Reputation: 6487
I have a page which has <link>
in the header that loads the CSS named light.css
. I also have a file named dark.css
. I want a button to swap the style of the page all together (there are 40 selectors used in css file and some do not match in two files).
How can I remove reference to light.css
with JS and remove all the styles that were applied and then load dark.css
and apply all the styles from that? I can't simply reset all of the elements, since some of the styles are applied through different css files and some are dynamically generated by JS. Is there a simple, yet effective way to do that without reloading the page? Vanilla JS is preferable, however I will use jQuery for later processing anyways, so jQ is also fine.
Upvotes: 101
Views: 133289
Reputation: 658
I do understand this is not the best solution but you can also do something like this:
<head>
<link href="//awesome-style-sunny.css" rel="stylesheet" id="default-style"></link>
<link href="//awesome-style-sunny.css" rel="stylesheet" id="themed-style"></link>
</head>
as you can see the same style is being loaded twice, this helps when you are switching the 2nd style href
, your users would not see a naked website without any style.
The order of style does matter as the later one would override the first one. Then we can do something like this as it was mentioned in most of the answers:
const changeTheme = (theme) => {
if (document.getElementById("themed-style")) {
document.getElementById("themed-style").href = theme
localStorage.setItem("user-theme", theme);
}
}
Upvotes: 0
Reputation: 153
If you're using Angular (cause it's not 2013 anymore), you can try the answer/solution/suggestion from here:
How can I change the targeted CSS file on a click event
It did the trick for me.
Upvotes: 0
Reputation: 1
I reworked lampe's example, and you can add a class using a selector in this way: first apply the class to specific selectors in a javascript (repeat as many times you need for specific element selectors (in my HTML):
$("p:nth-of-type(even)").toggleClass("main mainswitch");
Then the html looks like this
<!DOCTYPE html>
<html>
<head>
<script src="https://ajax.googleapis.com/ajax/libs/jquery/3.6.0/jquery.min.js">
</script>
<script>
$(document).ready(function(){
$("button").click(function(){
$(".mainswitch").toggleClass("main");
});
});
</script>
<style>
.main {
font-size: 120%;
color: red;
}
</style>
</head>
<body>
<div>
<p>This is a paragraph.</p>
<p class="main mainswitch">This is another paragraph.</p>
<p>This is a paragraph.</p>
<p>This is a paragraph.</p>
<p>This is a paragraph.</p>
</div>
<button>Toggle class "main" for p elements</button>
</body>
</html>
Upvotes: 0
Reputation: 36703
This question is pretty old but I would suggest an approach which is not mentioned here, in which you will include both the CSS files in the HTML, but the CSS will be like
light.css
/*** light.css ***/
p.main{
color: #222;
}
/*** other light CSS ***/
and dark.css will be like
/*** dark.css ***/
.dark_theme p.main{
color: #fff;
background-color: #222;
}
/*** other dark CSS ***/
basicall every selector in dark.css will be a child of .dark_theme
Then all you need to do is to change the class of body element if someone selects to change the theme of the website.
$("#changetheme").click(function(){
$("body").toggleClass("dark_theme");
});
And now all your elements will have the dark css once the user clicks on #changetheme
. This is very easy to do if you are using any kind of CSS preprocessors.
You can also add CSS animations for backgrounds and colors which makes the transition highly smooth.
Upvotes: 12
Reputation: 5155
You can create a new link, and replace the old one with the new one. If you put it in a function, you can reuse it wherever it's needed.
The Javascript:
function changeCSS(cssFile, cssLinkIndex) {
var oldlink = document.getElementsByTagName("link").item(cssLinkIndex);
var newlink = document.createElement("link");
newlink.setAttribute("rel", "stylesheet");
newlink.setAttribute("type", "text/css");
newlink.setAttribute("href", cssFile);
document.getElementsByTagName("head").item(cssLinkIndex).replaceChild(newlink, oldlink);
}
The HTML:
<html>
<head>
<title>Changing CSS</title>
<link rel="stylesheet" type="text/css" href="positive.css"/>
</head>
<body>
<a href="#" onclick="changeCSS('positive.css', 0);">STYLE 1</a>
<a href="#" onclick="changeCSS('negative.css', 0);">STYLE 2</a>
</body>
</html>
For simplicity, I used inline javascript. In production you would want to use unobtrusive event listeners.
Upvotes: 87
Reputation: 3703
Simply update you Link
href attribute to your new css file.
function setStyleSheet(fileName){
document.getElementById("WhatEverYouAssignIdToStyleSheet").setAttribute('href', fileName);
}
Upvotes: 0
Reputation: 40668
You can include all the stylesheets in the document and then activate/deactivate them as needed.
In my reading of the spec, you should be able to activate an alternate stylesheet by changing its disabled
property from true to false, but only Firefox seems to do this correctly.
So I think you have a few options:
rel=alternate
<link rel="stylesheet" href="main.css">
<link rel="stylesheet alternate" href="light.css" id="light" title="Light">
<link rel="stylesheet alternate" href="dark.css" id="dark" title="Dark">
<script>
function enableStylesheet (node) {
node.rel = 'stylesheet';
}
function disableStylesheet (node) {
node.rel = 'alternate stylesheet';
}
</script>
disabled
<link rel="stylesheet" href="main.css">
<link rel="stylesheet" href="light.css" id="light" class="alternate">
<link rel="stylesheet" href="dark.css" id="dark" class="alternate">
<script>
function enableStylesheet (node) {
node.disabled = false;
}
function disableStylesheet (node) {
node.disabled = true;
}
document
.querySelectorAll('link[rel=stylesheet].alternate')
.forEach(disableStylesheet);
</script>
media=none
<link rel="stylesheet" href="main.css">
<link rel="stylesheet" href="light.css" media="none" id="light">
<link rel="stylesheet" href="dark.css" media="none" id="dark">
<script>
function enableStylesheet (node) {
node.media = '';
}
function disableStylesheet (node) {
node.media = 'none';
}
</script>
You can select a stylesheet node with getElementById, querySelector, etc.
(Avoid the nonstandard <link disabled>
. Setting HTMLLinkElement#disabled is fine though.)
Upvotes: 88
Reputation: 15112
Using jquery you can definitely swap the css file. Do this on button click.
var cssLink = $('link[href*="light.css"]');
cssLink.replaceWith('<link href="dark.css" type="text/css" rel="stylesheet">');
Or as sam's answer, that works too. Here is the jquery syntax.
$('link[href*="light.css"]').prop('disabled', true);
$('link[href*="dark.css"]').prop('disabled', false);
Upvotes: 9
Reputation: 39
Maybe I'm thinking too complicated, but since the accepted answer was not working for me I thought I'd share my solution as well.
Story:
What I wanted to do was to include different 'skins' of my page in the head as additional stylesheets that where added to the 'main' style and switch them by pressing a button on the page (no browser settings or stuff).
Problem:
I thought @sam's solution was very elegant but it did not work at all for me. At least part of the problem is that I'm using one main CSS file and just add others on top as 'skins' and thus I had to group the files with the missing 'title' property.
Here is what I came up with.
First add all 'skins' to the head using 'alternate':
<link rel="stylesheet" href="css/main.css" title='main'>
<link rel="stylesheet alternate" href="css/skin1.css" class='style-skin' title=''>
<link rel="stylesheet alternate" href="css/skin2.css" class='style-skin' title=''>
<link rel="stylesheet alternate" href="css/skin3.css" class='style-skin' title=''>
Note that I gave the main CSS file the title='main' and all others have a class='style-skin' and no title.
To switch the skins I'm using jQuery. I leave it up to the purists to find an elegant VanillaJS version:
var activeSkin = 0;
$('#myButton').on('click', function(){
var skins = $('.style-skin');
if (activeSkin > skins.length) activeSkin=0;
skins.each(function(index){
if (index === activeSkin){
$(this).prop('title', 'main');
$(this).prop('disabled', false);
}else{
$(this).prop('title', '');
$(this).prop('disabled', true);
}
});
activeSkin++
});
What it does is it iterates over all available skins, takes the (soon) active one, sets the title to 'main' and activates it. All other skins are disabled and title is removed.
Upvotes: 0
Reputation: 35963
If you set an ID on the link element
<link rel="stylesheet" id="stylesheet" href="stylesheet1.css"/>
you can target it with Javascript
document.getElementsByTagName('head')[0].getElementById('stylesheet').href='stylesheet2.css';
or just..
document.getElementById('stylesheet').href='stylesheet2.css';
Here's a more thorough example:
<head>
<script>
function setStyleSheet(url){
var stylesheet = document.getElementById("stylesheet");
stylesheet.setAttribute('href', url);
}
</script>
<link id="stylesheet" rel="stylesheet" type="text/css" href="stylesheet1.css"/>
</head>
<body>
<a onclick="setStyleSheet('stylesheet1.css')" href="#">Style 1</a>
<a onclick="setStyleSheet('stylesheet2.css')" href="#">Style 2</a>
</body>
Upvotes: 22
Reputation: 10198
Using jquery .attr() you can set href of your link tag .i.e
Sample code
$("#yourButtonId").on('click',function(){
$("link").attr(href,yourCssUrl);
});
Upvotes: 4