You need to add code to your child theme’s functions.php
file or via a plugin that allows custom functions to be added, such as the Code snippets plugin. Please don’t add custom code directly to your parent theme’s functions.php
file as this will be wiped entirely when you update the theme.
Disable all stylesheets
WooCommerce enqueues 3 stylesheets by default. You can disable them all with the following snippet:
add_filter( ‘woocommerce_enqueue_styles’, ‘__return_empty_array’ ); |
This is the recommended process if you’re building a custom theme. Removing the default WooCommerce stylesheet and enqueuing your own will protect you during WooCommerce core updates.
Disable specific stylesheets
If you want to disable specific stylesheets (i.e, if you do not want to include the handheld stylesheet), you can use the following:
/** | |
* Set WooCommerce image dimensions upon theme activation | |
*/ | |
// Remove each style one by one | |
add_filter( ‘woocommerce_enqueue_styles’, ‘jk_dequeue_styles’ ); | |
function jk_dequeue_styles( $enqueue_styles ) { | |
unset( $enqueue_styles[‘woocommerce-general’] ); // Remove the gloss | |
unset( $enqueue_styles[‘woocommerce-layout’] ); // Remove the layout | |
unset( $enqueue_styles[‘woocommerce-smallscreen’] ); // Remove the smallscreen optimisation | |
return $enqueue_styles; | |
} | |
// Or just remove them all in one line | |
add_filter( ‘woocommerce_enqueue_styles’, ‘__return_false’ ); |
Then enqueue your own stylesheet like so:
/** | |
* Enqueue your own stylesheet | |
*/ | |
function wp_enqueue_woocommerce_style(){ | |
wp_register_style( ‘mytheme-woocommerce’, get_template_directory_uri() . ‘/css/woocommerce.css’ ); | |
if ( class_exists( ‘woocommerce’ ) ) { | |
wp_enqueue_style( ‘mytheme-woocommerce’ ); | |
} | |
} | |
add_action( ‘wp_enqueue_scripts’, ‘wp_enqueue_woocommerce_style’ ); |