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Mistcss

Create visual components for React without JavaScript or TypeScript. Leverage native HTML and CSS. It's an alternative to CSS-in-JS and CSS modules.

From typicode·Updated June 21, 2026·View on GitHub·

MistCSS lets you create reusable visual components without JavaScript or TypeScript (_think about it for a second... no JS/TS needed_). The project is written primarily in JavaScript, distributed under the MIT License license, first published in 2024. It has gained significant community traction with 1,624 stars and 55 forks on GitHub. Key topics include: css, css-in-js, next, nextjs, react.

Latest release: v1.0.6
December 5, 2024View Changelog →

MistCSS

Simplicity is the ultimate sophistication

MistCSS lets you create reusable visual components without JavaScript or TypeScript (think about it for a second... no JS/TS needed).

Leverage native HTML and CSS, get type safety and autocomplete. Just clean and efficient styling.

<img width="1116" alt="Screenshot 2024-11-01 at 03 47 44" src="https://github.com/user-attachments/assets/74aea071-be00-4d03-b43a-e46d6282e4b5">

What you see above is standard HTML (data-attributes) and CSS (nested CSS). MistCSS simply creates a d.ts file based on your CSS.

Features

  • 🥶 Not just zero-runtime, it goes beyond. It's zero JavaScript, not even for components, resulting in smaller bundles and faster code.
  • 💎 What you write is what you get. No transformations, easy debugging.
  • 🎒 Standards-based, reusable styles across frameworks, compatible with Tailwind or any CSS framework
  • ⚡️ Instantly productive, no learning curve, simple on-boarding.
  • 💖 Back to basics with a modern twist: access the full power of HTML and CSS, enhanced with type safety and code completion (without the complexity).

Differences

CSS-in-JSMistCSS
Runtime~0-10 KB0 KB
JavaScript functionsa few KB per component0 KB
TypeScript codeyes (at least for props)no (generated for the user)
Debuggingreact devtoolsbrowser inspector
Syntax highlightingdepends (may require extension)no additional extension
Generated bundleruntime + JS functions + logic + CSSCSS

This is general comparison and may vary depending on the library you're using.

Usage

Traditional approaches require wrapping your markup/styles in JavaScript functions (Button.tsx<button/>, Input.tsx<input/>, ...), defining props with TypeScript types, and writing logic to manage class names.

With MistCSS, styling is straightforward and minimal. Here’s how it looks:

mist.css

css
button { border-radius: 1rem; padding: 1rem; background: lightgray; &[data-variant='primary'] { background-color: black; color: white; } &[data-variant='secondary'] { background-color: grey; color: white; } }

Page.tsx

jsx
<> <button data-variant="primary">Save</button> {/* TS error, tertiary isn't valid */} <button data-variant="tertiary">Save</button> </>

Output

jsx
<button data-variant="primary">Save</button> {/* Same as in Page.tsx */}

This example demonstrates enums, but MistCSS also supports boolean and string props. For more details, see the FAQ.

How does it work?

MistCSS parses your mist.css file and generates mist.d.ts for type safety.

For instance, here’s the generated mist.d.ts for our button component:

<!-- prettier-ignore-start -->
typescript
interface Mist_button extends React.DetailedHTMLProps<React.HTMLAttributes<HTMLButtonElement>, HTMLButtonElement> { 'data-variant'?: 'primary' | 'secondary' } declare namespace JSX { interface IntrinsicElements { button: Mist_button // ← <button/> is extended at JSX level to allow 'primary' and 'secondary' values } }
<!-- prettier-ignore-stop -->

That’s it! Simple yet powerful, built entirely on browser standards and TypeScript/JSX.

Install

sh
npm install mistcss --save-dev

postcss.config.js

js
module.exports = { plugins: { mistcss: {}, }, }

layout.tsx

ts
import './mist.css'

FAQ

Can I use CSS frameworks like Tailwind or Open Props?

Absolutely, MistCSS is pure HTML and CSS, generating only mist.d.ts, so there are no limitations. You can integrate any CSS framework seamlessly. Here are a few examples to get you started:

[!IMPORTANT]
For the best experience, set up Tailwind IntelliSense in your editor. Refer to Tailwind's editor setup guide.

Tailwind v3 (@apply)

css
button { @apply bg-blue-500 text-white; /* ... */ }

Tailwind v3 (theme)

css
button { background: theme(colors.blue.500); /* ... */ }

Tailwind v4

Tailwind v4 will support CSS variables natively (see blog post).

Tailwind (inline style)

To override some styles, you can use className

jsx
<button data-variant="primary" className="p-12"> Save </button>

Open Props

css
button { background-color: var(--blue-6); /* ... */ }

Can I do X without JavaScript?

CSS is more powerful than ever, before reaching for JS, explore if native CSS features can accomplish what you need.

Can I write <name> instead of data-<name>?

No, using <name> would result in invalid HTML. However, this constraint is actually advantageous.

Firstly, it eliminates the risk of conflicts with native attributes:

jsx
<> <Button type="primary">Save</Button {/* Conflict with button's type="submit" */} <button data-type="primary">Save</button> {/* Safe */} </>

Additionally, just by typing data- in your editor, autocomplete helps you clearly distinguish your custom attributes from standard tag attributes.

How to write enum, boolean, string props and conditions?

css
div[data-component='section'] /* CSS variables */ --color: ...; /* Default styles */ background: var(--color, green); margin: ...; padding: ...; /* Enum props */ &[data-size="sm"] { ... } &[data-size="lg"] { ... } /* Boolean props */ &[data-is-active] { ... } /* Condition: size="lg" && is-active */ &[data-size="lg"]&[data-is-active] { ... } /* Condition: size="lg" && !is-active */ &[data-size="lg"]:not([data-is-active]) { ... } }
jsx
<div data-component="section" data-size="foo" data-is-active style={{ '--color': 'red' }} />

How to re-use the same tag?

If you want both basic links and button-styled links, here’s how you can do:

css
a:not([data-component]) { /* ... */ } a[data-component='button'] { &[data-variant='primary'] { /* ... */ } }
<!-- prettier-ignore-start -->
jsx
<> <a href="/home">Home</a> <a href="/home" data-component="button">Home</a> <a href="/home" data-component="button" data-variant="primary">Home</a> {/* TS error, `data-variant` is only valid with `data-component="button"` */} <a href="/home" data-variant="primary">Home</a> </>
<!-- prettier-ignore-stop -->

[!NOTE]
data-component is just a naming convention. Feel free to use any attribute, like data-kind='button' or just data-c. It’s simply a way to differentiate between components using the same tag.

How to split my code?

You can use CSS @import. For example, in your mist.css file:

css
@import './button.css';

How to build complex components?

mist.css

css
article[data-component='card'] { /* ... */ } div[data-component='card-title'] { /* ... */ } div[data-component='card-content'] { /* ... */ }

Card.jsx

jsx
export function Card({ title, children }) { return ( <article data-component="card"> <div data-component="card-title">{title}</div> <div data-component="card-content">{children}</div> </article> ) }

[!TIP]
To indicate that these styles aren't meant to be used outside of Card, you can name them data-p-component (p for private) or use another naming convention.

How to define CSS variables?

css
:root { --primary-color: #007bff; --secondary-color: #6c757d; } button { background: var(--primary-color) /* ... */

See also your CSS framework/tooling documentation for ways to define them in JS if you prefer.

How to Use MistCSS with an External UI?

Assuming you have your UI components in a separate package my-ui and you're using Next.js, follow these steps:

app/layout.tsx

tsx
import 'my-ui/mist.css'

app/mist.d.ts

typescript
import 'my-ui/mist.d.ts

This setup ensures that your Next.js application correctly imports styles and type definitions from your external UI package. It may vary based on tools you're using, but the same principles should apply.

Origin of the project name?

Mist is inspired by atomized water 💧 often seen near waterfalls. A nod to the Cascading in CSS 🌊.

Contributors

Showing top 11 contributors by commit count.

View all contributors on GitHub →

This article is auto-generated from typicode/mistcss via the GitHub API.Last fetched: 6/22/2026