Styling and Layout
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Traditional CSSIf you're using @docusaurus/preset-classic
, you can create your own CSS files (e.g. /src/css/custom.css
) and import them globally by passing it as an option into the preset.
Any CSS you write within that file will be available globally and can be referenced directly using string literals. This is the most traditional approach to writing CSS and is fine for small websites that do not have much customization.
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Styling your site with Infima@docusaurus/preset-classic
uses Infima as the underlying styling framework. Infima provides flexible layout and common UI components styling suitable for content-centric websites (blogs, documentation, landing pages). For more details, check out the Infima website.
When you init
your Docusaurus 2 project, the website will be generated with basic Infima stylesheets and default styling. You may customize the styling by editing the /src/css/custom.css
file.
Infima uses 7 shades of each color. We recommend using ColorBox to find the different shades of colors for your chosen primary color.
Alternatively, use the following tool to generate the different shades for your website and copy the variables into /src/css/custom.css
.
CSS Variable Name | Hex | Adjustment |
---|---|---|
--ifm-color-primary-lightest | #80aaef | |
--ifm-color-primary-lighter | #5a91ea | |
--ifm-color-primary-light | #4e89e8 | |
--ifm-color-primary | #3578e5 | 0 |
--ifm-color-primary-dark | #1d68e1 | |
--ifm-color-primary-darker | #1b62d4 | |
--ifm-color-primary-darkest | #1751af |
Replace the variables in src/css/custom.css
with these new variables.
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Dark ModeTo customize the Infima variables for dark mode you can add the following to src/css/custom.css
.
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Styling approachesA Docusaurus site is a single-page React application. You can style it the way you style React apps.
There are a few approaches/frameworks which will work, depending on your preferences and the type of website you are trying to build. Websites that are highly interactive and behave more like web apps will benefit from a more modern styling approaches that co-locate styles with the components. Component styling can also be particularly useful when you wish to customize or swizzle a component.
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Global stylesThis is the most traditional way of styling that most developers (including non-front end developers) would be familiar with.
Assuming you are using @docusaurus/preset-classic
and /src/css/custom.css
was passed in to the preset config, styles inside that file would be available globally.
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Theme Class NamesWe provide some predefined CSS class names to provide access for developers to style layout of a page globally in Docusaurus. The purpose is to have stable classnames shared by all themes that are meant to be targeted by custom CSS.
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CSS modulesTo style your components using CSS Modules, name your stylesheet files with the .module.css
suffix (e.g. welcome.module.css
). webpack will load such CSS files as CSS modules and you have to reference the class names from the imported CSS module (as opposed to using plain strings). This is similar to the convention used in Create React App.
The class names which will be processed by webpack into a globally unique class name during build.
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CSS-in-JScaution
This section is a work in progress. Welcoming PRs.
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Sass/SCSSTo use Sass/SCSS as your CSS preprocessor, install the unofficial Docusaurus 2 plugin docusaurus-plugin-sass
. This plugin works for both global styles and the CSS modules approach:
- Install
docusaurus-plugin-sass
:
- npm
- Yarn
- Include the plugin in your
docusaurus.config.js
file:
- Write and import your stylesheets in Sass/SCSS as normal.
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Global styles using Sass/SCSSYou can now set the customCss
property of @docusaurus/preset-classic
to point to your Sass/SCSS file:
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Modules using Sass/SCSSName your stylesheet files with the .module.scss
suffix (e.g. welcome.module.scss
) instead of .css
. Webpack will use sass-loader
to preprocess your stylesheets and load them as CSS modules.