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Theme Introduction
VitePress comes with its default theme providing many features out of the box. Learn more about each feature on its dedicated page listed below.
If you don't find the features you're looking for, or you would rather create your own theme, you may customize VitePress to fit your requirements.
Using a Custom Theme
You can enable a custom theme by adding the .vitepress/theme/index.js
file (the "theme entry file").
.
├─ docs
│ ├─ .vitepress
│ │ ├─ theme
│ │ │ └─ index.js
│ │ └─ config.js
│ └─ index.md
└─ package.json
A VitePress custom theme is simply an object containing three properties and is defined as follows:
interface Theme {
Layout: Component // Vue 3 component
NotFound?: Component
enhanceApp?: (ctx: EnhanceAppContext) => void
}
interface EnhanceAppContext {
app: App // Vue 3 app instance
router: Router // VitePress router instance
siteData: Ref<SiteData>
}
The theme entry file should export the theme as its default export:
// .vitepress/theme/index.js
import Layout from './Layout.vue'
export default {
Layout,
// this is a Vue 3 functional component
NotFound: () => 'custom 404',
enhanceApp({ app, router, siteData }) {
// app is the Vue 3 app instance from `createApp()`.
// router is VitePress' custom router. `siteData` is
// a `ref` of current site-level metadata.
}
}
...where the Layout
component could look like this:
<!-- .vitepress/theme/Layout.vue -->
<template>
<h1>Custom Layout!</h1>
<!-- this is where markdown content will be rendered -->
<Content />
</template>
The default export is the only contract for a custom theme. Inside your custom theme, it works just like a normal Vite + Vue 3 application. Do note the theme also needs to be SSR-compatible.
To distribute a theme, simply export the object in your package entry. To consume an external theme, import and re-export it from the custom theme entry:
// .vitepress/theme/index.js
import Theme from 'awesome-vitepress-theme'
export default Theme
Extending the Default Theme
If you want to extend and customize the default theme, you can import it from vitepress/theme
and augment it in a custom theme entry. Here are some examples of common customizations:
Registering Global Components
// .vitepress/theme/index.js
import DefaultTheme from 'vitepress/theme'
export default {
...DefaultTheme,
enhanceApp({ app }) {
// register global components
app.component('MyGlobalComponent', /* ... */)
}
}
Since we are using Vite, you can also leverage Vite's glob import feature to auto register a directory of components.
Customizing CSS
The default theme CSS is customizable by overriding root level CSS variables:
// .vitepress/theme/index.js
import DefaultTheme from 'vitepress/theme'
import './custom.css'
export default DefaultTheme
/* .vitepress/theme/custom.css */
:root {
--vp-c-brand: #646cff;
--vp-c-brand-light: #747bff;
}
See default theme CSS variables that can be overridden.
Layout Slots
The default theme's <Layout/>
component has a few slots that can be used to inject content at certain locations of the page. Here's an example of injecting a component into the before outline:
// .vitepress/theme/index.js
import DefaultTheme from 'vitepress/theme'
import MyLayout from './MyLayout.vue'
export default {
...DefaultTheme,
// override the Layout with a wrapper component that
// injects the slots
Layout: MyLayout
}
<!--.vitepress/theme/MyLayout.vue-->
<script setup>
import DefaultTheme from 'vitepress/theme'
const { Layout } = DefaultTheme
</script>
<template>
<Layout>
<template #aside-outline-before>
My custom sidebar top content
</template>
</Layout>
</template>
Or you could use render function as well.
// .vitepress/theme/index.js
import DefaultTheme from 'vitepress/theme'
import MyComponent from './MyComponent.vue'
export default {
...DefaultTheme,
Layout() {
return h(DefaultTheme.Layout, null, {
'sidebar-top': () => h(MyComponent)
})
}
}
Full list of slots available in the default theme layout:
- When
layout: 'doc'
(default) is enabled via frontmatter:aside-top
aside-bottom
aside-outline-before
aside-outline-after
aside-ads-before
aside-ads-after
- When
layout: 'home'
is enabled via frontmatter:home-hero-before
home-hero-after
home-features-before
home-features-after