The other day I was working on a blog where each post has a custom color attached to it for a little dose of personality. The author gets to pick that color in the CMS when they’re writing the post. Just a super-light layer of art direction.
To make that color show up on the front end, I wrote the value right into an inline style
attribute on the <article>
element. My templates happened to be in Liquid, but this would look similar in other templating languages:
{% for post in posts %}
<article style="background: {{post.custom_color}}"> <h1>{{post.title}}</h1> {{content}}
</article>
{% endfor %}
No problem there. But then I thought, “Wouldn’t it be nice if the custom color only showed up when when hovering over the article card?” But you can’t write hover styles in a style
attribute, right?
My first idea was to leave the style
attribute in place and write CSS like this:
article { background: lightgray !important;
}
article:hover { /* Doesn't work! */ background: inherit;
}
I can override the inline style by using !important
, but there’s no way to undo that on hover.
Eventually, I decided I could use a style
attribute to get the color value from the CMS, but instead of applying it right away, store it as a CSS variable:
<article style="--custom_color: {{post.custom_color}}"> <h1>{{post.title}}</h1> {{content}}
</article>
Then, that variable can be used to define the hover style in regular CSS:
article { background: lightgray;
}
article:hover { /* Works! */ background: var(--custom_color);
}
Now that the color value is saved as a CSS variable, there are all kinds of other things we can do with it. For instance, we could make all links in the post appear in the custom color:
article a { color: var(--custom_color);
}
And because the variable is scoped to the <article>
element, it won’t affect anything else on the page. We can even display multiple posts on the same page where each one renders in its own custom color.
Browser support for CSS variables is pretty deep, with the exception of Internet Explorer. Anyway, just a neat little trick that might come in handy if you find yourself working with light art direction in a CMS, as well as a reminder of just how awesome CSS variables can be.