I came across a ReactJS Boilerplate which had good reps and is community driven. Styling section emphasized more on styled component CSS but never stopped from switching to conventional CSS styling methodologies. Although this pulled my interests what makes the Styled-Component CSS stand out and why need to adopt it.
My Understanding of Styled component CSS:
- Component Driven idealogy. Your CSS also is now a component. - This is pretty cool!
- Load what you need and when you needed, kinda lazy CSS
- Theme provider, skins, modularity and dynamic - This can be achieved by other libs too
- Server side construction of your component DOM and its style.
My questions are:
Browsers are evolved to parse CSS separately from Javascript parsing, why are we trying to deviate from this and fit all in Javascript?
Styled-component CSS ships its javascript library to the client end, which actually parses styles at the runtime and put inside
<style />
tag when each component loads on demand. This means extra load and logic eventually contributing to execution cycles on browser. Why need this?(By the above question i mean for every component loaded, corresponding CSS is computed, created and inserted in head via
style
tag / Multiple style tags - Re-inventing CSS interpreters)Does continuous computed style text banging via
<style />
in the head tag cause browser reflow/repaint ?What are the performance advantages i get from this?
With add-on libraries / options like Post-CSS & SCSS classname hashing for dynamic classnames which pretty much solves the problem that everyone states. Why SC still ?
Community, please clear the air for me or correct me if i am wrong.
Some good articles that talks about repaint or DOM re-flow how it is performance expensive for browser when CSS styles are modified.
- https://developers.google.com/speed/articles/reflow
- http://www.stubbornella.org/content/2009/03/27/reflows-repaints-css-performance-making-your-javascript-slow/
- https://www.sitepoint.com/10-ways-minimize-reflows-improve-performance/
- https://www.phpied.com/rendering-repaint-reflowrelayout-restyle/
- https://developer.mozilla.org/en-US/docs/Web/API/CSS_Object_Model/Using_dynamic_styling_information
When you mix both Javascript and HTML (namely JSX) and then also CSS (JSS or another), you make your component a solid module that fits into a single file. You don't need to keep styles in a separate file anymore.
Then, the functional magic happens: as JSX is a pure function of raw data that returns "HTML" (not really), the same way CSS-in-JS is a pure function or raw data that returns "CSS" (also not really). From this point, I think it's worth reading about JSX and also about CSS-in-JS.
Not only on the run-time. Because CSS-in-JSS is just a function of data that returns CSS, you can use it on any platform. Take Node, add SSR, and you have
style
elements delivered to the browser in response body, therefore parsed just like it would happen in the original case of getting CSS delivered.Because it is convenient in development, just like React or Redux, just like jQuery, and just like any other lib, it comes at network load and browser performance cost.
You take a library because it solves a problem. If there seems to be no problem, why use library at all, right?
There are so many things that force reflow.
Browsers are smart. They don't even make an attempt to repaint if the styles haven't changed. Which doesn't mean that they don't calculate the difference, which costs CPU time.
There's a good intro into the scope and complexity of style (re)calculations, it's really worth reading to understand the subject deeper.
I've been using
SCSS
(SASS
) for many years now, and also have been usingStyled-Components
for a few projects, some large.I love both, and
Styled-Components
feels, for me, like a step forward:Styled-Components - Pros
I've found it easier to work with CSS within the JSX file itself (Opposing my judgment for many years before)
Easily use javascript variables within styles (eliminate the need for 2-sets of theme variable)
Styled-Components - Cons
SCSS/LESS pros can be viewed as opposite to the cons listed above, while having some more cons such as mixings and faster development when working with variables (IMHO). it can get "ugly" defining a local selector variable:
Compare these simplified examples:
SCSS
example:Styled-Components
local scope example:Obviously the variable could have been defined outside of the
Icon
styled wrapper and then internally used, but that won't make it isolated, because styled-component CSS might be composed of sub-components styled and look more like CSS:Not always it is desirable to extract each individual HTML element to its own styled component. it is done mostly for components that are or might be repeated across the app.
Regarding SASS mixings, they can be converted to javascript functions, so there's not much advantage to SASS here.
Overall, working with Styled-Components is fun & easy, but has a side-effect of a tighter coupling between the styles and the framework/component and it obviously has some performance penalty (nothing that will actually slow you down, but still).