Themes in Grafana are implemented in TypeScript. We chose the TypeScript language in part because it shares variables between Grafana TypeScript and Sass code.
Theme definitions are located in the following files:
This section provides usage guidelines for themes.
The following section describes how to use Grafana themes in React components.
The useStyles2
hook memoizes the function and provides access to the theme.
import { FC } from 'react';
import { GrafanaTheme2 } from '@grafana/data';
import { useStyles2 } from '@grafana/ui';
import { css } from '@emotion/css';
function Foo(props: FooProps) {
const styles = useStyles2(getStyles);
// Use styles with className
}
const getStyles = (theme: GrafanaTheme2) =>
css({
padding: theme.spacing(1, 2),
});
Use code similar to the following to give your component access to the theme variables:
import { FC } from 'react';
import { useTheme2 } from '@grafana/ui';
const Foo: FC<FooProps> = () => {
const theme = useTheme2();
// Your component has access to the theme variables now
};
This section explains how to select the correct variables in your theme.
The theme.colors
object has six rich color objects:
primary
secondary
info
success
warning
error
All these objects use the same secondary colors which are associated with different use cases.
Property | When to use |
---|---|
main | For backgrounds |
shade | For hover highlight |
text | For text color |
border | For borders, currently always the same as text color |
contrastText | Text color to use for text placed on top of the main color |
Example use cases:
- Want a red background? Use
theme.colors.error.main
. - Want green text? Use
theme.colors.success.text
. - Want text to be visible when placed inside a background that uses
theme.colors.error.main
? Usetheme.colors.error.contrastText
.
Property | When to use |
---|---|
theme.colors.text.primary | The default text color |
theme.colors.text.secondary | Text color for things that should be a bit less prominent |
theme.colors.text.disabled | Text color for disabled or faint things |
theme.colors.text.link | Text link color |
theme.colors.text.maxContrast | Maximum contrast (absolute white in dark theme, absolute black in white theme) |
Property | When to use |
---|---|
theme.colors.background.canvas | Dashboard background. A background surface for panels and panes that use primary background |
theme.colors.background.primary | The default content background for content panes and panels |
theme.colors.background.secondary | For cards and other surfaces that need to stand out when placed on top of the primary background |
Property | When to use |
---|---|
theme.colors.border.weak | Primary border for panels and panes and other subtle borders |
theme.colors.border.medium | For stronger borders like inputs |
theme.colors.border.strong | For even stronger border like hover highlighted border |
Property | When to use |
---|---|
theme.colors.action.hover | Background color for hover on card, menu or list item |
theme.colors.action.focus | Background color for focused card, menu or list item |
theme.colors.action.selected | Background color for selected card, menu or list item |
Example | Result |
---|---|
theme.spacing(1) | 8px |
theme.spacing(1, 2) | 8px 16px |
theme.spacing(1, 2, 0.5, 4) | 8px 16px 4px 32px |
Example | Result |
---|---|
theme.shape.borderRadius(1) | 2px |
theme.shape.borderRadius(2) | 4px |
To customize font family, font sizes, and line heights, use the variables under theme.typography
.
Use ThemeContext
like this:
import { ThemeContext } from '@grafana/data';
<ThemeContext.Consumer>{(theme) => <Foo theme={theme} />}</ThemeContext.Consumer>;
With this method your component will be automatically wrapped in ThemeContext.Consumer
and provided with current theme via the theme
prop. Components used with withTheme
must implement the Themeable
interface.
import { ThemeContext, Themeable } from '@grafana/ui';
interface FooProps extends Themeable2 {}
const Foo: React.FunctionComponent<FooProps> = () => ...
export default withTheme2(Foo);
If you need to pass a theme object to a function that you are testing, then import createTheme
and call it without any arguments. For example:
import { createTheme } from '@grafana/data';
describe('MyComponent', () => {
it('should work', () => {
result = functionThatNeedsTheme(createTheme());
expect(result).toBe(true);
});
});
If you need to modify the Sass variable files, we recommend that you migrate the styles to Emotion.
For the following variables to apply, you need to run this yarn dev
task:
[_variables|_variables.dark|_variables.light].generated.scss
: These files must be referenced in the main Sass files for Sass variables to be available.
If you need to modify the Sass variable files, be sure to update the files that end with .tmpl.ts
and not the .generated.scss
files.
Important: These variable files are automatically generated and should never be modified by hand.