stitches-rn-vitality
v0.0.16-alpha.0
Published
Stitches for React Native, for Vitality Design System
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Stitches-RN-Vitality
Installation
npm install stitches-rn-vitality
Documentation
For the most part Stitches Native behaves exactly as Stitches so you should follow the Stitches documentation to learn the basic principles and how to setup everything.
Differences
Due to the inherit differences between the Web and native platforms (iOS + Android) the implementation of Stitches Native differs slightly from the original Web version of Stitches.
First of all, CSS in React Native doesn't have CSS Variables, cascade, inheritance, keyframes, pseudo elements/classes, or global styles which means that some features that are available in Stitches are not possible to implement in Stitches Native.
Below you can see a list of all supported and unsupported features of Stitches Native.
Feature comparison
| Feature | Supported |
| --------------------- | ----------------------------------------- |
| styled
| ✅ |
| createStitches
| ✅ |
| defaultThemeMap
| ✅ |
| css
| ✅ (Simplified version) |
| theme
| ✅ (Use useTheme
in components/hooks) |
| createTheme
| ✅ (Only returned by createStitches
) |
| useTheme
| 🆕 (Stitches Native specific) |
| ThemeProvider
| 🆕 (Stitches Native specific) |
| styled().attrs()
| 🆕 (Stitches Native specific) |
| globalCss
| ❌ (No global styles in RN) |
| keyframes
| ❌ (No CSS keyframes in RN) |
| getCssText
| ❌ (SSR not applicable to RN) |
| Nesting | ❌ (No CSS cascade in RN) |
| Selectors | ❌ (No CSS selectors in RN) |
| Locally scoped tokens | ❌ (No CSS variables in RN) |
| Pseudo elements | ❌ (No pseudo elements/classes in RN) |
| as
prop | ❌ (No semantic HTML) |
Using createStitches
function
The createStitches
function doesn't need prefix
or insertionMethod
since they are not used in the native implementation.
import { createStitches } from 'stitches-rn-vitality';
createStitches({
theme: object,
media: object,
utils: object,
themeMap: object,
});
The return value of createStitches
doesn't include globalCss
, keyframes
, or getCssText
since they are not available in native platforms. React Native doesn't have any CSS keyframes based animations and all animations should be handled by the Animated API or with libraries such as react-native-reanimated.
The return value of createStitches
consist of the following:
const { styled, css, theme, createTheme, useTheme, ThemeProvider, config } =
createStitches({
/*...*/
});
Supported token types
The following token types are supported in React Native: borderStyles
, borderWidths
, colors
, fonts
, fontSizes
, fontWeights
, letterSpacings
, lineHeights
, radii
, sizes
, space
, zIndices
.
The only unsupported token types are shadows
and transitions
. Shadows in React Native cannot be expressed with a single string token like on the Web where CSS box-shadow
accepts a string that fully describes the shadow. In React Native shadows are defined differently on iOS and Android. On iOS you need to set the various shadow properties separately:
shadowOffset: {
width: number,
height: number
},
shadowOpacity: number,
shadowRadius: number
On Android there is a completely different elevation system that doesn't let you alter individual shadow properties but instead you have to set a single number as the elevation level:
elevation: number;
So, instead of having shadows as part of the design tokens in the theme
we can quite easily define shadow utilities inside utils
:
createStitches({
utils: {
// @todo type this properly, use tokens
shadow: (level: 'small' | 'medium' | 'large') => {
return {
small: {
elevation: 2,
shadowOffset: { width: 0, height: 1 },
shadowRadius: 3,
shadowOpacity: 0.1,
shadowColor: '#000',
},
medium: {
elevation: 5,
shadowOffset: { width: 0, height: 3 },
shadowRadius: 6,
shadowOpacity: 0.2,
shadowColor: '#000',
},
large: {
elevation: 10,
shadowOffset: { width: 0, height: 6 },
shadowRadius: 12,
shadowOpacity: 0.4,
shadowColor: '#000',
},
}[level];
},
},
});
You can then use the shadow util like this:
const Comp = styled('View', {
shadow: 'medium',
});
The other unsupported token type is transitions
which conflicts with how animations are handled in React Native. Read more about animations in the Animations docs.
Using css
helper
Unlike on the Web there is no concept of className
in React Native so the css
function is basically an identity function providing only TS types for the style object and returning exactly the same object back (or if given multiple objects merges them together). The returned object can be appended after the first argument of a styled component.
const styles = css({
backgroundColor: '$background', // <- get autocomplete for theme values
});
const SomeComp = styled(
'View',
{
/* ...other styles... */
},
styles // <- you can add as many shared styles as you want
);
<AnotherComp css={styles} />;
Theming with createTheme
Stitches Native handles theming differently than Stitches. Since there are no CSS Variables in React Native theming is handled via React Context in a similar way as other CSS-in-JS libraries such as styled-components handle theming.
const { theme, createTheme, ThemeProvider } = createStitches({
colors: {
background: '#fff',
text: '#000',
},
});
const darkTheme = createTheme({
colors: {
background: '#000',
text: '#fff',
},
});
function App() {
// In a real world scenario this value should probably live in React Context
const [darkMode, setDarkMode] = useState(false);
return (
<ThemeProvider theme={darkMode ? darkTheme : theme}>
{/*...*/}
</ThemeProvider>
);
}
Accessing the theme
You can get the current theme via the useTheme
hook:
import { useTheme } from '../your-stitches-config';
function Example() {
const theme = useTheme();
// Access theme tokens
// theme.colors|space|radii|etc.x
return (
<View style={{ backgroundColor: theme.colors.background }}>{/*...*/}</View>
);
}
Typing token aliases
Stitches Native supports theme token aliases the same way as Stitches with a minor difference related to TypeScript support:
createStitches({
colors: {
black: '#000',
primary: '$black' as const,
},
space: {
1: 8,
2: 16,
3: 32,
max: '$3' as const,
},
});
Note the usage of as const
for token alias values. It is required if you want to have the correct type for the theme token value when accessing it via useTheme
hook:
import { useTheme } from '../your-stitches-config';
function Example() {
const theme = useTheme();
const x = theme.colors.primary; // <-- type of `x` is `string`
const y = theme.space.max; // <--- type of `y` is `number` even though the value in the theme is `'$3'`, yey 😎
return <View style={{ backgroundColor: x, padding: y }}>{/*...*/}</View>;
}
⚠️ NOTE: without
as const
the type of the token will always bestring
!
For string
type tokens, you don't necessarily need to use as const
since the types align correctly without it, but you might want to do so anyway to be consistent.
Responsive styles with media
Responsive styles are not very common in React Native applications since you usually have a clearly constrained device environment where the app is used. However, some times you might need to tweak a style for very small or large phones or build an app that needs to adapt to tablet devices. For these use cases Stitches Native has support for two kinds of responsive styles:
- Device types based media flags
- Device dimensions based media queries
Device types based media flags
Simple boolean flags in the media
config can be used to distinguish between device types, eg. phone vs. tablet. You can utilize getDeviceType()
or isTablet()
from react-native-device-info to get the device type.
const isTablet = DeviceInfo.isTablet();
const { ... } = createStitches({
media: {
phone: !isTablet,
tablet: isTablet,
},
});
Then you can apply different prop values for variants of a styled components based on the device type:
const ButtonText = styled('Text', {
// base styles
variants: {
color: {
primary: {
color: '$primary',
},
secondary: {
color: '$secondary',
},
},
},
});
<ButtonText color={{ '@phone': 'primary', '@tablet': 'secondary' }}>
Hello
</ButtonText>;
Device dimensions based media queries
It's also possible to have a more Web-like breakpoint system based on the dimensions of the device. The syntax for the queries follows the CSS range queries syntax which means that there is no need to use min-width
or max-width
.
Examples of supported range queries:
(width > 750px)
(width >= 750px)
(width < 1080px)
(width <= 1080px)
(750px > width >= 1080px)
⚠️ NOTE: Only width based media queries are currently supported.
const { ... } = createStitches({
media: {
md: '(width >= 750px)',
lg: '(width >= 1080px)',
xl: '(width >= 1284px)',
xxl: '(width >= 1536px)',
},
});
⚠️ NOTE: The order of the media query keys matters and the responsive styles are applied in the order determined by
Object.entries
method.
Using media queries works the same way as device type flags:
const ButtonText = styled('Text', {
// base styles
variants: {
color: {
primary: {
color: '$primary',
},
secondary: {
color: '$secondary',
},
},
},
});
<ButtonText
color={{
'@initial': 'primary',
'@md': 'secondary',
'@lg': 'tertiary',
}}
>
Hello
</ButtonText>;
Additional props with .attrs
In React Native it is quite common that a component exposes props (other than style
) that accept a style object - a good example of this is the ScrollView
component that has contentContainerStyle
prop. Using theme tokens with these kind of props can be accomplished with the useTheme
hook:
function Comp() {
const theme = useTheme();
return (
<ScrollView contentContainerStyle={{ padding: theme.space[2] }}>
{/* ... */}
</ScrollView>
);
}
const ScrollView = styled('ScrollView', {
flex: 1,
});
This approach is fine but a bit convoluted since you have to import a hook just to access the theme tokens. There is a better way with the chainable .attrs
method which can be used to attach additional props to a Stitches styled component (this method was popularized by styled-components).
⚠️ NOTE: this method does not exist in the original Web version of Stitches.
function Example() {
return <ScrollView>{/*...*/}</ScrollView>;
}
const ScrollView = styled('ScrollView', {
flex: 1,
}).attrs((props) => ({
contentContainerStyle: {
padding: props.theme.space[2],
},
}));
It is also possible to access the variants of the component within .attrs
:
function Example() {
return <ScrollView spacious>{/*...*/}</ScrollView>;
}
const ScrollView = styled('ScrollView', {
flex: 1,
variants: {
spacious: {
true: {
// some styles...
},
false: {
// some styles...
},
},
},
}).attrs((props) => ({
contentContainerStyle: {
padding: props.theme.space[props.spacious ? 4 : 2],
},
}));