Chapter 4. Design Configuration
The design of the backend is loosely based on the popular AdminLTE template and itβs created with Bootstrap 4, jQuery and Font Awesome icons. You can customize this design in two ways:
- For simple backends, you can change the value of some YAML configuration options and create a CSS file to override some CSS variables.
- For more complex backends, you can process CSS and JavaScript assets with Webpack and you can override every template and fragment used to render the backend pages.
All the configuration options explained in this chapter are defined under the
global design
YAML key:
# config/packages/easy_admin.yaml
easy_admin:
design:
# ... design configuration options
Changing the Main Backend Color
Define the brand_color
option to change the default accent color used by the
backend interface:
# config/packages/easy_admin.yaml
easy_admin:
# ...
design:
brand_color: '#1ABC9C'
# the value of this option can be any valid CSS color
brand_color: 'red'
brand_color: 'rgba(26, 188, 156, 0.85)'
# if the color includes a '%', you must double it to escape it in the YAML file
brand_color: 'hsl(0, 100%%, 50%%);'
See Also
This option is useful when the only design change you want to make is to
update the main color of the interface. However, if you start changing more
design elements, itβs better to unset this option and use CSS variables as
explained :ref:in this section <customizing-the-backend-design>
.
Adding Custom Web Assets
Some backends may require to load your own CSS and JavaScript files. Use the
assets
option to define the paths of the web assets to load:
# config/packages/easy_admin.yaml
easy_admin:
# ...
design:
assets:
# all kinds of assets are supported and linked accordingly
css:
- '//example.org/css/admin1.css'
- 'http://example.org/css/admin2.css'
- 'https://example.org/css/admin3.css'
- '/bundles/user/css/admin4.css'
- 'bundles/app/css/admin5.css'
js:
- '//example.org/js/admin1.js'
- 'http://example.org/js/admin2.js'
- 'https://example.org/js/admin3.js'
- '/bundles/user/js/admin4.js'
- 'bundles/app/js/admin5.js'
CSS Selectors
The ``<body>`` element of every backend page includes different `id` and `class`
attributes to help you target your own styles. The `id` follows this pattern:
======== ============================================
View ``<body>`` ID attribute
======== ============================================
`edit` ``easyadmin-edit-<entity_name>-<entity_id>``
`list` ``easyadmin-list-<entity_name>``
`new` ``easyadmin-new-<entity_name>``
`show` ``easyadmin-show-<entity_name>-<entity_id>``
======== ============================================
If you are editing for example the element with ``id = 200`` of the `User` entity,
the ``<body>`` of that page will be ``<body id="easyadmin-edit-User-200" ...>``.
The pattern of the `class` attribute is different because it applies several
CSS classes at the same time:
======== ============================================
View ``<body>`` CSS class
======== ============================================
`edit` ``easyadmin edit edit-<entity_name>``
`list` ``easyadmin list list-<entity_name>``
`new` ``easyadmin new new-<entity_name>``
`show` ``easyadmin show show-<entity_name>``
======== ============================================
If you are displaying for example the listing of `User` entity elements, the
``<body>`` of that page will be ``<body class="easyadmin list list-User" ...>``.
## Changing the favicon
A nice trick for backends is to change their favicon to better differentiate
the backend from the public website (this is specially useful when opening lots
of tabs in your browser).
If you want to apply this technique, create the favicon image (using any common
format: `.ico`, `.png`, `.gif`, `.jpg`) and set the `favicon` option:
``` yaml
# config/packages/easy_admin.yaml
easy_admin:
design:
# ...
assets:
favicon: '/assets/backend/favicon.png'
# if the favicon uses an uncommon graphic format, define its MIME type
assets:
favicon:
path: '/assets/backend/favicon.xxx'
mime_type: 'image/xxx'
```
The value of the `favicon` option is used as the value of the `href` attribute
of the ``<link rel="icon" ...>`` element in the backend's layout.
## Enabling RTL Support
The RTL writing support is enabled automatically in the interface when the
locale of the application is `ar` (Arabic), `fa` (Persian) or `he`
(Hebrew). If you need a more precise control over this setting, configure the
`rtl` boolean option:
``` yaml
# config/packages/easy_admin.yaml
easy_admin:
design:
# ...
rtl: true
```
## Loading the Entire Bootstrap Framework
In EasyAdmin versions prior to 2.2.2, the backend didn't load the entire CSS and
JavaScript code from Bootstrap but only the parts that used it. This was made to
improve performance and required loading some separate files called
``bootstrap-all.css`` and ``bootstrap-all.js`` when you needed to use some
Bootstrap feature not included by default.
Given that the performance gain was minimal, this idea was abandoned and,
starting from EasyAdmin 2.2.2 the entire Boostrap CSS and JavaScript code is
loaded by default in all pages.
## Customizing the Backend Design
The design of the backend is created with lots of CSS variables. This makes it
easier to customize it to your own needs. You'll find all variables in the
``assets/css/easyadmin-theme/variables.scss`` file. To override any of them,
create a CSS file and redefine the variable values:
``` css
/* public/css/admin.css */
:root {
/* make the backend contents as wide as the browser window */
--body-max-width: 100%;
/* change the background color of the <body> */
--body-bg: #f5f5f5;
/* make the base font size smaller */
--font-size-base: 13px;
/* remove all border radius to make corners straight */
--border-radius: 0px;
}
```
Then, load this CSS file in your backend:
``` yaml
easy_admin:
# ...
design:
assets:
css:
# ...
- 'css/admin.css'
```
.. note::
Because of how Bootstrap styles are defined, it's not possible to use CSS
variables to override every style. Sometimes you may need to also override
the value of some Sass variables (which are also defined in the same
``assets/css/easyadmin-theme/variables.scss`` file).
## Managing the Backend Assets with Webpack
EasyAdmin uses [Webpack](https://webpack.js.org/) (via Symfony's [Webpack Encore](https://symfony.com/doc/current/frontend.html)) to manage its CSS
and JavaScript assets. This bundle provides both the source files and the
compiled versions of all assets, so you don't have to install Webpack to use
this bundle.
However, if you want total control over the backend styles, you can use Webpack
to integrate the SCSS and JavaScript source files provided in the `assets/`
directory. The only caveat is that EasyAdmin doesn't use Webpack Encore yet when
loading the assets, so you can't use features like versioning. This will be
fixed in future versions.
## Advanced Customization of Backend Pages
In addition to customizing the CSS and JavaScript files used to create the
backend interface, EasyAdmin lets you customize every single Twig template used
to render contents.
In read-only pages (`list`, `search` and `show`) you can override or
create new Twig template fragments to customize the rendering of each property
for any entity. Read the :ref:`Advanced Design Customization <list-search-show-advanced-design-configuration>`
section to learn more about it.
In read-write pages (`edit` and `new`) EasyAdmin relies on Symfony's Form
component to render contents, so you'll need to create a new form theme to
override the default design. In addition, this bundle defines some elements not
available by default in Symfony (form tabs, fieldsets, sections, etc.) so you
can create complex forms. Read the :ref:`Advanced Form Design <edit-new-advanced-form-design>`
section to learn more about it.
##
Next chapter: :doc:`list-search-show-configuration`