Typography
The Typography component helps present design and content clearly and efficiently.
Introduction
The Typography component helps maintain a consistent design by providing a limited set of values to choose from and convenient props for building common designs faster.
Typography
<Typography />
Playground
Basics
import Typography from '@mui/joy/Typography';
The Typography component wraps around its content, and displays text with specific typographic styles and properties.
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Nested Typography
The Typography component renders as a <p>
by default.
Nested Typography components are rendered as <span>
elements (unless customized by the component
prop).
Typography lets you create nested typography. Use your imagination to build wonderful user interface.
Customization
System props
As a CSS utility component, Typography supports every MUI System property. These properties can be used to customize the styling of the component and make it fit seamlessly with the overall design.
// Using the neutral color palette that defaults to the 500 value
<Typography color="neutral" fontSize="sm" fontWeight="lg" />
// Changing the specific element's color to neutral
<Typography textColor="neutral.300" fontSize="sm" fontWeight="lg" >
Levels
The level
prop gives access to a pre-defined scale of typographic values defined in the theme.
These values include various heading levels (h1, h2, h3, etc.) as well as body text levels (body1, body2, etc) and can be used to apply consistent typography throughout your application.
Additionally, you can also use the level prop to control the font size, weight, line height, and other typographic properties.
display1
display2
h1
h2
h3
h4
h5
h6
body1
body2
body3
body4body5Semantic elements
To customize the semantic element used, you can use the component
prop.
This can be useful in situations where you want to use a different semantic element than the one assigned by the level
prop.
The component will render as the HTML element defined by component
, but with the styles assigned to its respective level
.
// There's already an h1 on the page so let's not add another one.
<Typography level="h1" component="h2">
I render as an h2, but I have h1 styles
</Typography>
In a more efficient way, you can change the HTML mapping tags at the theme level.
const theme = extendTheme({
components: {
JoyTypography: {
defaultProps: {
levelMapping: {
display1: 'h1',
display2: 'h1',
h1: 'h2',
h2: 'h2',
h3: 'h3',
h4: 'h3',
h5: 'h3',
h6: 'h3',
body1: 'p',
body2: 'span',
body3: 'span',
body4: 'span',
body5: 'span',
},
},
},
},
});
Decorators
Use the startDecorator
and endDecorator
props to add supporting icons or elements to the Typography.
The icon automatically adjusts to the scale
The display also changes to flexbox123
Typography scale
To create a custom typographic scale, you can define the keys and values in the theme.typography
node at the theme level.
extendTheme({
typography: {
subtitle: {
fontSize: 'var(--joy-fontSize-lg)',
fontWeight: 'var(--joy-fontWeight-md)',
// CSS selectors are also supported!
'& + p': {
marginTop: '4px',
},
},
label: {
fontSize: 'var(--joy-fontSize-sm)',
fontWeight: 'var(--joy-fontWeight-lg)',
lineHeight: 'var(--joy-lineHeight-lg)',
marginBottom: '3px',
},
},
});
You can also access the newly created levels from the level
prop:
<Typography level="subtitle">
<Typography level="label">
Removing the default scale
To remove any unused typographic levels (for example, if you're building your own fully custom scale), you can clear the built-in values by assigning undefined
to them in the theme.
extendTheme({
typography: {
h1: undefined,
h2: undefined,
h3: undefined,
h4: undefined,
h5: undefined,
h6: undefined,
body1: undefined,
body2: undefined,
body3: undefined,
// ...your scale
},
});
When using TypeScript, be sure to also remove the built-in typography tokens from the types.
// in your theme or index file
declare module '@mui/joy/styles' {
interface TypographySystemOverrides {
display1: false;
display2: false;
h1: false;
h2: false;
h3: false;
h4: false;
h5: false;
h6: false;
body1: false;
body2: false;
body3: false;
body4: false;
body5: false;
}
}
Common examples
The demo below illustrates multiple uses of the Typography component with others as decorators.
Inactive
$25
This example demonstrates multiple lines of the text.
🚨Simple alert using only Typography.
Accessibility
Here are some factors to ensure that your Typography components are accessible:
- Ensure sufficient color contrast between text and background, using a minimum of WCAG 2.0's color contrast ratio of 4.5:1.
- Use relative units such as rem for
fontSize
to accommodate the user's settings. - Use a consistent heading hierarchy, and avoid skipping levels.
- Keep semantics and style separate by using the appropriate semantic elements(#semantic-elements).
Anatomy
The Typography component is composed of a single root <p>
that's assigned the body1
class, unless these defaults are overridden by the level
and/or component
props.
When one Typography component is nested within another, the nested component renders as a <span>
(unless customized as described above).
<p class="MuiTypography-root MuiTypography-body1">
<!-- Typography content -->
<span class="MuiTypography-root MuiTypography-inherit">
<!-- Nested Typography content -->
</span>
</p>