Theme Developer Tutorial: 3. CSS in Themes

Technically, Discourse uses SCSS to author its stylesheets. However, we’re increasingly moving towards native CSS features as they mature, so the vast majority of themes won’t need to use SCSS features or syntaxes. We follow a variant of BEM for our CSS, you should be familiar with this when writing theme CSS.

This chapter will focus on Discourse-specific subjects, so if you don’t already have a passing familiarity with CSS, take some time to learn about it from CSS styling basics - Learn web development | MDN.

Authoring theme CSS

As we touched on in the last chapter, the main entrypoint for theme CSS is the common/common.scss file. For many themes, that’s all you’ll need.

You can also use desktop/desktop.scss and mobile/mobile.scss, although we’re increasingly moving away from these separate files and towards breakpoint-based styling in common.scss.

But for more complex situations, you can put additional scss in files like /stylesheets/my-styles.scss, and import from common.scss like @import "my-styles";

Using variables

Discourse makes extensive use of CSS variables for colors, font sizes, and other things which need to be shared throughout the stylesheets. You can find a full list of the color variables here, font variables here. Or alternatively, open your browser dev tools, select the <html> element, and scroll through all the available variables.

Let’s make use of this knowledge by updating our theme to use the theme colors for the banner! Open up the common.scss file, and update the color properties to use variables:

.custom-welcome-banner {
  background: var(--quaternary);
  color: var(--secondary);
  text-align: center;
  padding: 10px;
}

discourse_theme will sync this change up to your site instantly, and the change should appear in your browser.

Great! Now your banner’s colors will match the site color scheme, and automatically adjust based on light/dark modes.

For more information about the variables available, check out this document

Finding CSS selectors to style

The number of elements and classes in Discourse can feel quite overwhelming from a re-styling standpoint. The key to having a maintainable theme is to keep your changes as small as possible, and match the selectors used in Discourse core’s stylesheets.

For example, let’s assume you want to style all the buttons in Discourse. One approach would be to use DevTools and try to find every variation of every button and style it. But a better approach would be to see how core is styling buttons, and base your approach on that.

To explore re-styling Discourse in more detail, check out the Designer’s guide to Discourse themes

Or if you’re ready to explore more ways to add/change content in Discourse, let’s go to the next chapter


This document is version controlled - suggest changes on github.

2 个赞

主题应该是 scss,或者也可以使用 stylesheets

1 个赞

两者都可以。我更喜欢 /stylesheets 以保持与核心和插件的一致性……尽管我现在意识到 theme-skeleton 使用的是 scss/,所以 99% 的主题都在使用它 :sweat_smile:

3 个赞

我猜我可以把它偷偷放进来,然后假装我忘了在6年前对skeleton做这个改动 :shushing_face:

5 个赞

将现有主题(以及插件?我在手机上,还没看我的插件)中的 scss 重命名为 stylesheets 是否有意义?

1 个赞

完全取决于你。在我们的主题编译器中,它们是同义词,我们目前没有任何弃用 scss 的计划。

(如果我们确实决定弃用,您会提前收到充分的警告)

这仅适用于主题。插件一直使用 /stylesheets 作为约定。

3 个赞