A storybook addons that lets your users toggle between dark and light mode.
Note
This is a fork of storybook-dark-mode by @hipstersmoothie to support Storybook 9.
This fork focus on maintaining compatibility with Storybook and security updates.
But it also has a few improvements made to the addon.
Install the following npm module:
npm i --save-dev @storybook-community/storybook-dark-modeor with yarn:
yarn add -D @storybook-community/storybook-dark-modeThen, add following content to .storybook/main.js
module.exports = {
addons: ['@storybook-community/storybook-dark-mode']
};Configure the dark and light mode by adding the following to your .storybook/preview.js file:
import { themes } from 'storybook/theming';
export const parameters = {
darkMode: {
// Override the default dark theme
dark: { ...themes.dark, appBg: 'black' },
// Override the default light theme
light: { ...themes.normal, appBg: 'red' }
}
};Order of precedence for the initial color scheme:
- If the user has previously set a color theme it's used
- The value you have configured for
currentparameter in your storybook - The OS color scheme preference
Once the initial color scheme has been set, subsequent reloads will use this value.
To clear the cached color scheme you have to localStorage.clear() in the chrome console.
export const parameters = {
darkMode: {
// Set the initial theme
current: 'light'
}
};This plugin will apply a dark and light class name to the manager. This allows you to easily write dark mode aware theme overrides for the storybook UI.
You can override the classNames applied when switching between light and dark mode using the darkClass and lightClass parameters.
export const parameters = {
darkMode: {
darkClass: 'lights-out',
lightClass: 'lights-on'
}
};You can also pass an array to apply multiple classes.
export const parameters = {
darkMode: {
darkClass: ['lights-out', 'foo'],
lightClass: ['lights-on', 'bar']
}
};This plugin will apply the dark/light class to the <body> element of the preview iframe. This can be configured with the classTarget parameter.
The value will be passed to a querySelector() inside the iframe.
This is useful if the <body> is styled according to a parent's class, in that case it can be set to html.
export const parameters = {
darkMode: {
classTarget: 'html'
}
};This plugin will apply the darkClass and lightClass classes to the preview iframe if you turn on the stylePreview option.
export const parameters = {
darkMode: {
stylePreview: true
}
};If your components use a custom Theme provider, you can integrate it by using the provided hook.
import { useDarkMode } from '@storybook-community/storybook-dark-mode';
import { addDecorator } from 'storybook/react-vite';
// your theme provider
import ThemeContext from './theme';
// create a component that uses the dark mode hook
function ThemeWrapper(props) {
// render your custom theme provider
return (
<ThemeContext.Provider value={useDarkMode() ? darkTheme : defaultTheme}>
{props.children}
</ThemeContext.Provider>
);
}
export const decorators = [renderStory => <ThemeWrapper>{renderStory()}</ThemeWrapper>)];If you want to have you UI's dark mode separate from you components' dark mode, implement this global decorator:
import { themes } from 'storybook/theming';
// Add a global decorator that will render a dark background when the
// "Color Scheme" knob is set to dark
const knobDecorator = storyFn => {
// A knob for color scheme added to every story
const colorScheme = select('Color Scheme', ['light', 'dark'], 'light');
// Hook your theme provider with some knobs
return React.createElement(ThemeProvider, {
// A knob for theme added to every story
theme: select('Theme', Object.keys(themes), 'default'),
colorScheme,
children: [
React.createElement('style', {
dangerouslySetInnerHTML: {
__html: `html { ${
colorScheme === 'dark' ? 'background-color: rgb(35,35,35);' : ''
} }`
}
}),
storyFn()
]
});
};
export const decorators = [knobDecorator];You can also listen for the DARK_MODE event via the addons channel.
import { addDecorator } from '@storybook/react-vite';
import { DARK_MODE_EVENT_NAME } from '@storybook-community/storybook-dark-mode';
import { addons } from 'storybook/preview-api';
// your theme provider
import ThemeContext from './theme';
// get channel to listen to event emitter
const channel = addons.getChannel();
// create a component that listens for the DARK_MODE event
function ThemeWrapper(props) {
// this example uses hook but you can also use class component as well
const [isDark, setDark] = useState(false);
useEffect(() => {
// listen to DARK_MODE event
channel.on(DARK_MODE_EVENT_NAME, setDark);
return () => channel.off(DARK_MODE_EVENT_NAME, setDark);
}, [channel, setDark]);
// render your custom theme provider
return (
<ThemeContext.Provider value={isDark ? darkTheme : defaultTheme}>
{props.children}
</ThemeContext.Provider>
);
}
export const decorators = [renderStory => <ThemeWrapper>{renderStory()}</ThemeWrapper>)];Since in docs mode, Storybook will not display its toolbar,
You can also trigger the UPDATE_DARK_MODE event via the addons channel if you want to control that option in docs mode,
By editing your .storybook/preview.js.
import React from 'react';
import { DocsContainer } from '@storybook/addon-docs';
import { themes } from '@storybook/theming';
import {
DARK_MODE_EVENT_NAME,
UPDATE_DARK_MODE_EVENT_NAME
} from '@storybook-community/storybook-dark-mode';
import { addons } from 'storybook/preview-api';
const channel = addons.getChannel();
export const parameters = {
darkMode: {
current: 'light',
dark: { ...themes.dark },
light: { ...themes.light }
},
docs: {
container: props => {
const [isDark, setDark] = React.useState();
const onChangeHandler = () => {
channel.emit(UPDATE_DARK_MODE_EVENT_NAME);
};
React.useEffect(() => {
channel.on(DARK_MODE_EVENT_NAME, setDark);
return () => channel.removeListener(DARK_MODE_EVENT_NAME, setDark);
}, [channel, setDark]);
return (
<div>
<input type="checkbox" onChange={onChangeHandler} />
<DocsContainer {...props} />
</div>
);
}
}
};Thanks goes to these wonderful people (emoji key):
This project follows the all-contributors specification. Contributions of any kind welcome!
