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Global Settings & Styles (theme.json)

Theme.json has been introduced in WordPress 5.8 as the way to control the overall appearance and settings of blocks. These settings and style presets get applied both in the editor and on the frontend of the site.

When to use theme.json

By default any new WordPress Theme at 10up includes a theme.json file with some minimal configuration. It is recommended to keep this file and use it to control which settings should be exposed on each block in the editor. Theme.json is the easiest mechanism of controlling what options should be exposed.

How to use theme.json

The theme.json file gets added to the root directory of a Theme. There are two main areas that you can control with the theme.json file: settings and styles. Both of these can have properties defined on the global level, meaning applying to the entire site with all its blocks, or on the block level where you can target individual block types.

{
"settings": {
// Global settings get defined here...

"blocks": {
// Block specific settings get defined here...
}
},

"styles" : {
// Global styles get defined here...

"blocks": {
// Block specific styles get defined here...
}
}

}
tip

Add the $schema key to your theme.json files:

{
"$schema": "https://schemas.wp.org/trunk/theme.json"
}

This will give you autocomplete and inline documentation while working on theme.json files.

You can interchange trunk with a specific WordPress version like so: https://schemas.wp.org/wp/5.9/theme.json

As mentioned earlier the theme.json file has two main purposes. It allows you to control which settings get displayed, and also define certain default values for styles. This styling mechanism is build on CSS custom properties.

So when you define a custom color palette like so:

theme.json
{
"$schema": "https://schemas.wp.org/trunk/theme.json",
"version": 2,
"settings": {
"color": {
"palette": [
{
"name": "Black",
"slug": "black",
"color": "#000000"
},
{
"name": "White",
"slug": "white",
"color": "#ffffff"
}
]
},
"blocks": {
"core/paragraph": {
"color": {
"palette": [
{
"name": "Red",
"slug": "red",
"color": "#ff0000"
}
]
}
}
}
}
}

WordPress automatically generates and includes the following custom properties get added to the page:

generated custom properties
body {
--wp--preset--color--black: #000000;
--wp--preset--color--white: #ffffff;
}

.wp-block-paragraph {
--wp--preset--color--red: #ff0000;
}
tip

By default WordPress caches the Stylesheet that gets generated out of theme.json. For development purposes you can bypass that caching by enabling debug mode via the WP_DEBUG global in your wp-config.php. (SCRIPT_DEBUG also achieves the same thing)

Understanding the cascade

These settings and styles exist at three levels, each overwriting the specificity of the previous layer. At the root there is the default core theme.json file which houses all the default values for everything. All the properties in this core theme.json file can be overwritten via the theme.json file of a theme. Finally there also is the third layer which is the user generated theme.json that comes out of the global styles panel in the site editor. This only impacts "Block Based Themes" which allow users to define colors, fonts, etc. manually using the Site Editor.

Global Styles Overview

Using the values from theme.json custom blocks

You can access the settings & values defined in theme.json via the useSetting hook. This hook accepts a string as its parameter which is used as the path for a setting. This means that it checks through the different specificity levels whether a value has been defined for this key.

It first checks whether the user has defined something, then whether the block has defined something in its settings, following the global settings in theme.json. If none of these places have any value it will use the default value specified in core.

import { useSetting } from '@wordpress/block-editor';

export function BlockEdit() {
const isEnabled = useSetting( 'typography.dropCap' );

// ...
}
Example:

Lets say we have this theme.json file:

theme.json
{
"settings": {
"typography": {
"dropCap": false
}
},
"blocks": [
"core/paragraph": {
"settings": {
"typography": {
"dropCap": true
}
}
}
]
}

Using useSetting('typography.dropCap') would only return true if it is being called from within the core/paragraph block.

Filtering theme.json data

Starting in WordPress 6.1 it is possible to filter the values of theme.json on the server. There are 4 different hooks for the 4 different layers or theme.json. Default, Blocks, Theme, and User.

  • wp_theme_json_data_default: hooks into the default data provided by WordPress
  • wp_theme_json_data_blocks: hooks into the data provided by the blocks
  • wp_theme_json_data_theme: hooks into the data provided by the theme
  • wp_theme_json_data_user: hooks into the data provided by the user

Each of these filters receives an instance of the WP_Theme_JSON_Data class with the data for the respective layer. To provide new data, the filter callback needs to use the update_with( $new_data ) method, where $new_data is a valid theme.json-like structure.

As with any theme.json, the new data needs to declare which version of the theme.json is using, so it can correctly be migrated.

function filter_theme_json_theme( $theme_json ){
$new_data = array(
'version' => 2,
'settings' => array(
'color' => array(
'text' => false,
'palette' => array(
array(
'slug' => 'foreground',
'color' => 'black',
'name' => __( 'Foreground', 'theme-domain' ),
),
array(
'slug' => 'background',
'color' => 'white',
'name' => __( 'Background', 'theme-domain' ),
),
),
),
),
);

return $theme_json->update_with( $new_data );
}
add_filter( 'wp_theme_json_data_theme', 'filter_theme_json_theme' );