Component styles link
Angular applications are styled with standard CSS. That means you can apply everything you know about CSS stylesheets, selectors, rules, and media queries directly to Angular applications.
Additionally, Angular can bundle component styles with components, enabling a more modular design than regular stylesheets.
This page describes how to load and apply these component styles.
Run the
Using component styles link
For every Angular component you write, you can define not only an HTML template, but also the CSS styles that go with that template, specifying any selectors, rules, and media queries that you need.
One way to do this is to set the
styles
property in the component metadata.
The
styles
property takes an array of strings that contain CSS code.
Usually you give it one string, as in the following example:
@Component({
selector: 'app-root',
template: `
<h1>Tour of Heroes</h1>
<app-hero-main [hero]="hero"></app-hero-main>
`,
styles: ['h1 { font-weight: normal; }']
})
export class HeroAppComponent {
/* . . . */
}
Component styling best practices link
See View Encapsulation for information on how Angular scopes styles to specific components.
You should consider the styles of a component to be private implementation details for that component.
When consuming a common component, you should not override the component's styles any more than you should access the private members of a TypeScript class.
While Angular's default style encapsulation prevents component styles from affecting other components, global styles affect all components on the page.
This includes
::ng-deep
, which promotes a component style to a global style.
Authoring a component to support customization link
As component author, you can explicitly design a component to accept customization in one of four different ways.
1. Use CSS Custom Properties (recommended) link
You can define a supported customization API for your component by defining its styles with CSS Custom Properties, alternatively known as CSS Variables. Anyone using your component can consume this API by defining values for these properties, customizing the final appearance of the component on the rendered page.
While this requires defining a custom property for each customization point, it creates a clear API contract that works in all style encapsulation modes.
2. Declare global CSS with
@mixin
link
While Angular's emulated style encapsulation prevents styles from escaping a component, it does not prevent global CSS from affecting the entire page. While component consumers should avoid directly overwriting the CSS internals of a component, you can offer a supported customization API via a CSS preprocessor like Sass.
For example, a component may offer one or more supported mixins to customize various aspects of the component's appearance. While this approach uses global styles in its implementation, it allows the component author to keep the mixins up to date with changes to the component's private DOM structure and CSS classes.
3. Customize with CSS
::part
link
If your component uses Shadow DOM, you can apply the
part
attribute to specify elements in your component's template.
This allows consumers of the component to author arbitrary styles targeting those specific elements with the
::part
pseudo-element.
While this lets you limit the elements within your template that consumers can customize, it does not limit which CSS properties are customizable.
4. Provide a TypeScript API link
You can define a TypeScript API for customizing styles, using template bindings to update CSS classes and styles. This is not recommended because the additional JavaScript cost of this style API incurs far more performance cost than CSS.
Special selectors link
Component styles have a few special selectors from the world of shadow DOM style scoping (described in the CSS Scoping Module Level 1 page on the W3C site). The following sections describe these selectors.
:host link
Every component is associated within an element that matches the component's selector.
This element, into which the template is rendered, is called the
host element
.
The
:host
pseudo-class selector may be used to create styles that target the host element itself, as opposed to targeting elements inside the host.
@Component({
selector: 'app-main',
template: `
<h1>It Works!</h1>
<div>
Start editing to see some magic happen :)
</div>
`
})
export class HostSelectorExampleComponent {
}
Creating the following style will target the component's host element. Any rule applied to this selector will affect the host element and all its descendants (in this case, italicizing all contained text).
:host {
font-style: italic;
}
The
:host
selector only targets the host element of a component.
Any styles within the
:host
block of a child component will
not
affect parent components.
Use the
function form
to apply host styles conditionally by including another selector inside parentheses after
:host
.
In this example the host's content also becomes bold when the
active
CSS class is applied to the host element.
:host {
font-style: italic;
}
:host(.active) {
font-weight: bold;
}
The
:host
selector can also be combined with other selectors.
Add selectors behind the
:host
to select child elements, for example using
:host h2
to target all
<h2>
elements inside a component's view.
You should not add selectors (other than
:host-context
) in front of the
:host
selector to style a component based on the outer context of the component's view.
Such selectors are not scoped to a component's view and will select the outer context, but it's not built-in behavior.
Use
:host-context
selector for that purpose instead.
:host-context link
Sometimes it's useful to apply styles to elements within a component's template based on some condition in an element that is an ancestor of the host element.
For example, a CSS theme class could be applied to the document
<body>
element, and you want to change how your component looks based on that.
Use the
:host-context()
pseudo-class selector, which works just like the function form of
:host()
.
The
:host-context()
selector looks for a CSS class in any ancestor of the component host element, up to the document root.
The
:host-context()
selector is only useful when combined with another selector.
The following example italicizes all text inside a component, but only
if some
ancestor
element of the host element has the CSS class
active
.
:host-context(.active) {
font-style: italic;
}
NOTE
:
Only the host element and its descendants will be affected, not the ancestor with the assigned
active
class.
(deprecated)
/deep/
,
>>>
, and
::ng-deep
link
Component styles normally apply only to the HTML in the component's own template.
Applying the
::ng-deep
pseudo-class to any CSS rule completely disables view-encapsulation for that rule.
Any style with
::ng-deep
applied becomes a global style.
In order to scope the specified style to the current component and all its descendants, be sure to include the
:host
selector before
::ng-deep
.
If the
::ng-deep
combinator is used without the
:host
pseudo-class selector, the style can bleed into other components.
The following example targets all
<h3>
elements, from the host element down through this component to all of its child elements in the DOM.
:host ::ng-deep h3 {
font-style: italic;
}
The
/deep/
combinator also has the aliases
>>>
, and
::ng-deep
.
Use
/deep/
,
>>>
, and
::ng-deep
only with
emulated
view encapsulation.
Emulated is the default and most commonly used view encapsulation.
For more information, see the View Encapsulation section.
The shadow-piercing descendant combinator is deprecated and support is being removed from major browsers and tools.
As such we plan to drop support in Angular (for all 3 of
/deep/
,
>>>
, and
::ng-deep
).
Until then
::ng-deep
should be preferred for a broader compatibility with the tools.
Loading component styles link
There are several ways to add styles to a component:
-
By setting
styles
orstyleUrls
metadata - Inline in the template HTML
- With CSS imports
The scoping rules outlined earlier apply to each of these loading patterns.
Styles in component metadata link
Add a
styles
array property to the
@Component
decorator.
Each string in the array defines some CSS for this component.
@Component({
selector: 'app-root',
template: `
<h1>Tour of Heroes</h1>
<app-hero-main [hero]="hero"></app-hero-main>
`,
styles: ['h1 { font-weight: normal; }']
})
export class HeroAppComponent {
/* . . . */
}
Reminder: These styles apply only to this component . They are not inherited by any components nested within the template nor by any content projected into the component.
The Angular CLI command
ng generate component
defines an empty
styles
array when you create the component with the
--inline-style
flag.
ng generate component hero-app --inline-style
Style files in component metadata link
Load styles from external CSS files by adding a
styleUrls
property to a component's
@Component
decorator:
@Component({
selector: 'app-root',
template: `
<h1>Tour of Heroes</h1>
<app-hero-main [hero]="hero"></app-hero-main>
`,
styleUrls: ['./hero-app.component.css']
})
export class HeroAppComponent {
/* . . . */
}
Reminder: the styles in the style file apply only to this component . They are not inherited by any components nested within the template nor by any content projected into the component.
You can specify more than one styles file or even a combination of
styles
and
styleUrls
.
When you use the Angular CLI command
ng generate component
without the
--inline-style
flag, it creates an empty styles file for you and references that file in the component's generated
styleUrls
.
ng generate component hero-app
Template inline styles link
Embed CSS styles directly into the HTML template by putting them inside
<style>
tags.
@Component({
selector: 'app-hero-controls',
template: `
<style>
button {
background-color: white;
border: 1px solid #777;
}
</style>
<h3>Controls</h3>
<button type="button" (click)="activate()">Activate</button>
`
})
Template link tags link
You can also write
<link>
tags into the component's HTML template.
@Component({
selector: 'app-hero-team',
template: `
<!-- We must use a relative URL so that the AOT compiler can find the stylesheet -->
<link rel="stylesheet" href="../assets/hero-team.component.css">
<h3>Team</h3>
<ul>
<li *ngFor="let member of hero.team">
{{member}}
</li>
</ul>`
})
When building with the CLI, be sure to include the linked style file among the assets to be copied to the server as described in the Assets configuration guide.
Once included, the CLI includes the stylesheet, whether the link tag's href URL is relative to the application root or the component file.
CSS @imports link
Import CSS files into the CSS files using the standard CSS
@import
rule.
For details, see
@import
on the MDN site.
In this case, the URL is relative to the CSS file into which you're importing.
/* The AOT compiler needs the `./` to show that this is local */
@import './hero-details-box.css';
External and global style files link
When building with the CLI, you must configure the
angular.json
to include
all external assets
, including external style files.
Register
global
style files in the
styles
section which, by default, is pre-configured with the global
styles.css
file.
See the Styles configuration guide to learn more.
Non-CSS style files link
If you're building with the CLI, you can write style files in sass, or less, and specify those files in the
@Component.styleUrls
metadata with the appropriate extensions (
.scss
,
.less
) as in the following example:
@Component({
selector: 'app-root',
templateUrl: './app.component.html',
styleUrls: ['./app.component.scss']
})
…
The CLI build process runs the pertinent CSS preprocessor.
When generating a component file with
ng generate component
, the CLI emits an empty CSS styles file (
.css
) by default.
Configure the CLI to default to your preferred CSS preprocessor as explained in the Workspace configuration guide.