$ npm install class-variance-authority
Class Variance Authority
CSS-in-TS libraries such as Stitches and Vanilla Extract are fantastic options for building type-safe UI components; taking away all the worries of class names and StyleSheet composition.
…but CSS-in-TS (or CSS-in-JS) isn't for everyone.
You may need full control over your StyleSheet output. Your job might require you to use a framework such as Tailwind CSS. You might just prefer writing your own CSS.
Creating variants with the "traditional" CSS approach can become an arduous task; manually matching classes to props and manually adding types.
cva
aims to take those pain points away, allowing you to focus on the more fun aspects of UI development.
variants
API movement – your open-source contributions are immensely appreciatedclb
library, but after some discussion with Bill, we felt it was best to go down the route of a separate project.npm i class-variance-authority
Unfortunately, yes. Originally, the plan was the publish the package as cva
, but this name has been taken and marked as a "placeholder". I've reached out to the author and NPM support, but have yet to hear back.
In the meantime, you can always alias the package for your convenience…
Alias the package with npm install
npm i cva@npm:class-variance-authority
Then import like so:
import { cva } from "cva";
// …
If you're using the "Tailwind CSS IntelliSense" Visual Studio Code extension, you can enable autocompletion inside cva
by adding the following to your settings.json
:
{
"tailwindCSS.experimental.classRegex": [
["cva\\(([^)]*)\\)", "[\"'`]([^\"'`]*).*?[\"'`]"]
]
}
Disclaimer: Although
cva
is a tiny library, it's best to use in a SSR/SSG environment – your user probably doesn't need this JavaScript, especially for static components.
Tru Narla did a wonderful overview of cva
at Next.js Conf 2022 – you should check it out before continuing:
To kick things off, let's build a "basic" button
component, using cva
to handle our variant's classes
Note: Use of Tailwind CSS is optional
// components/button.ts
import { cva } from "class-variance-authority";
const button = cva(["font-semibold", "border", "rounded"], {
variants: {
intent: {
primary: [
"bg-blue-500",
"text-white",
"border-transparent",
"hover:bg-blue-600",
],
// **or**
// primary: "bg-blue-500 text-white border-transparent hover:bg-blue-600",
secondary: [
"bg-white",
"text-gray-800",
"border-gray-400",
"hover:bg-gray-100",
],
},
size: {
small: ["text-sm", "py-1", "px-2"],
medium: ["text-base", "py-2", "px-4"],
},
},
compoundVariants: [
{
intent: "primary",
size: "medium",
class: "uppercase",
// **or** if you're a React.js user, `className` may feel more consistent:
// className: "uppercase"
},
],
defaultVariants: {
intent: "primary",
size: "medium",
},
});
button();
// => "font-semibold border rounded bg-blue-500 text-white border-transparent hover:bg-blue-600 text-base py-2 px-4 uppercase"
button({ intent: "secondary", size: "small" });
// => "font-semibold border rounded bg-white text-gray-800 border-gray-400 hover:bg-gray-100 text-sm py-1 px-2"
All cva
components provide an optional class
or className
prop, which can be used to pass additional classes to the component.
// components/button.ts
import { cva } from "class-variance-authority";
const button = cva(/* … */);
button({ class: "m-4" });
// => "…buttonClasses m-4"
button({ className: "m-4" });
// => "…buttonClasses m-4"
VariantProps
cva
offers the VariantProps
helper to extract variant types
// components/button.ts
import type { VariantProps } from "class-variance-authority";
import { cva, cx } from "class-variance-authority";
/**
* Button
*/
export type ButtonProps = VariantProps<typeof button>;
export const button = cva(/* … */);
To keep the API small and unopionated, cva
doesn't offer a built-in solution for setting required variants.
Instead, we recommend using TypeScript's Utility Types:
// components/button.ts
import { cva, type VariantProps } from "class-variance-authority";
export type ButtonVariantProps = VariantProps<typeof button>;
export const buttonVariants = cva("…", {
variants: {
optional: { a: "…", b: "…" },
required: { a: "…", b: "…" },
},
});
/**
* Button
*/
export interface ButtonProps
extends Omit<ButtonVariantProps, "required">,
Required<Pick<ButtonVariantProps, "required">> {}
export const button = (props: ButtonProps) => buttonVariants(props);
// ❌ TypeScript Error:
// Argument of type "{}": is not assignable to parameter of type "ButtonProps".
// Property "required" is missing in type "{}" but required in type
// "ButtonProps".
button({});
// âś…
button({ required: "a" });
Whilst cva
doesn't yet offer a built-in method for composing components, it does offer the tools to extend components on your own terms…
For example; two cva
components, concatenated together with cx
:
// components/card.ts
import type { VariantProps } from "class-variance-authority";
import { cva, cx } from "class-variance-authority";
/**
* Box
*/
export type BoxProps = VariantProps<typeof box>;
export const box = cva(["box", "box-border"], {
variants: {
margin: { 0: "m-0", 2: "m-2", 4: "m-4", 8: "m-8" },
padding: { 0: "p-0", 2: "p-2", 4: "p-4", 8: "p-8" },
},
defaultVariants: {
margin: 0,
padding: 0,
},
});
/**
* Card
*/
type CardBaseProps = VariantProps<typeof cardBase>;
const cardBase = cva(["card", "border-solid", "border-slate-300", "rounded"], {
variants: {
shadow: {
md: "drop-shadow-md",
lg: "drop-shadow-lg",
xl: "drop-shadow-xl",
},
},
});
export interface CardProps extends BoxProps, CardBaseProps {}
export const card = ({ margin, padding, shadow }: CardProps = {}) =>
cx(box({ margin, padding }), cardBase({ shadow }));
cva
Builds a cva
component
const component = cva("base", options);
base
: the base class name (string
, string[]
or null
)options
(optional)
variants
: your variants schemacompoundVariants
: variants based on a combination of previously defined variantsdefaultVariants
: set default values for previously defined variants.null
A cva
component function
cx
Concatenates class names
const className = cx(classes);
classes
: array of classes to be concatenatedstring
⚠️ Warning: The examples below are purely demonstrative and haven't been tested thoroughly (yet)
---
import { cva, type VariantProps } from "class-variance-authority";
const button = cva("button", {
variants: {
intent: {
primary: [
"bg-blue-500",
"text-white",
"border-transparent",
"hover:bg-blue-600",
],
secondary: [
"bg-white",
"text-gray-800",
"border-gray-400",
"hover:bg-gray-100",
],
},
size: {
small: ["text-sm", "py-1", "px-2"],
medium: ["text-base", "py-2", "px-4"],
},
},
compoundVariants: [{ intent: "primary", size: "medium", class: "uppercase" }],
});
interface Props extends VariantProps<typeof button> {}
/**
* For Astro components, we recommend setting your defaultVariants within
* Astro.props (which are `undefined` by default)
*/
const { intent = "primary", size = "medium" } = Astro.props;
---
<button class={button({ intent, size })}>
<slot />
</button>
/* styles.css */
.button {
/* */
}
.button--primary {
/* */
}
.button--secondary {
/* */
}
.button--small {
/* */
}
.button--medium {
/* */
}
.button--primary-small {
/* */
}
import { cva } from "class-variance-authority";
const button = cva("button", {
variants: {
intent: {
primary: "button--primary",
secondary: "button--secondary",
},
size: {
small: "button--small",
medium: "button--medium",
},
},
compoundVariants: [
{ intent: "primary", size: "medium", class: "button--primary-small" },
],
defaultVariants: {
intent: "primary",
size: "medium",
},
});
button();
// => "button button--primary button--medium"
button({ intent: "secondary", size: "small" });
// => "button button--secondary button--small"
// button.11ty.js
const { cva } = require("class-variance-authority");
// ⚠️ Disclaimer: Use of Tailwind CSS is optional
const button = cva("button", {
variants: {
intent: {
primary: [
"bg-blue-500",
"text-white",
"border-transparent",
"hover:bg-blue-600",
],
secondary: [
"bg-white",
"text-gray-800",
"border-gray-400",
"hover:bg-gray-100",
],
},
size: {
small: ["text-sm", "py-1", "px-2"],
medium: ["text-base", "py-2", "px-4"],
},
},
compoundVariants: [{ intent: "primary", size: "medium", class: "uppercase" }],
defaultVariants: {
intent: "primary",
size: "medium",
},
});
module.exports = function ({ label, intent, size }) {
return `<button class="${button({ intent, size })}">${label}</button>`;
};
/* button.module.css */
.base {
/* */
}
.primary {
/* */
}
.secondary {
/* */
}
.small {
/* */
}
.medium {
/* */
}
.primaryMedium {
/* */
}
// button.tsx
import React from "react";
import { cva, type VariantProps } from "class-variance-authority";
import {
base,
primary,
secondary,
small,
medium,
primaryMedium,
} from "./button.module.css";
const button = cva(base, {
variants: {
intent: {
primary,
secondary,
},
size: {
small,
medium,
},
},
compoundVariants: [
{ intent: "primary", size: "medium", className: primaryMedium },
],
defaultVariants: {
intent: "primary",
size: "medium",
},
});
export interface ButtonProps
extends React.HTMLAttributes<HTMLButtonElement>,
VariantProps<typeof button> {}
export const Button: React.FC<ButtonProps> = ({
className,
intent,
size,
...props
}) => <button className={button({ intent, size, className })} {...props} />;
// button.tsx
import React from "react";
import { cva, type VariantProps } from "class-variance-authority";
// ⚠️ Disclaimer: Use of Tailwind CSS is optional
const button = cva("button", {
variants: {
intent: {
primary: [
"bg-blue-500",
"text-white",
"border-transparent",
"hover:bg-blue-600",
],
secondary: [
"bg-white",
"text-gray-800",
"border-gray-400",
"hover:bg-gray-100",
],
},
size: {
small: ["text-sm", "py-1", "px-2"],
medium: ["text-base", "py-2", "px-4"],
},
},
compoundVariants: [
{ intent: "primary", size: "medium", className: "uppercase" },
],
defaultVariants: {
intent: "primary",
size: "medium",
},
});
export interface ButtonProps
extends React.HTMLAttributes<HTMLButtonElement>,
VariantProps<typeof button> {}
export const Button: React.FC<ButtonProps> = ({
className,
intent,
size,
...props
}) => <button className={button({ intent, size, className })} {...props} />;
<!-- button.svelte -->
<script lang="ts">
import { cva, type VariantProps } from "class-variance-authority";
const button = cva("button", {
variants: {
intent: {
primary: "button--primary",
secondary: "button--secondary",
},
size: {
small: "button--small",
medium: "button--medium",
},
},
compoundVariants: [
{ intent: "primary", size: "medium", class: "button--primary-medium" },
],
defaultVariants: {
intent: "primary",
size: "medium",
},
});
type ButtonProps = VariantProps<typeof button>;
export let intent: ButtonProps["intent"];
export let size: ButtonProps["size"];
</script>
<button class={button({ intent, size })}><slot /></button>
<style>
.button { /* … */ }
.button--primary { /* … */ }
.button--secondary { /* … */ }
.button--small { /* … */ }
.button--medium { /* … */ }
.button--primary-medium { /* … */ }
</style>
<!-- button.vue -->
<script setup lang="ts">
import { cva, type VariantProps } from "class-variance-authority";
const button = cva("button", {
variants: {
intent: {
primary: "button--primary",
secondary: "button--secondary",
},
size: {
small: "button--small",
medium: "button--medium",
},
},
compoundVariants: [
{ intent: "primary", size: "medium", class: "button--primary-medium" },
],
defaultVariants: {
intent: "primary",
size: "medium",
},
});
type ButtonProps = VariantProps<typeof button>;
defineProps<{
intent: ButtonProps["intent"];
size: ButtonProps["size"];
}>();
</script>
<template>
<button :class="button({ intent, size })">
<slot />
</button>
</template>
<style>
.button {
/* … */
}
.button--primary {
/* … */
}
.button--secondary {
/* … */
}
.button--small {
/* … */
}
.button--medium {
/* … */
}
.button--primary-medium {
/* … */
}
</style>
Although primarily designed for handling class names, at its core, cva
is really just a fancy way of managing a string…
const greeter = cva("Good morning!", {
variants: {
isLoggedIn: {
true: "Here's a secret only logged in users can see",
false: "Log in to find out more…",
},
},
defaultVariants: {
isLoggedIn: "false",
},
});
greeter();
// => "Good morning! Log in to find out more…"
greeter({ isLoggedIn: "true" });
// => "Good morning! Here's a secret only logged in users can see"
styled
API?Long story short: it's unnecessary.
cva
encourages you to think of components as traditional CSS classes:
cva
however you'd likeThere's no as
prop in cva
, because HTML is free:
-- // A familiar `styled` button as a link
-- <Button as="a" href="#" variant="primary">Button as a link</Button>
++ // A `cva` button as a link
++ <a href="#" class={button({variant: "primary"})}>Button as a link</a>
You can't.
cva
doesn't know about how you choose to apply CSS clases, and it doesn't want to.
We recommend either:
Showing/hiding elements with different variants, based on your preferred breakpoint.
export const Example = () => (
<>
<div className="hidden sm:inline-flex">
<button className={button({ intent: "primary" })}>
Hidden until sm
</button>
</div>
<div className="inline-flex sm:hidden">
<button className={button({ intent: "secondary" })}>
Hidden after sm
</button>
</div>
</>
);
Create a bespoke variant that changes based on the breakpoint.
e.g. button({ intent: "primaryUntilMd" })
Note
This is something I've been thinking about since the project's inception, and I've gone back and forth many times on the idea of building it. It's a large undertaking and brings all the complexity of supporting many different build tools and frameworks.
In my experience, "responsive variants" are typically rare, and hiding/showing different elements is usually good enough to get by.
To be frank, I'm probably not going to build/maintain a solution unless someone periodically gives me a thick wad of cash to do so, and even then I'd probably rather spend my free time living my life.
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