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Palette

The palette enables you to modify the color of the components to suit your brand.

Intentions

A color intention is a mapping of a palette to a given intention within your application. The theme exposes the following color intentions:

  • primary - used to represent primary interface elements for a user.
  • secondary - used to represent secondary interface elements for a user.
  • error - used to represent interface elements that the user should be made aware of.
  • warning - used to represent potentially dangerous actions or important messages.
  • info - used to present information to the user that is neutral and not necessarily important.
  • success - used to indicate the successful completion of an action that user triggered.

The default palette uses the shades prefixed with A (A200, etc.) for the secondary intention, and the un-prefixed shades for the other intentions.

If you want to learn more about color, you can check out the color section.

Primary

palette.primary.light

#4791db

palette.primary.main

#1976d2

palette.primary.dark

#115293

Secondary

palette.secondary.light

#e33371

palette.secondary.main

#dc004e

palette.secondary.dark

#9a0036

Error

palette.error.light

#e57373

palette.error.main

#f44336

palette.error.dark

#d32f2f

Warning

palette.warning.light

#ffb74d

palette.warning.main

#ff9800

palette.warning.dark

#f57c00

Info

palette.info.light

#64b5f6

palette.info.main

#2196f3

palette.info.dark

#1976d2

Success

palette.success.light

#81c784

palette.success.main

#4caf50

palette.success.dark

#388e3c

Customization

You may override the default palette values by including a palette object as part of your theme.

If any of the palette.primary, palette.secondary, palette.error, palette.warning, palette.info or palette.successs 'intention' objects are provided, they will replace the defaults.

The intention value can either be a color object, or an object with one or more of the keys specified by the following TypeScript interface:

interface PaletteIntention {
  light?: string;
  main: string;
  dark?: string;
  contrastText?: string;
}

Using a color object

The simplest way to customize an intention is to import one or more of the provided colors and apply them to a palette intention:

import { createMuiTheme } from '@material-ui/core/styles';
import blue from '@material-ui/core/colors/blue';

const theme = createMuiTheme({
  palette: {
    primary: blue,
  },
});

Providing the colors directly

If you wish to provide more customized colors, you can either create your own color object, or directly supply colors to some or all of the intention's keys:

import { createMuiTheme } from '@material-ui/core/styles';

const theme = createMuiTheme({
  palette: {
    primary: {
      // light: will be calculated from palette.primary.main,
      main: '#ff4400',
      // dark: will be calculated from palette.primary.main,
      // contrastText: will be calculated to contrast with palette.primary.main
    },
    secondary: {
      light: '#0066ff',
      main: '#0044ff',
      // dark: will be calculated from palette.secondary.main,
      contrastText: '#ffcc00',
    },
    // Used by `getContrastText()` to maximize the contrast between
    // the background and the text.
    contrastThreshold: 3,
    // Used by the functions below to shift a color's luminance by approximately
    // two indexes within its tonal palette.
    // E.g., shift from Red 500 to Red 300 or Red 700.
    tonalOffset: 0.2,
  },
});

As in the example above, if the intention object contains custom colors using any of the "main", "light", "dark" or "contrastText" keys, these map as follows:

  • If the "dark" and / or "light" keys are omitted, their value(s) will be calculated from "main", according to the "tonalOffset" value.
  • If "contrastText" is omitted, its value will be calculated to contrast with "main", according to the "contrastThreshold" value.

Both the "tonalOffset" and "contrastThreshold" values may be customized as needed. A higher value for "tonalOffset" will make calculated values for "light" lighter, and "dark" darker. A higher value for "contrastThreshold" increases the point at which a background color is considered light, and given a dark "contrastText".

Note that "contrastThreshold" follows a non-linear curve.

Example

<ThemeProvider theme={theme}>
  <Button color="primary">Primary</Button>
  <Button color="secondary">Secondary</Button>
</ThemeProvider>

Color tool

Need inspiration? The Material Design team has built an awesome palette configuration tool to help you.

Dark mode

Material-UI comes with two palette types, light (the default) and dark. You can make the theme dark by setting type: 'dark'. While it's only a single property value change, internally it modifies several palette values.

const darkTheme = createMuiTheme({
  palette: {
    type: 'dark',
  },
});

The colors modified by the palette type are the following:

Typography

palette.text.primary

#fff

palette.text.secondary

rgba(255, 255, 255, 0.7)

palette.text.disabled

rgba(255, 255, 255, 0.5)

Buttons

palette.action.active

#fff

palette.action.hover

rgba(255, 255, 255, 0.08)

palette.action.selected

rgba(255, 255, 255, 0.16)

palette.action.disabled

rgba(255, 255, 255, 0.3)

palette.action.disabledBackground

rgba(255, 255, 255, 0.12)

Background

palette.background.default

#303030

palette.background.paper

#424242

Divider

palette.divider

rgba(255, 255, 255, 0.12)

Typography

palette.text.primary

rgba(0, 0, 0, 0.87)

palette.text.secondary

rgba(0, 0, 0, 0.54)

palette.text.disabled

rgba(0, 0, 0, 0.38)

Buttons

palette.action.active

rgba(0, 0, 0, 0.54)

palette.action.hover

rgba(0, 0, 0, 0.04)

palette.action.selected

rgba(0, 0, 0, 0.08)

palette.action.disabled

rgba(0, 0, 0, 0.26)

palette.action.disabledBackground

rgba(0, 0, 0, 0.12)

Background

palette.background.default

#fafafa

palette.background.paper

#fff

Divider

palette.divider

rgba(0, 0, 0, 0.12)

User preference

Users might have specified a preference for a light or dark theme. The method by which the user expresses their preference can vary. It might be a system-wide setting exposed by the Operating System, or a setting controlled by the User Agent.

You can leverage this preference dynamically with the useMediaQuery hook and the prefers-color-scheme media query.

For instance, you can enable the dark mode automatically:

import React from 'react';
import useMediaQuery from '@material-ui/core/useMediaQuery';
import { ThemeProvider } from '@material-ui/core/styles';

function App() {
  const prefersDarkMode = useMediaQuery('(prefers-color-scheme: dark)');

  const theme = React.useMemo(
    () =>
      createMuiTheme({
        palette: {
          type: prefersDarkMode ? 'dark' : 'light',
        },
      }),
    [prefersDarkMode],
  );

  return (
    <ThemeProvider theme={theme}>
      <Routes />
    </ThemeProvider>
  );
}

Default values

You can explore the default values of the palette using the theme explorer or by opening the dev tools console on this page (window.theme.palette).