className: cx extension
Aside from the styled extension, styled-ppx provides the %cx [%cx] extension.
%cx [%cx] generates a className given one or more CSS declarations. This is useful to attach to a React component via the className prop. Sometimes is hard to give the right name for a styled component or maybe those styles are only used once, that’s why %cx [%cx] exists.
Examples
<span className=%cx("font-size: 32px")> {React.string("Hello!")} </span><span className=[%cx "font-size: 32px"]>
{React.string("Hello!")}
</span>;let fullWidth: string = %cx(`
position: absolute;
width: 100%;
height: 100%;
top: 0;
left: 0;
`)
<div className=fullWidth> {React.string("Hello!")} </div>let fullWidth: string = [%cx {|
position: absolute;
width: 100%;
height: 100%;
top: 0;
left: 0;
|}];
<div className=fullWidth> {React.string("Hello!")} </div>;The value fullWidth is a string that contains a hash pointing to a style HTML tag in the <head>. If you want to concatenate it with other styles, you can use the string concatenation operator (++):
<div className=fullWidth ++ " " ++ "extra-classname"> {React.string("Hello!")} </div><div className=fullWidth ++ " " ++ "extra-classname"> {React.string("Hello!")} </div>Features
- Selectors, media queries and other nesting is supported in CSS declarations.
- Interpolation is allowed.
%cx("color: $(Theme.colors.primary)")[%cx "color: $(Theme.colors.primary)"]. - Curly braces aren’t allowed.
%cx("{ display: block; }")[%cx "{ display: block; }"]will break.