A figma plugin for automatically theming your designs from one color mapping to another. This was built specifically for use by the Discord design team.
- Run
yarn
to install dependencies. - Run
yarn build:watch
to start webpack in watch mode.
⭐ To change the UI of your plugin (the react code), start editing App.tsx.
⭐ To interact with the Figma API edit controller.ts.
⭐ Read more on the Figma API Overview.
- Follow the instructions for running locally
- Set up your own themes, see the examples below in the Theme Object section.
- In Figma, create a plugin and select this Auto Theme plugin manifest file.
- Upload the plugin images from the asset directory, then hit publish internally.
- When a frame or multiple frames are selected the code loops through each layer.
- During the loop, the layer checks to see what "type" the layer is (text, vector, rectangle etc). This allows us to skip certain nodes and handle mappings different for text and shapes.
- If the layer has a fill, it fetches that nodes Style ID using
figma.getStyleById
. - It then imports that style from our main library using
figma.importStyleByKeyAsync
- Once we have that styles
key
then we check to see if it has a match in one of our theme objects, if it has a match we update that node with a new color.
Themes are objects with key value pairs to handle how we map each color to another corresponding color. See example theme.
'4b93d40f61be15e255e87948a715521c3ae957e6': {
name: "Dark / Header / Primary (White)",
mapsToName: "Light / Header / Primary (900)",
mapsToKey: '3eddc15e90bbd7064aea7cc13dc13e23a712f0b0',
},
The first string of numbers is our style.key
which in our design system is called "Dark / Header / Primary (White)". This color in light theme is "Light / Header / Primary (900)", so we replace our first key with the mapsToKey
string. Swapping one style key for another.
"style_key_goes_here": {
name: "",
mapsToKey: "style_key_to_switch_with_goes_here",
mapsToName: "",
},
This does mean you'll need to know the keys
of each of your styles.
I built Inspector Plugin for this very reason.
Some of your designs may use components like the status bar on iOS. In order to solve for this, the plugin allows you to swap instances of components.
"component_key_goes_here": {
name: "",
mapsToKey: "component_key_to_switch_with_goes_here",
mapsToName: "",
},
This way if you'd like to switch iPhone X Status Bar / Dark
with iPhone X Status Bar / Light
rather than try and theme them, you can. Only instances will check to see if it's parent component is listed in the themes you've declared, otherwise it will be treated normally.
Yes, create a new theme and import it, then hook up a button in the UI to send a message to the controller.ts to call that theme. There are two examples of this in the code already.
This repo is using:
- React + Webpack
- TypeScript
- TSLint
- Prettier precommit hook