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darkmodejs

Status License npm


Utility package for managing Dark Mode on the web.

Dark Mode is a feature in modern Operating Systems which allows you to change your default UI from a light to dark theme. On the web we can take advantage of this to control the theme of our website.

Utilises the matchMedia API and its listeners, in combination with the prefers-color-scheme media query, in order to fire functions whenever you're in Dark Mode.

Example application using darkmodejs in Windows 10 Firefox Example application using darkmodejs in Windows 10 Firefox

πŸ“ Prerequisites

Requires an Operating System which supports Dark Mode:

  • macOS 10.14
  • iOS 13.0
  • iPadOS 13.0
  • Windows 10
  • ... or greater

Also requires support for the prefers-color-scheme media query. A complete list of supported browsers can be found on caniuse.

🏁 Install

$ npm install @assortment/darkmodejs

🎈 Usage

import darkmodejs from '@assortment/darkmodejs';

const config = { onChange: (activeTheme, themes) => {} };

darkmodejs(config);

If you need ES5 support, you can require the package instead.

const darkmodejs = require('@assortment/darkmodejs');

An example could be logging to console when a theme is active:

import darkmodejs from '@assortment/darkmodejs';

const onChange = (activeTheme, themes) => {
  switch (activeTheme) {
    case themes.DARK:
      console.log('darkmode enabled');
      break;
    case themes.LIGHT:
      console.log('lightmode enabled');
      break;
    case themes.NO_PREF:
      console.log('no preference enabled');
      break;
    case themes.NO_SUPP:
      console.log('no support sorry');
      break;
  }
};

darkmodejs({ onChange });

You can also do a spot of cleanup by calling the removeListeners function that is returned from darkmodejs. It removes both DARK and LIGHT query listeners.

const dmjs = darkmodejs({ onChange });

dmjs.removeListeners();

This can be useful when unmounting components or pages that use dynamic routing techniques.

βš™ API

config

darkmodejs accepts a config object, which in turn accepts a single function of onChange.

onChange(activeTheme, themes)

Type: Function. Required: No.

This function is called when darkmodejs is executed to check:

  • if there is support for prefers-color-scheme;
  • if the dark, light or no-preference theme is active.

The function is also bound to MediaQueryList.addListener to listen for changes.

activeTheme

Type: String. Required: No.

Returns the current active theme.

themes

Type: Object{String}. Required: No.

Returns all available theme states:

{
  DARK: 'dark',
  LIGHT: 'light',
  NO_PREF: 'no-preference',
  NO_SUPP: 'no-support'
}

returned

Once initiated, you also have access to the removeListeners function for cleanup purposes.

removeListeners

Type: Function.

Removes both DARK and LIGHT query listeners.

🎬 Examples

The following examples are taken from darkmodejs-demo, a demo application created to show how you can use @assortment/darkmodejs in conjunction with Emotion Theming to control your website's theme based on a user's OS preference.

MacOS

Safari (supported)

Supported in MacOS with Safari

Firefox (supported)

Supported in MacOS with Firefox

Windows 10

Firefox (supported)

Supported in Windows 10 with Firefox

Chrome (not supported until Chrome 76)

Not supported in Windows 10 with Chrome 75

No preference

Special mention to no-preference. To my knowledge I don't believe any Operating System currently allows for a no preference option, so there's no current circumstance where this returns true from a prefers-color-scheme media query. That said, as its part of the specification I've included it as an option in the demo app if you ever want to do anything specific.

Example no preference theme set

✍️ License

MIT Β© Luke Whitehouse