Implement Themes/Dark Mode in Your Front-End in 5 Minutes

Written by bearded-impala | Published 2020/07/23
Tech Story Tags: frontend | front-end-development | css | react | dark-mode | get-dark-mode-on-my-website | dropshipping-website-themes

TLDR Themes/Dark Mode is often the most procrastinated feature of implementing dark mode in your app’s front-end. Write a CSS mixin containing classes of DOM elements we want to style as a part of our theme. Write your code to allow the user to change the class of the <body> element. Use the same setTheme method for the onChange event that already sets the body class and stores the user's. The setTheme is set on a drop-down to select from multiple themes.via the TL;DR App

No matter if you write your own CSS or use frameworks such as Semantic or Bootstrap, implementing dark mode is often the most procrastinated feature
Let’s cut to the chase:
1. Write a CSS mixin containing classes of the DOM elements we want to style as a part of our theme
.theme(@bg-color,@font-color,@menu,@card-bg) {
  background-color: @bg-color;
  color: @font-color;
  .menu {
    background-color: @menu;
    .menu.transition.visible {
      background-color: @menu;
    }
  }
  .text {
    color: @font-color;
  }
  .ui.card {
    background-color: @card-bg;
    .header,
    .meta {
      color: @font-color;
    }
  }
}
2. Including our mixin in the style-sheet meant to be imported in the entry javascript(index.js) or the topmost component(App.js)
@import "./Theme.less";

//generic
@dark-font: #333;
@light-font: rgba(255, 255, 255, 0.9);

//algae
@algae-bg: rgb(191, 211, 206);
@algae-menu: #116466;
@algae-card: rgba(140, 170, 150, 0.7);
body.algae {
  .theme(@algae-bg,@dark-font,@algae-menu,@algae-card);
}

//charcoal
@charcoal-bg: #373737;
@charcoal-menu: #272727;
@charcoal-card: #1b1c1d;
body.charcoal {
  .theme(@charcoal-bg,@light-font,@charcoal-menu,@charcoal-card);
}

//lavender
@lavender-bg: rgb(224, 191, 224);
@lavender-menu: rgb(180, 140, 180);
@lavender-card: rgba(219, 212, 196, 0.699);
body.lavender {
  .theme(@lavender-bg,@dark-font,@lavender-menu,@lavender-card);
}

//paper
@paper-bg: #f4f4f4;
@paper-menu: rgba(110, 110, 110, 1);
@paper-card: #fff;
body.paper {
  .theme(@paper-bg,@dark-font,@paper-menu,@paper-card);
}
3. Write your code to allow the user to change the class of the <body> element. In my case, I have provided a drop-down.
setTheme(themeName) {
  document.getElementById("body").className = themeName;
  localStorage.setItem("theme", themeName);
}
<Dropdown text="Select Theme" item>
 <Dropdown.Menu>
   <Dropdown.Item
     content="Algae"
     onClick={() => this.setTheme("algae")}
   />
   <Dropdown.Item
     content="Charcoal"
     onClick={() => this.setTheme("charcoal")}
   />
   <Dropdown.Item
     content="Lavender"
     onClick={() => this.setTheme("lavender")}
   />
   <Dropdown.Item
     content="Paper"
     onClick={() => this.setTheme("paper")}
   />
 </Dropdown.Menu>
</Dropdown>
Now depending on whether you want a light switch to go dark or a dropdown to select from multiple themes (I’m using a DropDown from Semantic UI), you can have the same setTheme method for the onChange event.
4. Everything should work now unless the user refreshes. The setTheme method already sets the body class and stores user’s selection to localStorage, but we need to read that on a page load or refresh. Place the following script in your app’s entry point, either index.html or index.js, preferably the latter.
window.onload = function () {
  if (localStorage.getItem("theme")) {
    document.getElementById("body").className = localStorage.getItem("theme") || "paper";
  }
};
All done !!
https://github.com/bearded-impala/CSS-Theming

And the GitHub page of that repository,
https://bearded-impala.github.io/CSS-Theming
Thanks for reading.

Written by bearded-impala | Full Spectrum Developer. Solution Designer.
Published by HackerNoon on 2020/07/23