While I was at Algolia’s Paris office last week, Dhaya Benmessaoud from our Front-end Experience team showed me a cool trick for styling Algolia’s React widgets in your UI. Out-of-the-box, Algolia provides a couple of pre-built themes for search experiences (Algolia and Satellite) as well as the ability to create custom themes. Recently, the front-end experience team has added a third way to style your UI, by injecting custom CSS classes into your Algolia React components.
This is great news for people who use class-based CSS frameworks like Bootstrap and Tailwind! In my case, I was working with the Algolia Ecommerce UI Template, which relies on Tailwind for styling. I wanted to add a <TrendingFacets>
widget from the Algolia Recommend UI library to my homepage, but I wanted to style it using Tailwind classes to match the rest of my front-end.
Here’s how it looks before styling:
I can definitely do better! To accomplish this, I need to use the classNames
attribute for my component. It’s available for all of Algolia’s React widgets (including Recommend) and it allows you to override styling on component-specific elements. Some of our other front-end APIs like Vanilla JavaScript (cssClasses
) and Vue (class-names
) have had this functionality for years, and now it’s available in React thanks to the recent refresh that added React hooks.
The documentation lists the elements I can override for each Algolia widget. For instance, here are the elements of a <SearchBox>
widget:
For my <TrendingFacets>
widget, I want the list in a horizontal line to conserve space, so I add a flex
class to its list
element. I’ll also add a new facetItem
class to give each item
a nice capsule shape with some simple hover styling. Here’s how my component looks after styling.
And here’s the code:
<TrendingFacets
classNames={{ list: 'flex', item: 'facetItem' }}
recommendClient={recommendClient}
indexName={indexName}
maxRecommendations={3}
itemComponent={({ item }) => (
<a href={item.facetValue}>{item.facetValue}</a>
)}
facetName={facetName}
/>
Adding classNames
to customize the style of Algolia widgets makes so much sense, especially for people like me who are addicted to Tailwind CSS for styling front-ends. You can read more about adding custom CSS classes to widgets in the Algolia documentation. If you’re new to Algolia, you can try it out by signing up for a free tier account.
Also published here.