Most likely, no. After using it on my personal site, I wouldn't recommend it for something more or less critical. This PPX is a big fat hack and it shows.
These bindings are unsafe. It means you won't get typed CSS.
What you'll get:
- Type-safe and auto-completable classnames
- Everything Linaria offers, such as:
- Static extraction
- Functions / variables sharing between ReScript and CSS
It works only with ReScript syntax.
You need to install and configure Linaria. Please, refer to their docs.
Install these bindings:
# yarn
yarn add rescript-linaria
# or npm
npm install --save rescript-linaria
As it's implemented as PPX, you need to add this to your bsconfig.json
:
"ppx-flags": [
"rescript-linaria/ppx"
],
See example of its usage with Webpack.
moodule Css = %css(
let cn = css`
display: flex;
position: relative;
`
)
@react.component
let make = () => <div className=Css.cn />
css
tagged template is unsound, including interpolations. It is 100% unsafe territory. What you type inside this tag goes directly to JS without any background checks. You basically write %raw
JS, which gets slightly modified by PPX so Linaria can pick it up.
moodule Css = %css(
let pad = 5
let cn = css`
padding: ${pad}px;
color: ${Color.text};
`
)
You can interpolate:
- everything that Linaria accepts for interpolation:
- primitives, such as strings, numbers, etc
- applications of general functions
- applications of functions with pipes are also supported
You can't interpolate:
- applications of functions with labeled/optional arguments
- applications of functions with placeholder arguments
- externals (you must bind external to a variable first)
- other ReScript-only things, such as variants
It is required to have exactly 1 %css
module within 1 ReScript file.
You can place %css
module either:
- in
.res
module as a submodule, as shown in the examples above - or in its own file using
include
:
// AppStyles.res
include %css(
// your css...
)
You can find more examples here.