Version: Unity 6.1 Alpha (6000.1)
Language : English
Add styles to UXML
Reference other files from UXML

Reuse UXML files

You can create a UXML file as a template and reuse it in other UXML files.

Import a UXML template

When you design a large user interface, you can create template UXML files that define parts of the UI, and use the <Template> and <Instance> elements to import it into another UXML file.

For example, if you have a portrait UI(User Interface) Allows a user to interact with your application. Unity currently supports three UI systems. More info
See in Glossary
element that has an image, a name, and a label, you can create a UXML template file as Assets/Portrait.uxml with the following content:

<ui:UXML ...>
    <ui:VisualElement class="portrait">
        <ui:Image name="portaitImage" style="--unity-image: url(\"a.png\")"/>
        <ui:Label name="nameLabel" text="Name"/>
        <ui:Label name="levelLabel" text="42"/>
    </ui:VisualElement>
</ui:UXML>

You can then reuse the Portrait template like this:

<ui:UXML ...>
    <ui:Template src="/Assets/Portrait.uxml" name="Portrait"/>
    <ui:VisualElement name="players">
        <ui:Instance template="Portrait" name="player1"/>
        <ui:Instance template="Portrait" name="player2"/>
    </ui:VisualElement>
</ui:UXML>

Override UXML attributes

When you create instances of a UXML template, you can override the default attribute values of its elements. Attribute overrides allow you to instantiate the same template many times with different values for each instance.

Override an attribute

You can override attributes with the UXML tag. To override an attribute, specify the following:

  • The element-name attribute of the element whose attributes you want to override
  • The name of the attribute to override
  • The new attribute value

For example, if you want to display the same set of information for each player in your game, you can create a UXML template, and use attribute overrides to create player-specific instances.

First, create a template, such as MyTemplate.uxml, with the following content:

<UXML xmlns="Unityui.UIElements">
    <Label name="player-name-label" text="default name" />
    <Label name="player-score-label" text="default score" />
</UXML>

Then, instance it from another UXML file and override its attributes to display each player’s name and score:

<UXML xmlns="UnityEngine.UIElements" xmlns:uie="UnityEditor.UIElements">
    <Template src="MyTemplate.uxml" name="MyTemplate" />
    <Instance name="player1" template="MyTemplate">
        <!-- Alice is the new value of the text attribute for the player-name-label -->
        <AttributeOverrides element-name="player-name-label" text="Alice" /> 
        <!-- 2 is the new value of the text attribute for the player-score-label -->
        <AttributeOverrides element-name="player-score-label" text="2" />
    </Instance>
    <Instance name="player2" template="MyTemplate">
        <!-- Bob is the new value of the text attribute for the player-name-label -->
        <AttributeOverrides element-name="player-name-label" text="Bob" />
        <!-- 1 is the new value of the text attribute for the player-score-label -->
        <AttributeOverrides element-name="player-score-label" text="1" />
    </Instance>
</UXML>

Override multiple attributes

You can specify more than one attribute per override. For example, the following syntax finds any element in the instance named player-name-label, and

  • Overrides the default value of its text attribute with the new value, Alice.
  • Overrides the default value of its tooltip attribute with the new value, Tooltip 1.
<AttributeOverrides element-name="player-name-label" text="Alice" tooltip="Tooltip 1" />

Nest attribute overrides

Attribute overrides propagate through nested templates in the element hierarchy. For example, if template A instances template B, and template B instances template C, both template A and template B can override attributes in template C.

When you override attributes in nested templates, the shallowest override takes precedence. In the example above, if template A and template B both override the same attribute of template C, the override in template A determines what actually appears in the rendered UI.

Override template instance styles

If you’re creating instances of a UXML template, and an element in the template has an inline style defined with the style attribute, you can’t use AttributeOverrides to override that style attribute. However, you can use USS selectors in a USS style sheet to override the styling of your template instances.

For example, if you have the following UXML template called Hotkeys.uxml that defines a #Container with two labels, and the #Container has an inline style that defines the flex row direction:

<ui:UXML xmlns:ui="UnityEngine.UIElements" xmlns:uie="UnityEditor.UIElements" editor-extension-mode="False">
    <ui:VisualElement name="Container" style="flex-direction: row;">
        <ui:Label text="E" name="Hotkeys" />
        <ui:Label text="Talk" name="Action" />
    </ui:VisualElement>
</ui:UXML>

If you want to create two template instances with the second having a reversed flex row direction, you can’t use AttributeOverides to override the style attribute of the #Container element in your second instance.

To override the style, do the following:

  • Remove the style of the #Container in the above UXML template (Hotkeys.uxml).
  • In your UXML instances file, name your two instances, such as HotkeysXML and ReversedHotkeysXML.
  • Apply a USS style sheet, such as ContextHotkeys.uss, to your UXML instance file.
<ui:UXML xmlns:ui="UnityEngine.UIElements" xmlns:uie="UnityEditor.UIElements">
    <ui:Template name="HotkeysXML" src="HotkeysXML.uxml"/>
    <Style src="ContextHotKeys.uss"/>
    <ui:Instance template="HotkeysXML" name="HotkeysXML" />
    <ui:Instance template="HotkeysXML" name="ReversedHotkeysXML" />
</ui:UXML>

You can then create ContextHotkeys.uss to change the #Container style according to the template instance name:

#ReversedHotkeysXML > #Container {
    flex-direction: row-reverse;
}
 
#HotkeysXML > #Container {
    flex-direction: row;
}

Limitations

Attribute overrides have the following limitations:

  • Attribute overrides find matching attributes according to the element name you specify. You can’t use USS Selectors or UQuery to match elements.
  • Although you can override an element’s binding-path attribute, data binding doesn’t work with attribute overrides.
  • You can’t override an element’s class, name, or style attributes.

Specify where to nest child elements in a UXML template

You can use the content-container attribute of a visual elementA node of a visual tree that instantiates or derives from the C# VisualElement class. You can style the look, define the behaviour, and display it on screen as part of the UI. More info
See in Glossary
to specify where to nest child elements in a UXML template. For example, if you have the following UXML template file as Assets/MyTemplate.uxml:

<ui:UXML xmlns:ui="UnityEngine.UIElements" ...>
    <ui:Label text="Group Title" name="groupTitle" />
    <ui:VisualElement name="group-container" content-container="anyValue">
         <!--Add child elements here -->
    </ui:VisualElement>
    <ui:VisualElement />
</ui:UXML>

You can then apply the template with nested child elements as this:

<ui:UXML xmlns:ui="UnityEngine.UIElements" ...>
    <ui:Template path="Assets/MyTemplate.uxml" name="my-template"/>
    <ui:Instance template="my-template">
        <ui:Label text="Test"/> <!--This label element is instantiated inside the `group-container` element-->
    </ui:Instance>
</ui:UXML>

Note: You can provide any value to the content-container attribute.

Additional resources

Add styles to UXML
Reference other files from UXML