CSS-in-Clojure(Script). shadow.css
is essentially a mini DSL for writing CSS directly in Clojure(Script) Code, allowing you to directly write CSS where it is used.
Play with it live directly in your browser via the shadow-grove Playground.
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The syntax for defining the CSS is stable and pretty much final, same goes for the css
macro. I won't rule out potential additions, but what is here now will very likely stay as it is forever.
The build side is rough. It works perfectly fine, but the developer experience could be better.
If you want to see actual projects using this you may look at the shadow-cljs UI sources. Just search for (css
.
Writing and maintaining CSS is a burden. Editing CSS in actual .css
files means you have to come up with names for everything so the HTML can actually reference the styles. Coming up with the names in the first place is hard, and maintaining them over time is even harder. Many naming conventions (eg. BEM) exist, which helps shrink the problem but does not eliminate it. Writing actual CSS also requires constantly context switching since the syntax is much different from Clojure.
Nowadays, tailwindcss has become very popular alternative, which sort of flips the naming problem. Instead, you have a lot of predefined aliases for commonly used CSS properties and use those to style elements. This works great and using Tailwind in CLJ(S) projects actually works quite well. However, it does require installing JS tools and running them. IMHO Tailwind also went a bit overboard with some things, which it kinda had to because it is limited to what can be actual CSS classnames inside a class
HTML attribute. shadow-css
is much more flexible, so most of that is not required or supported.
I wanted something that ...
- has close to zero (or actually zero) runtime impact and code size (for frontend CLJS builds)
- gives me the expressive power of Tailwind aliases, while still giving me full access to all of CSS
- stays entirely in the CLJ(S) space with no outside dependencies (
node
not required) - is usable in all CLJ(S) projects and libraries
- is completely framework-agnostic, with no expectations for how the HTML/DOM is actually generated
- integrates seamlessly with CSS written by other means
It is not a goal to hide or abstract CSS in any way other than a slightly friendlier syntax and developer experience.
It is also not a goal to express every single thing CSS can potentially do. Sometimes, it is easier to just write some CSS (eg. @keyframes). The build tooling makes it easy to include basic CSS directly.
Knowledge of CSS is required to make anything meaningful with this. No CSS explanation is done here. There are no predefined "components".
The basis for everything is the shadow.css/css
macro. It accepts a subset of Clojure to define the CSS and returns a classname for use in place of HTML class
attribute
(ns my.app
(:require [shadow.css :refer (css)]))
(defn hiccup-example []
[:div {:class (css :px-4 :shadow {:color "green"})}
"Hello World"])
This will generate HTML like <div class="my_app__L5C16">Hello World</div>
. The generated classname is derived from the location used in the code, but may be optimized later by the build tools. The generated name is of no concern when writing the code, you can ignore it entirely. This eliminates the naming problem. Moving or deleting the (css ...)
rule also means the CSS is updated accordingly.
The generated CSS for the above will look something like this.
.my_app__L5C16 {
box-shadow: 0 1px 3px 0 rgb(0 0 0 / 0.1), 0 1px 2px -1px rgb(0 0 0 / 0.1);
color: green;
padding-left: 1rem;
padding-right: 1rem;
}
Note that this is subject to change once optimizations are applied. The nice thing is that is something that will just happen automatically, and is not something you need to worry about yourself.
Naming things is sometimes useful. Instead of naming the CSS class, we just use Clojure for that. So, for example we can just use let
to define local bindings. Each name declared that way is just referencing a string holding the generated classname.
(defn hiccup-example [key val]
(let [$row (css ...)
$key (css ...)
$val (css ...)]
[:div {:class $row}
[:div {:class $key} key]
[:div {:class $val} val]]))
(def $my-button (css ...))
of course also works if you want to share styles in multiple places.
I personally prefer prefixing css classnames with $
in names, just to distinguish them easily in the code. This is of course entirely optional, it is just a regular CLJ(S) symbol with no special meaning otherwise.
As mentioned earlier the css
macro only accepts a subset of the Clojure. It must be entirely static and cannot take any dynamic code. Symbols or lists used inside css
will result in an error. You'd have the same limitation when using actual CSS files, so you lost nothing.
The syntax is limited to the following, and each element is merged in order from left to right. Later values will override earlier values, in case they define the same properties.
(css :px-4 :shadow :flex)
Keywords represent aliases. For the most part they are identical to tailwind aliases, you can refer to the excellent tailwind documentation (eg. px-4). They are just shortcuts for common CSS property values. When the CSS is generated each alias is replaced with its value. :px-4
is just short for {:padding-left 4 :padding-right 4}
. There are thousands of pre-defined aliases, and you may define your own. They are also entirely optional, you can just use maps if you want.
(css :px-4 {:color "green"})
Each key in a map must be a keyword, which maps directly to a CSS property name. Their name is just passed though as-is and no conversion is done. Conveniently, CSS uses the same name notation and everything maps to idiomatic Clojure names naturally (eg. :padding-left
is padding-left
in CSS).
The value for each key can be
- A string which is used as-is. The example above just generates
color: green;
in the CSS. They are not converted in any way. - Numbers are converted with some basic rules, these rules are shared with the aliases.
(css :p-4)
is identical to(css {:padding 4})
, which both end up aspadding: 1rem;
in the CSS. They map exactly to the default spacing scale used by tailwind. Note that most numbers in CSS require a unit, so you use Strings in their place.:padding 4
does not mean4px
. You'd use:padding "4px"
for that. - Keywords are again aliases.
(css {:color :primary-color})
allows you to define a:primary-color
alias when building the CSS, instead of hardcoding the value in the code.
(css "my-class" :px-4)
Strings are used as pass-through values and will not affect the CSS generated by shadow.css
. It will however affect the string generated by the css
macro. This is a useful shortcut if you want to integrate with other existing CSS.
[:div {:class (css "foo bar" :px-4)} "Hello!"]
;; same as
[:div {:class (str "foo bar " (css :px-4))} "Hello!"]
generates
<div class="foo bar my_app__LxCx">Hello!</div>
(css
{:color "green"}
[:hover {:color "red"}])
Vectors represent sub-selectors and can be used to target pseudo-elements, nested elements or media queries.
The first element is either string or a keyword, which again is a pre-defined aliases that will be replaced by its value when building. A String must either start with a @
when representing a media query or contain a &
, which will refer back to the actual generated classname.
:hover
in the above maps to "&:hover"
which in the final CSS would be .my_app__LxCx:hover { ... }
.
Media Queries are just passed through and the emitted CSS rules are grouped accordingly.
(css :px-4 ["@media (min-width: 1024px)" :px-8])
;; or using predefined alias
(css :px-4 [:lg :px-8])
Writing those repeatedly would get annoying, so the default tailwind responsive breakpoints are provided as aliases by default. Which of course can be overridden or extended via custom aliases.
Each element in the vector following the first will be part of that sub-selector and only accepts keyword aliases, maps or other vectors. Pass-through Strings are not allowed here.
By design the css
macro is very static and does not accept any dynamic values. This does not mean we can't do dynamic things. We are still just writing Clojure code, we can just use other means to gain back all dynamic things we may need.
There are many options to choose from and all resemble exactly what you'd be doing with regular CSS. You could just replace all (css ...)
here with a "my-class"
referencing CSS defined in actual CSS files, and the code would otherwise stay the same.
;; assigning different classnames based on arguments
(defn ui-example [selected?]
(let [$selected (css ...)
$regular (css ...)]
[:div {:class (if selected? $selected $regular)}
...]))
;; adding additional rules based on argument
(defn ui-example [selected?]
(let [$base (css ...)
$selected (css ...)]
[:div {:class (str $base (when selected? (str " " $selected)))}
...]))
;; depending on what you use to generated html that may already have
;; convenience helpers for you to make it a little less verbose
;; remember that all you are working with here is a string
(defn ui-example [selected?]
(let [$base (css ...)
$selected (css ...)]
[:div {:class [$base (when selected? $selected)]}
...]))
;; using a sub-selector
;; &.selected here targets elements having BOTH the selected and & classes
;; remember that & here is replaced with the actual classname the css macro
;; generates. So it is identical to a .foo.selected {} selector in CSS
(def $thing
(css
...
["&.selected"
...]))
(defn ui-example [selected?]
;; so the code just conditionally assigns the two classnames
[:div {:class (str $thing (when selected? " selected"))}
...])
;; using style attributes
(defn ui-example [selected?]
[:div {:class (css ...)
:style {:color (if selected? "red" "green")}}
...])
You can also use CSS Variables of course. I won't go into this here further since that would blow the scope of this document.
I think all dynamic uses are covered just fine and the css
macro itself doesn't need to do any of it.
There are situations where you may want to write some old-school manual CSS and include it in the generated output. This can be done via the :shadow.css/include
metadata in a ns
that is part of the build.
(ns my.app
{:shadow.css/include ["my/app.css"]}
(:require ...))
The shadow-cljs UI does this here to include the main.css in the same directory as the main.cljs
file.
The value of :shadow.css/include
should be a vector of classpath resource paths. The build process will just include the files as they are. They will be minified, if the build is minified, but no other processing is done.
All of this is subject to change. Currently, the only way to build the CSS is by writing a Clojure function.
I'd suggest using a new namespace since the shadow.css.build
namespace is not needed at runtime and should not be required by any of your actual application namespaces. I'm generally using build
in a src/dev/build.clj
file.
(ns build
(:require
[shadow.css.build :as cb]
[clojure.java.io :as io]))
(defn css-release [& args]
(let [build-state
(-> (cb/start)
(cb/index-path (io/file "src" "main") {})
(cb/generate
'{:ui
{:entries [my.app]}})
(cb/minify)
(cb/write-outputs-to (io/file "public" "css")))]
(doseq [mod (:outputs build-state)
{:keys [warning-type] :as warning} (:warnings mod)]
(prn [:CSS (name warning-type) (dissoc warning :warning-type)]))))
Here is a breakdown of what all this does:
-
(cb/start)
creates the initial build state and creates all the default aliases. It returns a map representing the build state. Basically each subsequent steps modifies this map or generates .css files from it. -
(cb/index-path (io/file "src" "main"))
finds all.clj
,.cljs
,.cljc
files in the specifiedsrc/main
directory and extracts(css ...)
forms from it. You can call this multiple times if you have additional directories that should be indexed.
The cb/generate
configures the basic build structure. CSS output is configured in "chunks". Basically think of the entire build as producing one .css
file. It may sometimes be more desirable to split that file into smaller chunks when needed. This example only has one, here the :ui
chunk will later create the ui.css
file. Don't worry about splitting too much for now, it is often not necessary.
The generator needs to know which CSS should go into which chunk. For this shadow-css
uses the namespace structure from your code. The :entries [my.app]
option means, that it will take the my.app
namespace, include all CSS found in the file for that namespace, and then also follow all the required namespaces from my.app
to also include those and follow them as well. Assuming my.app
actually required all your namespaces, which it will for most projects, either directly or indirectly, then this would be enough to create CSS for all your files. You may add additional namespaces into the :entries
vector when needed.
You may also use the :include [my.app*]
instead, or in addition to :entries
. This will end up including all namespaces with the my.app
prefix, but does not follow any other required namespaces. You may also add multiple patterns into this vector. A *
at the end is used for a wildcard prefix match, the *
may only be at the end for now. You may also just put a regular namespace here like :include [my.app]
, which will only include the CSS for that namespace and nothing else.
cb/minify
strips all comments and whitespace from the generated outputs.cb/write-outputs-to
writes the actual.css
files to the supplied dir. For the:ui
chunk it generates apublic/css/ui.css
in this case.- The
doseq
is for printing warnings (e.g. missing aliases). A bit rough but works for now.
At this point the build is done, files were written to disk and the build state can be discarded.
Custom aliases or other things can be added before generate
is called. Adding or overriding an alias is just (assoc-in build-state [:aliases :px-4] {:color "green"})
.
The default available aliases can be found in this file.
The build-state
threaded through the ->
form is just a map, which contains everything interesting about the build. Feel free to explore, e.g. via tap>
in the shadow-cljs Inspect UI. It can become fairly large, but it is pretty self-explanatory.
css-release
ultimately is just a regular Clojure function. You may run this from the REPL, lein run -m build/css-release
, shadow-cljs run build/css-release
or clj -X build/css-release
.
The above works totally fine, but is a bit manual. During development I prefer to just have something watching my source files and automatically rebuilding my CSS on change. This coupled with the hot-reload for CSS provided by shadow-cljs
(or figwheel
) makes for a very nice workflow.
I use this basic construct to integrate the CSS building into my regular REPL workflow. This is using the fs-watch
utility provided by shadow-cljs
, but any file watcher will do. Since I use shadow-cljs anyway, I just start my work by using the run feature:
npx shadow-cljs run repl/start
That'll start shadow-cljs
and CSS building starts with it. You can start CLJS builds from the start
function as shown, so this basically replaces the normal npx shadow-cljs watch your-build
(ns repl
(:require
[clojure.java.io :as io]
[build]
[shadow.cljs.devtools.api :as shadow]
[shadow.cljs.devtools.server.fs-watch :as fs-watch]))
(defonce css-watch-ref (atom nil))
(defn start
{:shadow/requires-server true}
[]
;; this is optional
;; if using shadow-cljs you can start a watch from here
;; same as running `shadow-cljs watch your-build` from the command line
(shadow/watch :your-build)
;; build css once on start
(build/css-release)
;; then setup the watcher that rebuilds everything on change
(reset! css-watch-ref
(fs-watch/start
{}
[(io/file "src" "main")]
["cljs" "cljc" "clj"]
(fn [_]
(try
(build/css-release)
(catch Exception e
(prn [:css-failed e]))))))
::started)
(defn stop []
(when-some [css-watch @css-watch-ref]
(fs-watch/stop css-watch))
::stopped)
(defn go []
(stop)
(start))
If you are used to the common CLJ REPL workflow setups this should fit right in. You can modify this to fit your needs.
It is possible to set up the development builds in a more efficient way. For me this has not been necessary given that most builds complete within ~100ms. If your development builds are becoming slow let me know, I can provide a more detailed guide on how to potentially make it faster.
Doing anything more dynamic would require doing things at runtime.
This violates the first stated goal, since it would require a substantial amount of code to actually generate the CSS at runtime. Instead, all CSS is generated by parsing and extracting (css ...)
forms from actual source code files on disk. It becomes part of you build process, and you are left with generated ready to use .css
files.
This also means it is easy to integrate into existing CSS build systems. No need to throw away all your existing styles.
It suffers none of the known issues that other systems, which build CSS at runtime, have. You are paying for the generation cost at build time. Instead of your users paying it every time they open your webpage. Leading to substantially better performance overall.
I don't think this is actually a problem, but might be for some REPL-heavy workflows.
All CSS is built from actual files on disk. It cannot possibly see what you do at the REPL. Remember this does almost nothing at runtime. Everything you write and load from disk works just fine (eg. require
and load-file
) but evaluating individual forms may become a problem. You may of course evaluate (css ...)
forms at the REPL, they'll however be somewhat useless since no actual CSS is generated. Not that any REPL needs CSS anyway.
(require '[shadow.css :refer (css)])
=> nil
(css :px-4)
=> "user__L1_C1"
The problem shows itself when you put something in a file but then redefine it at the REPL. Suppose, somewhere you have:
(defn ui-component []
(html [:div {:class (css :px-4)} "Hello World"]))
change something and re-define it at the REPL, without saving the file to disk. The location of the (css
form may have changed and therefore generated classname no longer matches. When the HTML is loaded it'll point to a classname that does not exist and the element may appear unstyled.
Again, I don't believe this to be a problem, and is a trade-off I'm willing to make either way.
The current build tooling just looks for (css ...)
forms in source files. It just assumes that you have a :refer (css)
and that all (css ...)
uses are actual CSS forms it should process. It could be a little smarter and respect qualified uses or other aliases, but doesn't as of now.
Since the code is not evaluated during builds it also cannot find any CSS generated by other macros. There are ways those macros could provide the necessary data in theory, but it cannot be inferred automatically by the current tooling.
I also don't believe this to be a problem, but I'm eager to see someone come up with something shorter/friendlier than the current (css ...)
forms.