exportparts
The exportparts
global attribute allows you to select and style elements existing in nested shadow trees, by exporting their part
names.
The shadow tree is an isolated structure where identifiers, classes, and styles cannot be reached by selectors or queries belonging to a regular DOM. There are two HTML attributes that can be applied to shadow tree elements that enable targeting CSS styles from outside to shadow tree: part
and exportparts
.
The global part
attribute makes a shadow tree element visible to its parent DOM. A part
name is used as the parameter of the ::part()
pseudo-element. In this way, you can apply CSS styles to elements in the shadow tree from outside of it. However, the ::part()
pseudo-element is only visible to the parent DOM. This means that when a shadow tree is nested, the parts are not visible to any ancestors other than the direct parent. The exportparts
attribute solves this limitation.
The exportparts
attribute enables shadow tree parts to be visible outside the shadow DOM. This concept is referred to as "exporting". The exportparts
attribute is placed on the element's shadow host, which is the element to which the shadow tree is attached. The value of this attribute is a comma-separated list of part
names present in the shadow tree. These names are made available to the DOMs outside the current structure.
<template id="ancestor-component">
<nested-component exportparts="part1, part2, part5"></nested-component>
</template>
When exporting a part
, you have the option to assign a different name to the part, as shown in the snippet below. The value of the exportparts
attribute is really a comma-separated list of part-name mappings. So the exportparts
attribute in the above code snippet is the equivalent of exportparts="part1:part1, part2:part2, part5:part5
, indicating that each part
is exported with the same name. In each mapping, the first string specifies the name of the part within the shadow tree, and the second string specifies the name with which the part will be exposed externally.
<template id="ancestor-component">
<nested-component
exportparts="part1:exposed1, part2:exposed2"></nested-component>
</template>
Examples
Basic component
To demonstrate how exportparts
is used to enable targeting parts within nested components, we will create a component, and then nest it within another component.
HTML
First, let's create a card component that we will then wrap with another component. We also use the new element we created, populating the slots with plain text as content.
<template id="card-component-template">
<style>
:host {
display: block;
}
</style>
<div class="base" part="base">
<div part="header"><slot name="header_slot"></slot></div>
<div part="body"><slot name="body_slot"></slot></div>
<div part="footer"><slot name="footer_slot"></slot></div>
</div>
</template>
<card-component>
<p slot="header_slot">This is the header</p>
<p slot="body_slot">This is the body</p>
<p slot="footer_slot">This is the footer</p>
</card-component>
JavaScript
We use JavaScript to define our web component defined in the HTML above:
customElements.define(
"card-component",
class extends HTMLElement {
constructor() {
super(); // Always call super first in constructor
const cardComponent = document.getElementById(
"card-component-template",
).content;
const shadowRoot = this.attachShadow({
mode: "open",
});
shadowRoot.appendChild(cardComponent.cloneNode(true));
}
},
);
CSS
We style parts of the <card-component>
shadow tree using the ::part
pseudo-element:
::part(body) {
color: red;
font-style: italic;
}
Results
Nested component
Continuing the above <card-component>
example, we create a nested component by wrapping the <card-component>
within another component; in this case, the <card-wrapper>
component. We then export the parts from the nested component that we want to make styleable from outside the component's shadow tree with the exportparts
attribute.
HTML
<template id="card-wrapper">
<style>
:host {
display: block;
}
</style>
<card-component exportparts="base, header, body">
<slot name="H" slot="header_slot"></slot>
<slot name="B" slot="body_slot"></slot>
<slot name="F" slot="footer_slot"></slot>
</card-component>
</template>
We include a <card-wrapper>
custom element, and a <card-component>
for comparison:
<h2>Card wrapper</h2>
<card-wrapper>
<p slot="H">This is the header</p>
<p slot="B">This is the body</p>
<p slot="F">This is the footer</p>
</card-wrapper>
<h2>Card component</h2>
<card-component>
<p slot="header_slot">This is the header</p>
<p slot="body_slot">This is the body</p>
<p slot="footer_slot">This is the footer</p>
</card-component>
JavaScript
customElements.define(
"card-wrapper",
class extends HTMLElement {
constructor() {
super(); // Always call super first in constructor
const cardWrapper = document.getElementById("card-wrapper").content;
const shadowRoot = this.attachShadow({
mode: "open",
});
shadowRoot.appendChild(cardWrapper.cloneNode(true));
}
},
);
CSS
Now, we can target parts of the <card-component>
directly and when nested within a <card-wrapper>
like so:
h2 {
background-color: #dedede;
}
card-wrapper,
card-component {
border: 1px dashed blue;
width: fit-content;
}
::part(body) {
color: red;
font-style: italic;
}
::part(header),
::part(footer) {
font-weight: bold;
}
Results
Note footer
is not bold when nested, as we did not include it in exportparts
.
Exposing mapped parts
To rename exported parts, we include a comma-separated list of mapped parts, with each mapped part including the original name and exported name separated by a colon (:
):
HTML
We update the prior <card-wrapper>
custom element with the remapping syntax (omitting body
from the exported parts list):
<template id="card-wrapper">
<card-component
exportparts="
base:card__base,
header:card__header,
footer:card__footer
">
<span slot="header_slot"><slot name="H"></slot></span>
<span slot="body_slot"><slot name="B"></slot></span>
<span slot="footer_slot"><slot name="F"></slot></span>
</card-component>
</template>
JavaScript
customElements.define(
"card-wrapper",
class extends HTMLElement {
constructor() {
super(); // Always call super first in constructor
const cardWrapper = document.getElementById("card-wrapper").content;
const shadowRoot = this.attachShadow({
mode: "open",
});
shadowRoot.appendChild(cardWrapper.cloneNode(true));
}
},
);
CSS
In targetting the parts of the <card-component>
from within the <card-wrapper>
, we can only style the exported parts via their exposed part names:
/* selects the exported parts name */
::part(card__header) {
font-weight: bold;
}
/* selects nothing: these part names were not exported */
::part(footer),
::part(body) {
font-weight: bold;
}
Results
Specifications
Specification |
---|
CSS Shadow Parts # element-attrdef-html-global-exportparts |
Browser compatibility
BCD tables only load in the browser
See also
part
HTML attribute<template>
and<slot>
HTML elements::part
and::slotted
pseudo-elements:host
pseudo-classShadowRoot
interfaceElement.part
property- Using templates and slots
- CSS scoping module