I am using Angular Material 2 themes for my Angular 4 app. I have the following themes created in my theme.scss
@import '~@angular/material/theming';
@include mat-core();
$primary-color: mat-palette($mat-grey);
$accent-color: mat-palette($mat-blue, 500, 900, A100);
$warning-color: mat-palette($mat-red);
$dark-theme: mat-dark-theme($primary-color, $accent-color, $warning-color);
$light-theme: mat-light-theme($primary-color, $accent-color, $warning-color);
And in my style.scss, I have the following
@import 'theme.scss';
.dark-theme {
@include angular-material-theme($dark-theme);
}
.light-theme {
@include angular-material-theme($light-theme);
}
In my HTML I have hardcoded the dark theme (eventually I want to give the user an option to pick one of the two - dark or light)
<body class="dark-theme">
<app-root></app-root>
</body>
But when I run the app, I don't see the dark colors I expected to see. For instance, if I inspect the body element I don't see any styles at all set to it. Or if I add a h1 element there are no styles set to it. I expected that all the elements inside my body tag will follow the theme's colors. Is that not the case? Should I explicitly mention what colors my non-mat elements need to have?
I don't think the bootstrapping was incorrect. Because when I use mat components like the following, the theme is applied for that component - but the overall background is still not set and hence white.
<mat-drawer-container class="example-container">
<mat-drawer mode="side" opened="true">{{title}}</mat-drawer>
<mat-drawer-content>Main content</mat-drawer-content>
</mat-drawer-container>
Also, what if I wanted to apply a different color from the palette I am using, other than the primary, accent or warning colors? How do I set and use them?
I'm absolutely new to this concept and have only now started understanding what the above code is doing. Any help is greatly appreciated.
btn-primary
orbtn-danger
. The one I know is to create your own class.my-primary-background { background-color: mat-color($primary-color) }
and apply that class to what you want to style. Is there a cleaner way? Maybe? Reference: material.angular.io/guide/…