To keep things organized, UIElements has adopted BEM as the methodology for styling elements. While using BEM is not mandatory, it is recommended.
BEM stands for Block Element Modifier. BEM is a simple system that helps you write structured, non-ambiguous, easy to maintain selectors. With BEM, you assign classes to elements and then use these classes as the selectors in style sheets.
BEM classes have up to three components:
menu
, button
, list-view
menu__item
, button__icon
, or list-view__item
menu--disabled
, menu__item--disabled
, button--small
, or list-view__item--selected
.Each name part may consist of Latin letters, digits, and dashes. Each name part is joined together with either a double underscore __
or a double dash --
.
The following example shows XML code for a menu:
<VisualElement class="menu">
<Label class="menu__item" text="Banana" />
<Label class="menu__item" text="Apple" />
<Label class="menu__item menu__item--disabled" text="Orange" />
</VisualElement>
Since each element is equipped with classes that describe its role and appearance, you can write most of your selectors with only one class name:
.menu {
}
.menu__item {
}
.menu__item--disabled {
}
You should be able to style elements using a single class name. However, in some cases, you may need to use complex selectors. For example, you could use a complex selector when the style of an element depends on the modifier of its block:
.button {
}
.button__icon {
}
.button--small {
}
.button--small .button__icon {
}
Be careful that you do not specify long selectors. A long selector could indicate inconsistencies in the graphic design of your UI(User Interface) Allows a user to interact with your application. More info
See in Glossary. You should also avoid using type names (Button
, Label
) or element names (#my-button
) in your BEM selectors.
VisualElement
BEM-friendlyUIElements adheres to BEM. Each visual element has the necessary class names attached. For example, all TextElement
have the unity-text-element
class. Each instance of Button
, which derives from TextElement
, has its class list populated with the unity-button
and unity-text-element
classes.
If you derive a new element from VisualElement
or one of its descendants, following these guidelines to ensure that your element is easy to style using the BEM methodology:
AddToClassList()
in the constructor to add the relevant USS classes to your element instances.my-block__first-child
, my-block__other-child
.