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styled()

Extend and build custom and optimizable components.

If you're looking for a full list of style properties accepted by Tamagui, see the Styles page.

Create a new component by extending an existing one:

import { GetProps, View, styled } from '@tamagui/core'
export const Circle = styled(View, {
name: 'Circle', // useful for debugging, and Component themes
borderRadius: 100_000_000,
})
// helper to get props for any TamaguiComponent
export type CircleProps = GetProps<typeof Circle>

Usage:

<Circle x={10} y={10} backgroundColor="red" />

Note, tamagui and @tamagui/core both export many of the same helpers, like styled. If you are using tamagui, you don't need to ever add @tamagui/core to your package.json or import it and can instead import directly from tamagui itself and don't need the following.

You can pass any prop that is supported by the component you are extending, even variants of the parent component. Tamagui will figure out the style props up-front, turn them into classNames, and then pass the non-style props down to the component as defaultProps.

One really important and useful thing to note about Tamagui style properties: the order is important! Read more below

Variants

Let's add some variants:

import { View, styled } from '@tamagui/core'
export const Circle = styled(View, {
borderRadius: 100_000_000,
variants: {
pin: {
top: {
position: 'absolute',
top: 0,
},
},
centered: {
true: {
alignItems: 'center',
justifyContent: 'center',
},
},
size: {
'...size': (size, { tokens }) => {
return {
width: tokens.size[size] ?? size,
height: tokens.size[size] ?? size,
}
},
},
} as const,
})

Please use as const for the variants definition until Typescript gains the ability to infer generics as const .

We can use these like so:

<Circle pin="top" centered size="$lg" />

To learn more about to use them and all the special types, see the docs on variants.

Non-working React Native views

You can assume all "utility" views in React Native are not supported: Pressable, TouchableOpacity, and others. They have specific logic for handling events that conflicts with Tamagui. We could support these in the future, but we don't plan on it - you can get all of Pressable functionality for the most part within Tamagui itself, and if you need something outside of it, you can use Pressable directly.

Using on the web

The styled() function supports Tamagui views, React Native views, and any other React component that accepts a style prop. If you wrap an external component that Tamagui doesn't recognize, Tamagui will assume it only supports the style prop and not optimize it.

If it does accept className, you can opt-in to className, CSS media queries, and compile-time optimization by adding acceptsClassName:

import { SomeCustomComponent } from 'some-library'
import { styled } from 'tamagui' // or '@tamagui/core'
export const TamaguiCustomComponent = styled(SomeCustomComponent, {
acceptsClassName: true,
})

createStyledContext

When building a "Composable Component API", you need a way to pass properties down to multiple related components at once.

What is a Composable Component API? It looks like this:

export default () => (
<Button size="$large">
<Button.Icon>
<Icon />
</Button.Icon>
<Button.Text>Lorem ipsum</Button.Text>
</Button>
)

Note how the size="$large" is set on the outer Button frame. We'd expect this size property to pass down to both the Icon and Text so that our frame size always matches the icon and text size. It would be cumbersome and bug-prone to have to always pass the size to every sub-component.

Tamagui solves this with createStyledContext which acts much like React createContext, except it only works with styled components and only controls their variants (for now, we're exploring if it can do more).

You can set it up as follows:

import {
SizeTokens,
View,
Text,
createStyledContext,
styled,
withStaticProperties,
} from '@tamagui/core'
export const ButtonContext = createStyledContext<{ size: SizeTokens }>({
size: '$medium',
})
export const ButtonFrame = styled(View, {
name: 'Button',
context: ButtonContext,
variants: {
size: {
'...size': (name, { tokens }) => {
return {
height: tokens.size[name],
borderRadius: tokens.radius[name],
gap: tokens.space[name].val * 0.2,
}
},
},
} as const,
defaultVariants: {
size: '$medium',
},
})
export const ButtonText = styled(Text, {
name: 'ButtonText',
context: ButtonContext,
variants: {
size: {
'...fontSize': (name, { font }) => ({
fontSize: font?.size[name],
}),
},
} as const,
})
export const Button = withStaticProperties(ButtonFrame, {
Props: ButtonContext.Provider,
Text: ButtonText,
})

A few things to note here:

  • ButtonContext should only be typed and given properties that work across both components. Since they both define a size variant, this works.
  • But note that one defines ...size while the other defines ...fontSize. This works in this case only if your design system has consistent naming for token sizes across size and fontSize (and is why we highly recommend this pattern).
  • You can use <Button.Props size="$large"><Button /></Button.Props> now to set default props for a Button from above.
  • As of today, using context pattern does not work with the optimizing compiler flattening functionality. So we recommend not using this for your most common components like Stacks or Text. But for Button or anything higher level it's totally fine - it will still extract CSS and remove some logic from the render function. We've mapped out how this can work with flattening eventually and it shouldn't be too much effort.

Order is important

Finally, it's important to note that the order of style properties is significant. This is really important for two reasons:

  1. You want to control which styles are overridden.
  2. You have a variant that expands into multiple style properties, and you need to control it.

Lets see how it lets us control overriding styles:

import { View, ViewProps } from '@tamagui/core'
export default (props: ViewProps) => (
<View background="red" {...props} width={200} />
)

In this case we set a default background to red, but it can be overridden by props. But we set width after the prop spread, so width is always going to be set to 200.

It also is necessary for variants to make sense. Say we have a variant huge that sets scale to 2 and borderRadius to 100:

// this will be scale = 3
export default (props: ViewProps) => (
<MyView huge scale={3} />
)
// this will be scale = 2
export default (props: ViewProps) => (
<MyView scale={3} huge />
)

If order wasn't important, how would you expect these two different usages to work? You'd have to make order important somewhere. If you do it in the styled() helper somewhere, you end up having no flexibility and would end up with boilerplate. Making the prop order important gives us maximum expressiveness and is easy to understand.

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Advanced

You can skip this section unless you're building out very rich components that are nested multiple levels and need variants at each level.

Custom props that accepts tokens with acceptTokens

If you are wrapping something like an SVG, you may want it to accept theme and token values on certain props, for example fill. You can do so using acceptTokens:

const StyledSVG = styled(SVG, {}, {
acceptsTokens: {
fill: 'color'
} as const
})

Now your StyledSVG will properly type the fill property to accept token and theme values. It will then map any values it recieves to the style prop with any token or theme values resolved. Note the as const, until TypeScript 5 is more fully supported this improves the generated types.

styleable

This is an advanced pattern that is only needed if you are building a design system that has complex components.

Any styled() component will have a helper function on it called .styleable().

This advanced usage is necessary if you are doing a pattern like the following:

// 1. you create a `styled` primitive as usual
const StyledText = styled(Text)
// 2. you create a wrapper component that adds some logic
// but still returns a styled component that receives the props
const HigherOrderStyledText = (props) => <StyledText {...props} />
// 3. you want that wrapper component itself to be able to use with `styled`
const StyledHigherOrderStyledText = styled(HigherOrderStyledText, {
variants: {
// oops, variants will merge incorrectly
},
})

So you must add a .styleable() around your HigherOrderStyledText. You'll also want to forward the ref, which happens automatically with styleable:

const StyledText = styled(Text)
const HigherOrderStyledText = StyledText.styleable((props, ref) => (
<StyledText ref={ref} {...props} />
))
const StyledHigherOrderStyledText = styled(HigherOrderStyledText, {
variants: {
// variants now merge correctly
},
})

Note that styleable automatically wraps your component in themeable, which means it will handle the theme props for you and change the theme above your wrapped component. This means that in HigherOrderStyledText you can use useTheme and if you do something like <HigherOrderStyledText theme="some_different_theme">, then your useTheme() hook will properly get the some_difference_theme Theme object.

Also note that you also must always pass the props given to HigherOrderStyledText down to StyledText for things to work properly.

A further note on types: if you want to add some extra props to your componentin TypeScript you should do it using the generic first argument of styleable, and do so by only passing in the extra props for type performance reasons:

import { View, ViewProps } from '@tamagui/core'
type ExtraProps = {
someCustomProp: boolean
}
export type CustomProps = ViewProps & ExtraProps
const Custom = View.styleable<ExtraProps>((props) => {
// ...
return null
})

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Variants