Package Exports
- react-jss
This package does not declare an exports field, so the exports above have been automatically detected and optimized by JSPM instead. If any package subpath is missing, it is recommended to post an issue to the original package (react-jss) to support the "exports" field. If that is not possible, create a JSPM override to customize the exports field for this package.
Readme

React integration of JSS
There is a number of benefits when using react-jss instead of JSS directly:
- Lazy evaluation - sheet is created only when component will mount.
- Auto attach/detach - sheet will be rendered to the dom when component is about to mount and will be removed when no element needs it.
- A sheet gets shared between all elements.
- You want to use it with React Hot Loader.
Also you may need this module if you build a big application where leaving all styles in the DOM or compiling all styles at once may have a performance overhead or you are going to hit IE limits.
Usage
You can use it as a higher-order component to inject JSS. It can act both as a simple wrapping function and as a ES7 decorator.
React JSS wraps your React component and injects props.sheet, which is just a regular JSS style sheet, as a prop into your component. This is a common pattern that is used for composition in React instead of mixins, and works equally well with old-style createClass classes, as well as the ES6 classes.
Because JSS class names are namespaced by default, you will need to reach into this.props.sheet.classes to get their real names. For example, if you define a button class in your JSS stylesheet, its real name will be available as props.sheet.classes.button.
By default react-jss comes with jss and presets.
import React from 'react'
import injectSheet from 'react-jss'
const styles = {
button: {
backgroundColor: 'yellow'
},
label: {
fontWeight: 'bold'
}
}
const Button = ({sheet: {classes}, children}) => (
<button className={classes.button}>
<span className={classes.label}>
{children}
</span>
</button>
)
export default injectSheet(styles)(Button)Custom setup.
If you want to specify a jss version and plugins to use, you should create your own jss instance, setup plugins and create a injectSheet function which has your jss version bound.
import {create as createJss} from 'jss'
import {create as createInjectSheet} from 'react-jss'
import vendorPrefixer from 'jss-vendor-prefixer'
const jss = createJss()
jss.use(vendorPrefixer())
export const injectSheet = createInjectSheet(jss)You can also access the Jss instance being used by default.
import {jss} from 'react-jss'Using decorators.
You can use ES7 with decorators (using babel-plugin-transform-decorators-legacy).
import React, {Component} from 'react'
import injectSheet from 'react-jss'
const styles = {
button: {
backgroundColor: 'yellow'
},
label: {
fontWeight: 'bold'
}
}
@injectSheet(styles)
export default class Button extends Component {
render() {
const {sheet: {classes}, children} = this.props
return (
<button className={classes.button}>
<span className={classes.label}>
{children}
</span>
</button>
)
}
}Using classNames helper.
You can use classNames together with JSS same way you do it with global CSS.
import classNames from 'classnames'
const Component = ({sheet: {classes}, children, isActive}) => (
<div
className={classNames({
[classes.normal]: true,
[classes.active]: isActive
})}>
{children}
</div>
)Installation.
npm install --save react-jssLicense
MIT