Although provided, we strongly advise the use of the theme property to control the look and feel of the dashboard. We recommend keeping usage of CSS classes to a minimum.
If there is something which the theme property does not allow you to control. Please get in-touch with our support team to see how we can help.
CSS
To make the dashboard look and feel like the rest of your website, we've added CSS class names which allow you complete control over the customization of your dashboard.
You can write a CSS file that uses the vizzly_
prefixed CSS class names to override the Vizzly base styles.
Before you start writing your CSS, remember to add the disableVizzlyTheme
React prop to the Dashboard
component and then start making your CSS changes. You'll see a more un-opinionated version of
the Vizzly dashboard, and it will be easier to add your own theme and maintain in the future.
For example, if you're using a library such as react-helmet
(opens in a new tab) that supplies the Head
component in this example,
then your diff might look something like this;
import Vizzly from "@vizzly/dashboard";
export default () => (
<>
+ <Head>
+ <style>
+ .vizzly_button {
+ background: green;
+ }
+ </style>
+ </Head>
<Vizzly.Dashboard
+ disableVizzlyTheme
{/* ... rest of the dashboard props ... */ }
/>
</>
)
Available CSS classes
This is an exhaustive list of CSS classes which can be used to customize the Vizzly dashboard. We recommend combining this list with searching through the elements using the inspector developer tool (opens in a new tab) to target the components which you want to customize.
If there is a part of the Vizzly dashboard that you'd like to make customizable, please contact us through your shared slack channel with us, and we'll see what we can do to help.
View all CSS classes
.vizzly_button
Sets the default button styles.
.vizzly_listview
Targe the listview component used to manage measures, dimensions, sorts, global filters etc.
.vizzly_listview-item
Styles the individual rows in a listview component.
.vizzly_listview-new-item
Style the button at the bottom of a listview utilized by users to add a new item.
.vizzly_modal-header
Style the header of a modal.
.vizzly_modal-content
Style the content of a modal.
.vizzly_modal-footer
Style the footer of a modal.
.vizzly_modal-overlay
Style the background of a modal, used to differentiate the content of the modal from the background.
.vizzly_modal-wrapper
Target a modal.
.vizzly_data-set-preview
Target the table component used to display a preview of a data set during the flow of creating a new chart.
.vizzly_pick-component-type
Target the grid used to display the available component types.
.vizzly_modal-empty-library
Target the modal which contains the charts in the users library, when the library is empty.
.vizzly_modal-library-preview
Target the preview chart shown in the component library.
.vizzly_modal-library-list
Target the list of charts shown in the component library.
.vizzly_dashboard
Target the parent element of the Vizzly dashboard.
.vizzly_modal-close
Style the close modal button.
.vizzly_modal-library
Target the modal when the component library is shown.
.vizzly_modal-editor
Target the modal when the component editor is shown.
.vizzly_accordion
Style the accordions used throughout the chart editor.
.vizzly_accordion-content
Style the content of an accordion.
.vizzly_panel-property
Target each of the data and style properties.
.vizzly_tab-group
Target the parent element of a tab.
.vizzly_tab-button-list
Target the parent element of a list of tabs.
.vizzly_tab-panel
Target the parent element for each panel of content in a tab group.
.vizzly_tab-button
Style the buttons used in a tab group.
.vizzly_select
Style a select input.
.vizzly_button-group
Target a wrapper for a collection of buttons.
.vizzly_input
Style HTML inputs.
.vizzly_populated-cell
Target the cell of a dashboard when it contains a chart or table.
.vizzly_empty-cell
Target the cell of a dashboard when it is empty.
.vizzly_selected
Combine this with other classnames to target an active option of a select input.
.vizzly_loading
Combine this with other classnames to target a component when it is in the loading state.
.vizzly_disabled
Combine this with other classnames to target a component when it is in the disabled state.
.vizzly_error
Combine this with other classnames to target a component when it is in the error state.
.vizzly_sm
Used on components which by default, are smaller in size.
.vizzly_primary
Combine this with the button classnames to style a primary button.
.vizzly_secondary
Combine this with the button classnames to style a secondary button.
.vizzly_subtle
Used on components which by default, are not as prominent on the page. This is used on buttons and other HTML inputs.
Importing the CSS
As you customize the Vizzly dashboard using CSS classes, you can import these styles in the idiomatic ways;
- You can set the styles in the
head
tag of the HTML document. - As a separate CSS file referenced in the
head
tag of the HTML document. - Using a CSS in JS approach such as styled-components (opens in a new tab) to create global styles.
Troubleshooting
"My custom styles are having no effect"
There's a few simple things that might be causing the issue;
- Be sure that you have set the
disableVizzlyTheme={true}
property on theVizzly.Dashboard
React component. - Be sure that you are targeting an HTML element with valid CSS (opens in a new tab).
- Be sure that the CSS selector is finding the element on the page. You can use the chrome developer tools in the "style" section to do this. You'll see the styles you want to be applied are crossed out.
After checking the above and the problem continues, then it is time to increase the specificity of the CSS references. You can do this by targeting the HTML element multiple times with the same selector. For example, instead of just specifying the selector like so;
button.vizzly_primary {
background: red;
}
you can utilize the v
class which will also exist on the HTML element which has vizzly_
classnames on, and reference the element like so;
.v.button.vizzly_primary {
background: red;
}
If it is still being overridden, you can keep adding the v
class until your styles take effect. For example;
.v.v.v.v.button.vizzly_primary {
background: red;
}