above demo relies on the default className
values, but you can provide your own class name with the componentsProps
API.
import * as React from 'react';
import { styled } from '@material-ui/core/styles';
import Slider from '@material-ui/core/Slider';
const CustomizedSlider = styled((props) => (
<Slider componentsProps={{ thumb: { className: 'thumb' } }} {...props} />
))`
color: #20b2aa;
:hover {
color: #2e8b57;
}
& .thumb {
border-radius: 1px;
}
`;
export default function StyledComponentsDeep2() {
return (
<div>
<Slider defaultValue={30} />
<CustomizedSlider defaultValue={30} />
</div>
);
}
Tema
Você é encorajado a compartilhar o mesmo objeto de tema entre Material-UI e o resto de seu projeto.
You are encouraged to share the same theme object between MUI and the rest of your project.
const CustomizedSlider = styled(Slider)(
({ theme }) => `
color: ${theme.palette.primary.main};
:hover {
color: ${darken(theme.palette.primary.main, 0.2)};
}
`,
);
Portais
The Portal provides a first-class way to render children into a DOM node that exists outside the DOM hierarchy of the parent component. Because of the way styled-components scopes its CSS, you may run into issues where styling is not applied.
For example, if you attempt to style the tooltip
generated by the Tooltip component, you will need to pass along the className
property to the element being rendered outside of it's DOM hierarchy. The following example shows a workaround:
import * as React from 'react';
import { styled } from '@material-ui/core/styles';
import Button from '@material-ui/core/Button';
import Tooltip from '@material-ui/core/Tooltip';
const StyledTooltip = styled(({ className, ...props }) => (
<Tooltip {...props} classes={{ popper: className }} />
))`
& . MuiTooltip-tooltip {
background: navy;
}
`;
Módulos CSS
It's hard to know the market share of this styling solution as it's dependent on the bundling solution people are using.
CssModulesSlider.module.css
.slider {
color: #20b2aa;
}
.slider:hover {
color: #2e8b57;
}
CssModulesSlider.js
import * as React from 'react';
import Slider from '@material-ui/core/Slider';
// webpack, parcel or else will inject the CSS into the page
import styles from './CssModulesSlider.module.css';
export default function CssModulesSlider() {
return (
<div>
<Slider defaultValue={30} />
<Slider defaultValue={30} className={styles.slider} />
</div>
);
}
Ordem de injeção do CSS ⚠️
Note: Most CSS-in-JS solutions inject their styles at the bottom of the HTML <head>
, which gives MUI precedence over your custom styles. To remove the need for !important, you need to change the CSS injection order. Here's a demo of how it can be done in MUI:
import * as React from 'react';
import { StyledEngineProvider } from '@material-ui/core/styles';
export default function GlobalCssPriority() {
return (
<StyledEngineProvider injectFirst>
{/* Your component tree. Now you can override MUI's styles. */}
</StyledEngineProvider>
);
}
Note: If you are using Emotion and have a custom cache in your app, that one will override the one coming from MUI. In order for the injection order to still be correct, you need to add the prepend option. Here is an example:
*/}
</StylesProvider>
);
} import * as React from 'react';
import { CacheProvider } from '@emotion/react';
import createCache from '@emotion/cache';
const cache = createCache({
key: 'css',
prepend: true,
});
export default function CssModulesPriority() {
return (
<CacheProvider value={cache}>
{/* Sua árvore de componentes. Now you can override MUI's styles. */}
</CacheProvider>
);
}
Note: If you are using styled-components and have StyleSheetManager
with a custom target
, make sure that the target is the first element in the HTML <head>
. If you are curious to see how it can be done, you can take a look on the StyledEngineProvider
implementation in the @mui/styled-engine-sc
package.
Elementos mais profundos
If you attempt to style the Slider, you will likely need to affect some of the Slider's child elements, for example the thumb. In MUI, all child elements have an increased specificity of 2: .parent .child {}
. When writing overrides, you need to do the same. It's important to keep in mind that CSS Modules adds an unique id to each class, and that id won't be present on the MUI provided children class. To escape from that, CSS Modules provides a functionality, the :global
selector.
The following examples override the slider's thumb
style in addition to the custom styles on the slider itself.
CssModulesSliderDeep1.module.css
.slider {
color: #20b2aa;
}
.slider:hover {
color: #2e8b57;
}
.slider :global .MuiSlider-thumb {
border-radius: 1px;
}
CssModulesSliderDeep1.js
import * as React from 'react';
// webpack, parcel or else will inject the CSS into the page
import styles from './CssModulesSliderDeep1.module.css';
import Slider from '@material-ui/core/Slider';
export default function CssModulesSliderDeep1() {
return (
<div>
<Slider defaultValue={30} />
<Slider defaultValue={30} className={styles.slider} />
</div>
);
}
The above demo relies on the default className
values, but you can provide your own class name with the componentsProps
API.
CssModulesSliderDeep2.module.css
.slider {
color: #20b2aa;
}
.slider:hover {
color: #2e8b57;
}
.slider .thumb {
border-radius: 1px;
}
CssModulesSliderDeep2.js
import * as React from 'react';
// webpack, parcel or else will inject the CSS into the page
import styles from './CssModulesSliderDeep2.module.css';
import Slider from '@material-ui/core/Slider';
export default function CssModulesSliderDeep2() {
return (
<div>
<Slider defaultValue={30} />
<Slider
defaultValue={30}
className={styles.slider}
componentsProps={{ thumb: { className: styles.thumb } }}
/>
</div>
);
}
Emotion
A propriedade css
Emotion's css() method works seamlessly with MUI.
Tema
Funciona exatamente como styled components. You can use the same guide.
A API styled()
It works exactly like styled components. You can use the same guide.
Tailwind CSS
Setup
If you are used to Tailwind CSS and want to use it together with the MUI components, you can start by cloning the Tailwind CSS example project. If you use a different framework, or already have set up your project, follow these steps:
- Add Tailwind CSS to your project, following the instructions in https://tailwindcss.com/docs/installation.
- Remove Tailwind CSS's preflight style so it can use the MUI's preflight instead (CssBaseline).
tailwind.config.js
module.exports = {
+ corePlugins: {
+ preflight: false,
+ },
};
- Add the
important
option, using the id of your app wrapper. For example,#__next
for Next.js and"#root"
for CRA:
tailwind.config.js
module.exports = {
content: [
"./src/**/*.{js,jsx,ts,tsx}",
],
+ important: '#root',
theme: {
extend: {},
},
plugins: [],
}
Most of the CSS used by Material UI has as specificity of 1, hence this important
property is unnecessary. However, in a few edge cases, MUI uses nested CSS selectors that win over Tailwind CSS. Use this step to help ensure that the deeper elements can always be customized using Tailwind's utility classes. More details on this option can be found here https://tailwindcss.com/docs/configuration#selector-strategy
- Fix the CSS injection order. Most CSS-in-JS solutions inject their styles at the bottom of the HTML
<head>
, which gives MUI precedence over Tailwind CSS. To reduce the need for theimportant
property, you need to change the CSS injection order. Here's a demo of how it can be done in MUI:
import * as React from 'react';
import { StyledEngineProvider } from '@mui/material/styles';
export default function GlobalCssPriority() {
return (
<StyledEngineProvider injectFirst>
{/* Your component tree. Now you can override MUI's styles. */}
</StyledEngineProvider>
);
}
Note: If you are using Emotion and have a custom cache in your app, it will override the one coming from MUI. In order for the injection order to still be correct, you need to add the prepend option. Here is an example:
*/}
</StylesProvider>
);
} import * as React from 'react';
import { CacheProvider } from '@emotion/react';
import createCache from '@emotion/cache';
const cache = createCache({
key: 'css',
prepend: true,
});
export default function CssModulesPriority() {
return (
<CacheProvider value={cache}>
{/* Sua árvore de componentes. Now you can override MUI's styles. */}
</CacheProvider>
);
}
Note: If you are using styled-components and have StyleSheetManager
with a custom target
, make sure that the target is the first element in the HTML <head>
. If you are curious to see how it can be done, you can take a look at the StyledEngineProvider
implementation in the @mui/styled-engine-sc
package.
- Change the target container for
Portal
-related elements so that they are injected under the main app wrapper that was used in step 3 for setting up theimportant
option in the Tailwind config.
const rootElement = document.getElementById("root");
const root = createRoot(rootElement);
const theme = createTheme({
components: {
MuiPopover: {
defaultProps: {
container: rootElement,
},
},
MuiPopper: {
defaultProps: {
container: rootElement,
},
},
},
});
root.render(
<StyledEngineProvider injectFirst>
<ThemeProvider theme={theme}>
<App />
</ThemeProvider>
</StyledEngineProvider>;
);
Usage
Now it's all set up and you can start using Tailwind CSS on the MUI components!
index.tsx
import * as React from 'react';
import Slider from '@mui/material/Slider';
export default function App() {
return (
<div>
<Slider defaultValue={30} />
<Slider defaultValue={30} className="text-teal-600" />
</div>
);
}
Deeper elements
If you attempt to style the Slider, for example, you'll likely want to customize its child elements.
This example showcases how to override the Slider's thumb
style.
SliderThumbOverrides.tsx
import * as React from 'react';
import Slider from '@mui/material/Slider';
export default function SliderThumbOverrides() {
return (
<div>
<Slider defaultValue={30} />
<Slider
defaultValue={30}
className="text-teal-600"
componentsProps={{ thumb: { className: 'rounded-sm' } }}
/>
</div>
);
}
Styling pseudo states
If you want to style a component's pseudo-state, you can use the appropriate key in the classes
prop. Here is an example of how you can style the Slider's active state:
SliderPseudoStateOverrides.tsx
import * as React from 'react';
import Slider from '@mui/material/Slider';
export default function SliderThumbOverrides() {
return <Slider defaultValue={30} classes={{ active: 'shadow-none' }} />;
}
JSS TSS
JSS itself is no longer supported in MUI however, if you like the hook-based API (makeStyles
→ useStyles
) that react-jss
was offering you can opt for tss-react
.
TSS integrates well with MUI and provide a better TypeScript support than JSS.
import { render } from 'react-dom';
import { CacheProvider } from '@emotion/react';
import createCache from '@emotion/cache';
import { ThemeProvider } from '@mui/material/styles';
export const muiCache = createCache({
key: 'mui',
prepend: true,
});
//NOTE: Don't use <StyledEngineProvider injectFirst/>
render(
<CacheProvider value={muiCache}>
<ThemeProvider theme={myTheme}>
<Root />
</ThemeProvider>
</CacheProvider>,
document.getElementById('root'),
);
Now you can simply import { makeStyles, withStyles } from 'tss-react/mui'
. The theme object that will be passed to your callbacks functions will be the one you get with import { useTheme } from '@mui/material/styles'
.
If you want to take controls over what the theme
object should be, you can re-export makeStyles
and withStyles
from a file called, for example, makesStyles.ts
:
import { useTheme } from '@mui/material/styles';
//WARNING: tss-react require TypeScript v4.4 or newer. If you can't update use:
//import { createMakeAndWithStyles } from "tss-react/compat";
import { createMakeAndWithStyles } from 'tss-react';
export const { makeStyles, withStyles } = createMakeAndWithStyles({
useTheme,
/*
OR, if you have extended the default mui theme adding your own custom properties:
Let's assume the myTheme object that you provide to the <ThemeProvider /> is of
type MyTheme then you'll write:
*/
//"useTheme": useTheme as (()=> MyTheme)
});
Then, the library is used like this:
import { makeStyles } from 'tss-react/mui';
export function MyComponent(props: Props) {
const { className } = props;
const [color, setColor] = useState<'red' | 'blue'>('red');
const { classes, cx } = useStyles({ color });
//Thanks to cx, className will take priority over classes.root
return <span className={cx(classes.root, className)}>hello world</span>;
}
const useStyles = makeStyles<{ color: 'red' | 'blue' }>()((theme, { color }) => ({
root: {
color,
'&:hover': {
backgroundColor: theme.palette.primary.main,
},
},
}));
For info on how to setup SSR or anything else, please refer to the TSS documentation.