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JSS is a very thin layer which compiles JSON structures to CSS.
Take a look at "The important parts" and slides.
By leveraging namespaces we can solve the cascading problem better than bem and make our components truly reusable and composable.
Why do we need transpilers like sass or stylus when we can use javascript to do the same and much more?
Access css declarations and values from js without DOM round trip.
Smaller footprint because of code reuse and no vendor specific declarations
Take a look at examples directory.
Jss styles are just plain javascript objects. They map 1:1 to css rules, except of those modified by plugins.
// Some random jss code example
{
carouselCaption: {
position: 'absolute',
'z-index': 10
},
hr: {
border: 0,
'border-top': '1px solid #eee'
}
}
I recommend to not to use this if you use jss on the client. Instead you should write a function, which makes a test for this feature support and generates just one final declaration.
In case you are using jss as a server side precompiler, you might want to have more than one property with identical name. This is not possible in js, but you can use an array.
{
'.container': {
background: [
'red',
'-moz-linear-gradient(left, red 0%, green 100%)',
'-webkit-linear-gradient(left, red 0%, green 100%)',
'-o-linear-gradient(left, red 0%, green 100%)',
'-ms-linear-gradient(left, red 0%, green 100%)',
'linear-gradient(to right, red 0%, green 100%)'
]
}
}
.container {
background: red;
background: -moz-linear-gradient(left, red 0%, green 100%);
background: -webkit-linear-gradient(left, red 0%, green 100%);
background: -o-linear-gradient(left, red 0%, green 100%);
background: -ms-linear-gradient(left, red 0%, green 100%);
background: linear-gradient(to right, red 0%, green 100%);
}
// Pure js
var jss = window.jss
// Commonjs
var jss = require('jss')
Create a style sheet with namespaced rules.
jss.createStyleSheet([rules], [options])
Options:
media
style element attributetitle
style element attributetype
style element attributenamed
true by default - keys are names, selectors will be generated, if false - keys are global selectors.link
link jssRule
instances with DOM `CSSRule instances so that styles, can be modified dynamically, false by default because it has some performance cost.
var sheet = jss.createStyleSheet({
myButton: {
width: '100px',
height: '100px'
}
}, {media: 'print'}).attach()
console.log(sheet.classes.myButton) // .jss-0
<style media="print">
.jss-0 {
width: 100px;
height: 100px;
}
</style>
var sheet = jss.createStyleSheet({
'.something': {
width: '100px',
height: '100px'
}
}, {named: false}).attach()
<style>
.something {
width: 100px;
height: 100px;
}
</style>
sheet.attach()
Insert style sheet into the render tree. You need to call it in order to make your style sheet visible for the layout.
sheet.detach()
Detaching unsused style sheets will speedup every DOM node insertion and manipulation as the browser will have to do less lookups for css rules potentially to be applied to the element.
sheet.addRule([selector], rule)
Returns an array of rules, because you might have a nested rule in your style.
var rules = sheet.addRule({
padding: '20px',
background: 'blue'
})
document.body.innerHTML = '<button class="' + rules[0].className + '">Button</button>'
var rules = sheet.addRule('.my-button', {
padding: '20px',
background: 'blue'
})
sheet.getRule(name)
Access a rule within sheet by selector or name.
// Using name, if named rule was added.
var rule = sheet.getRule('myButton')
// Using selector
var rule = sheet.getRule('.my-button')
sheet.addRules(rules)
In case you want to add rules to the sheet separately or even at runtime.
sheet.addRules({
myButton: {
float: 'left',
},
something: {
display: 'none'
}
})
jss.createRule([selector], rule)
In order to apply styles directly to the element butt still be able to use jss plugins.
var rule = jss.createRule({
padding: '20px',
background: 'blue'
})
rule.applyTo(element)
rule.applyTo(element)
This is equivalent to element.style.background = 'blue'
except of that you could use a rule from sheet which is already defined and can apply plugins to it. Example.
jss.createRule({
background: 'blue'
}).applyTo(element)
rule.prop(name, [value])
When option link
is true, after stylesheet is attached, linker saves references to CSSRule
instances so that you are able to set rules properties at any time. Example.
var sheet = jss.createStyleSheet({
a: {
color: 'red'
}
}, {link: true})
// Get the color.
sheet.getRule('a').prop('color') // red
// Set the color.
sheet.getRule('a').prop('color', 'green')
jss.use(fn)
Passed function will be invoked with Rule instance. Take a look at plugins like extend
, nested
or vendorPrefixer
.
jss.use(function(rule) {
// Your modifier.
})
sheet.toString()
If you want to get a pure CSS string from jss e.g. for preprocessing jss on the server.
var jss = require('jss')
var sheet = jss.createStyleSheet({
myButton: {
float: 'left',
}
})
console.log(sheet.toString())
.jss-0 {
float: left;
}
Things you know from stylus like @extend, nested selectors, vendor prefixer are separate plugins.
Full list of available plugins
npm install jss
#or
bower install jsstyles
# print help
jss
# convert css
jss source.css -p > source.jss
-
How fast would bootstrap css lib render? I have converted bootstraps css to jss. In
bench/bootstrap
folder you will find jss and css files. You need to try more than once to have some average value.On my machine overhead is about 10-15ms.
-
Rendering jss vs. css (same styles) jsperf bench.
npm i
open test/local.html
MIT