3

Material UI uses className for stying. But how can I pass the style to sub react component?

Below is my style definition.

const styles = createStyles({
      root: {
        backgroundColor: 'transparent !important',
        boxShadow: 'none',
        paddingTop: '25px',
        color: '#FFFFFF'
      },
      subComponentStyle: {
         ...
      }
    });

And I use this like:

...
const NavigationBar = (props) => {
   const { classes } = props;
   return ( 
       <div className={classes.root}>
        // Add other code here
          <SubComponent ... > // how to pass `classes.subComponentStyle` style here
       </div>
   )
}
...
export default withStyles(styles)(NavigationBar);

If the SubComponent component is also exported with withStyles. How can I pass some styles to override its own styling?

My SubComponent is exported as:

const styles = createStyles({
   ...
});

const SubComponent = ({classes}) => {
...
}

export default withStyles(styles)(SubComponent);

as you can see, it has its own classes. I don't want to override its classes completely. Is there a way to merge the passed in classes with its internal classes?

3 Answers 3

4

// Edited to merged styles

MUI will merge styles if you pass the classes as well as wrap the child withStyles. ie:

import { styles } from './NavStyles'

const NavigationBar = (props) => {
   const { classes } = props;
   return ( 
       <div className={classes.root}>
          <SubComponent classes={classes} >
       </div>
   )
};

export default withStyles(styles)(NavigationBar);

and in then also apply styles to the child component


import { styles } from './SubCompStyles'

const SubComponent = ({classes}) => {
 // classes object is a merge of both parent and child styles
 // ... component logic
};

export default withStyles(styles)(SubComponent)
5
  • My SubComponent also has its own classes. I don't want to override the SubComponent style completely. Is there a way to merge the passed in classes with the internal classes? May 21, 2019 at 2:16
  • 1
    The classes should automatically get merged with the internal classes by withStyles when using the second approach in this answer (passing classes via SubComponent's classes property). May 21, 2019 at 2:51
  • I just tried @RyanCogswell's solution - and can confirm they do merge.
    – M.Lewis
    May 21, 2019 at 3:02
  • how is this supposed to work when you're using typescript and the two types don't match up?
    – Spongman
    Apr 23, 2020 at 2:44
  • it will show Warning: Material-UI: the key xxx provided to the classes property object is not implemented in SubComponent. if NavigationBar && SubComponent classes object keys are not sync. According to link, I would suggest using <SubComponent parentClasses={classes} > and not to merge classes in this case. Feb 5, 2021 at 4:27
0

Heres how you can do it with hook API:

Sub component

const useStyles = makeStyles((theme) => ({
  root: {
    borderRadius: 3,
    color: 'white',
    padding: '0 30px',
    width: '12em',
    height: 43,
    borderRadius: 21.5,
    textTransform: 'capitalize',
  ... your styles here. 
  },
}))

export default function AuthSecondaryButton(props) {
  const classes = useStyles()
  console.log('s', props.className)
  return (
    <Button
      {...props}
      className={clsx({
        [classes.root]: true,
        [props.className]: true,
      })}
    />
  )
}

Parent component

const useStyles = makeStyles((theme) => ({

 secondaryButton: {
    marginTop: theme.spacing(1),
  },
}))


export default function App(props) {
  const classes = useStyles()
return(
  <AuthSecondaryButton
              onClick={onClickSecondaryButton}
              className={classes.secondaryButton}
            >
              Sign Up
            </AuthSecondaryButton>
)

0

A slight tweak to @clever_usernames approach. This uses classnames package instead of the clsx package, which we use in our project.

Replacing this...

   className={clsx({
        [classes.root]: true,
        [props.className]: true,
      })}

with this...

className={classNames(classes.root, props.className)}

Full Example

Sub component

import classNames from 'classnames'

const useStyles = makeStyles((theme) => ({
  root: {
    borderRadius: 3,
    color: 'white',
    padding: '0 30px',
    width: '12em',
    height: 43,
    borderRadius: 21.5,
    textTransform: 'capitalize',
  ... your styles here. 
  },
}))

export default function AuthSecondaryButton(props) {
  const classes = useStyles()
  console.log('s', props.className)
  return (
    <Button
      {...props}
      className={classNames(classes.root, props.className)}
    />
  )
}

Parent component

const useStyles = makeStyles((theme) => ({

 secondaryButton: {
    marginTop: theme.spacing(1),
  },
}))


export default function App(props) {
  const classes = useStyles()
return(
  <AuthSecondaryButton
              onClick={onClickSecondaryButton}
              className={classes.secondaryButton}
            >
              Sign Up
            </AuthSecondaryButton>
)

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