# Styling an extension Lens provides a set of global styles and UI components that can be used by any extension to preserve the look and feel of the application. ## Layout For layout tasks Lens is using [flex.box](https://www.npmjs.com/package/flex.box) library which provides helpful class names to specify some of the [flexbox](https://developer.mozilla.org/en-US/docs/Web/CSS/CSS_Flexible_Box_Layout/Basic_Concepts_of_Flexbox) properties. For example, `div` with class names: ```html
``` at the end will have following css properties: ```css div { display: flex; flex-direction: column; align-items: center; } ``` However, feel free to use any styling technique or framework like [Emotion](https://github.com/emotion-js/emotion) or just plain CSS if you prefer. ### Layout Variables There is a set of CSS Variables available for extensions to use for basic layout needs. They are located inside `:root` and are defined in [app.scss](https://github.com/lensapp/lens/blob/master/src/renderer/components/app.scss): ```css --unit: 8px; --padding: var(--unit); --margin: var(--unit); --border-radius: 3px; ``` They are intended to set consistent margins and paddings across components, e.g. ```css .status { padding-left: calc(var(--padding) * 2); border-radius: var(--border-radius); } ``` ## Themes Lens is using two built-in themes defined in [the themes directory](https://github.com/lensapp/lens/tree/master/src/renderer/themes), one for light, and one for dark color schemes. ### Theme Variables When Lens is loaded, it transforms the selected theme `json` file into a list of [CSS Custom Properties (CSS Variables)](https://developer.mozilla.org/en-US/docs/Web/CSS/Using_CSS_custom_properties) which then gets injected into the `:root` element so any of the down-level components can use them. ![CSS vars listed in devtools](images/css-vars-in-devtools.png) When the user changes the theme, the process is repeated, and new CSS Variables appear instead of previous ones. If you want to follow a selected theme to keep the 'native' Lens look and feel, respecting the light/dark appearance of your extension, you can use the provided variables and built-in Lens components such as `Button`, `Select`, `Table`, etc. There is a set of CSS Variables available for extensions to use for theming. They are all located inside `:root` and are defined in [app.scss](https://github.com/lensapp/lens/blob/master/src/renderer/components/app.scss): ```css --font-main: 'Roboto', 'Helvetica', 'Arial', sans-serif; --font-monospace: Lucida Console, Monaco, Consolas, monospace; --font-size-small: calc(1.5 * var(--unit)); --font-size: calc(1.75 * var(--unit)); --font-size-big: calc(2 * var(--unit)); --font-weight-thin: 300; --font-weight-normal: 400; --font-weight-bold: 500; ``` as well as in [the theme modules](https://github.com/lensapp/lens/tree/master/src/renderer/themes): ``` --blue: #3d90ce; --magenta: #c93dce; --golden: #ffc63d; --halfGray: #87909c80; --primary: #3d90ce; --textColorPrimary: #555555; --textColorSecondary: #51575d; --textColorAccent: #333333; --borderColor: #c9cfd3; --borderFaintColor: #dfdfdf; --mainBackground: #f1f1f1; --contentColor: #ffffff; --layoutBackground: #e8e8e8; --layoutTabsBackground: #f8f8f8; --layoutTabsActiveColor: #333333; --layoutTabsLineColor: #87909c80; ... ``` They can be used in form of `var(--magenta)`, e.g. ```css .status { font-size: var(--font-size-small); background-color: var(--colorSuccess); } ``` A complete list of all themable colors can be found in the [color reference](../color-reference). ### Theme switching When the light theme is active, the `` element gets a "theme-light" class, ``. If the class isn't there, assume the theme is dark. The active theme can be changed in the `Preferences` page: ![Color Theme](images/theme-selector.png) Currently, there is no prescribed way of detecting changes to the theme in JavaScript. [This issue](https://github.com/lensapp/lens/issues/1336) hopes to improve on this. In the meantime, you can use a [MutationObserver](https://developer.mozilla.org/en-US/docs/Web/API/MutationObserver) to observe the `` element's `class` attribute to see if the "theme-light" class gets added to it: ```javascript ... useEffect(function () { const observer = new MutationObserver(function (mutations: MutationRecord[]) { mutations.forEach((mutation: MutationRecord) => { if (mutation.type === 'attributes' && mutation.attributeName === 'class') { if ((mutation.target as HTMLElement).classList.contains('theme-light')) { // theme is LIGHT } else { // theme is DARK } } }); }); observer.observe(document.body, { attributes: true, attributeFilter: ['class'], }); return function () { observer.disconnect(); }; }, []); // run once on mount ... ``` ## Injected styles Every extension is affected by list of default global styles defined in [app.scss](https://github.com/lensapp/lens/blob/master/src/renderer/components/app.scss). These are basic browser resets and element styles like setting the `box-sizing` property for every element, default text and background colors, default font sizes, basic heading formatting, etc. Extension may overwrite these if needed. They have low CSS specificity, so overriding them should be fairly easy. ## CSS-in-JS If an extension uses a system like `Emotion` to work with styles, it can use CSS variables as follows: ```javascript const Container = styled.div(() => ({ backgroundColor: 'var(--mainBackground)' })); ```