Styling The Toolbar
The toolbar in Rhino Editor is implemented using a custom element. I created the custom element to be a proper Toolbar
You can style the toolbar like so:
CSS
.rhino-editor::part(toolbar) {}
But this may not always be enough. If you need to for example remove the border-color
you’d
want to do:
CSS
.rhino-editor::part(toolbar__base) {
border-color: transparent;
}
Putting it altogether, we could do something like this and make the toolbar look closer to the one that ship with Trix.
CSS
#toolbar-styling-example::part(toolbar) {
margin-bottom: 1rem;
}
#toolbar-styling-example::part(toolbar__base) {
/* 1px so we can show the outline of the buttons */
padding-left: 1px;
padding-right: 1px;
border-color: transparent;
}
Styling the buttons
Bringing it one step further, we can look at what it takes to style buttons.
Buttons also have part
s attached to them.
Here’s an example of the parts available on the undo
button.
CSS
/* Applies to all toolbar buttons */
.rhino-editor::part(toolbar__button) {}
/* Applies to "active" buttons which in practical terms is any button highlighted blue due to it being active in the editor. */
.rhino-editor::part(toolbar__button--active) {}
/* Applies to "disabled" buttons (buttons which are not currently usable) */
.rhino-editor::part(toolbar__button--disable) {}
/* Only applies to undo button */
.rhino-editor::part(toolbar__button--undo) {}
Buttons also have tooltip
parts you can tap into.
CSS
.rhino-editor::part(toolbar__tooltip) {}
.rhino-editor::part(toolbar__tooltip--undo) {}
Buttons also have slot
s available if the CSS parts aren’t enough.
HTML
<rhino-editor>
<svg slot="undo-icon"></svg>
<my-super-cool-tooltip slot="undo-tooltip"></my-super-cool-tooltip>
</rhino-editor>