--- title: 'Theming' --- Storybook is theme-able using a lightweight theming API. ## Global theming It's possible to theme Storybook globally. Storybook includes two themes that look good out of the box: "normal" (a light theme) and "dark" (a dark theme). Unless you've set your preferred color scheme as dark, Storybook will use the light theme as default. Make sure you have installed [`@storybook/addons`](https://www.npmjs.com/package/@storybook/addons) and [`@storybook/theming`](https://www.npmjs.com/package/@storybook/theming) packages. ```sh yarn add --dev @storybook/addons @storybook/theming ``` As an example, you can tell Storybook to use the "dark" theme by modifying [`.storybook/manager.js`](./overview.md#configure-story-rendering): When setting a theme, set a full theme object. The theme is replaced, not combined. ## Theming docs [Storybook Docs](../writing-docs/introduction) uses the same theme system as Storybook’s UI, but is themed independently from the main UI. Supposing you have a Storybook theme defined for the main UI in [`.storybook/manager.js`](./overview.md#configure-story-rendering): Here's how you'd specify the same theme for docs in [`.storybook/preview.js`](./overview.md#configure-story-rendering): Continue to read if you want to learn how to create your theme. ## Create a theme quickstart The easiest way to customize Storybook is to generate a new theme using the `create()` function from `storybook/theming`. This function includes shorthands for the most common theme variables. Here's how to use it: First create a new file in `.storybook` called `yourTheme.js`. Next paste the code below and tweak the variables. Finally, import your theme into [`.storybook/manager.js`](./overview.md#configure-story-rendering) and add it to your Storybook parameters. The `@storybook/theming` package is built using TypeScript, so this should help create a valid theme for TypeScript users. The types are part of the package itself. Many theme variables are optional, the `base` property is NOT. This is a perfectly valid theme: ## CSS escape hatches The Storybook theme API is narrow by design. If you want to have fine-grained control over the CSS, all of the UI and Docs components are tagged with class names to make this possible. This is advanced usage: **use at your own risk**. To style these elements, insert style tags into: - For Storybook’s UI, use `.storybook/manager-head.html` - For Storybook Docs, use `.storybook/preview-head.html`
Similar to changing the preview’s head tag, `.storybook/manager-head.html` allows you to inject code into the manager side, which can be useful to adding styles for your theme that target Storybook’s HTML. WARNING: we don’t make any guarantees about the structure of Storybook’s HTML and it could change at any time. Consider yourself warned!
## MDX component overrides If you're using MDX for docs, there's one more level of themability. MDX allows you to completely override the components that are rendered from Markdown using a components parameter. This is an advanced usage that we don't officially support in Storybook, but it's a powerful mechanism if you need it. Here's how you might insert a custom code renderer for `code` blocks on the page, in [`.storybook/preview.js`](./overview.md#configure-story-rendering): You can even override a Storybook block component. Here's how you might insert a custom `` block: ## Addons and theme creation Some addons require specific theme variables that a Storybook user must add. If you share your theme with the community, make sure to support the official API and other popular addons so your users have a consistent experience. For example, the popular Actions addon uses [react-inspector](https://github.com/xyc/react-inspector/blob/master/src/styles/themes/chromeLight.js) which has themes of its own. Supply additional theme variables to style it like so: ## Using the theme for addon authors Reuse the theme variables above for a native Storybook developer experience. The theming engine relies on [emotion](https://emotion.sh/), a CSS-in-JS library. Use the theme variables in object notation: Or with template literals: