Config
Default configuration
export default {
theme: {},
plugins: [],
content: [
`${srcDir}/components/**/*.{vue,js,ts}`,
`${srcDir}/layouts/**/*.vue`,
`${srcDir}/pages/**/*.vue`,
`${srcDir}/composables/**/*.{js,ts}`,
`${srcDir}/plugins/**/*.{js,ts}`,
`${srcDir}/utils/**/*.{js,ts}`,
`${srcDir}/App.{js,ts,vue}`,
`${srcDir}/app.{js,ts,vue}`,
`${srcDir}/Error.{js,ts,vue}`,
`${srcDir}/error.{js,ts,vue}`,
`${srcDir}/app.config.{js,ts}`
]
}
You can learn more about the Tailwind configuration and the content configuration in Tailwind docs.
Overwriting the configuration
You can extend the default configuration:
- with a tailwind.config file
- using the config option
- with the
tailwindcss:config
Nuxt hook
tailwind.config
If a tailwind.config
file is present, it will be imported and used to overwrite the default configuration. All of the following file extensions will work by default: .js
, .cjs
, .mjs
, and .ts
. When not using the .cjs
file extension, you need to use ESM syntax (see #549).
You can configure the path with the configPath option.
import colors from 'tailwindcss/colors'
export default {
theme: {
extend: {
colors: {
primary: colors.green
}
}
}
}
Learn more about the Tailwind config in their docs.
config
option
You can also use your nuxt.config
file to set your Tailwind config with the tailwindcss.config
property:
import tailwindTypography from '@tailwindcss/typography'
export default {
// ...
tailwindcss: {
config: {
plugins: [tailwindTypography]
}
}
}
Hooks
tailwindcss:loadConfig
Passes any Tailwind configuration read by the module for each (extended) layer/path before merging all of them.
tailwindcss:config
Passes the resolved vanilla configuration read from all layers and paths with merging using defu.
tailwindcss:resolvedConfig
Passes the complete resolved configuration with all defaults from the full Tailwind config using resolveConfig
.
Usage
You can use a Nuxt hook to manipulate the Tailwind configuration.
// ~/modules/nuxt-tailwind-mod/index.ts
import { defineNuxtModule, addTemplate } from '@nuxt/kit'
export default defineNuxtModule({
setup (options, nuxt) {
nuxt.hook('tailwindcss:config', function (tailwindConfig) {
tailwindConfig.theme.colors.blue = '#fff'
})
nuxt.hook('tailwindcss:resolvedConfig', function (resolvedConfig) {
console.log('This is the resulting config', JSON.stringify(resolvedConfig))
})
}
})
Learn more about Nuxt modules.
async/await
) and are called after merging the configurations.Merging strategy
The provided config will be merged using defu's array function merger.
When assigning an array to the content
property, it will be concatenated with the default value.
Example
export default {
content: [
'content/**/*.md'
]
}
The content
option will be:
[
'components/**/*.{vue,js,ts}',
'layouts/**/*.vue',
'pages/**/*.vue',
'composables/**/*.{js,ts}',
'plugins/**/*.{js,ts}',
'App.{js,ts,vue}',
'app.{js,ts,vue}',
'Error.{js,ts,vue}',
'error.{js,ts,vue}',
'content/**/*.md'
]
If you want to fully overwrite its value, you can use a function
that receives the default value:
import type { ModuleOptions } from '@nuxtjs/tailwindcss'
const config: ModuleOptions['config'] = {
content (contentDefaults) {
return [
// add the defaults
...contentDefaults,
// or filter only vue file patterns from defaults
...contentDefaults.filter((c) => c.endsWith('*.vue')),
// add js and vue files for a directory
'./my-components/**/*.{js,vue}',
// exclude test files if you keep them together with source
contentDefaults.filter(
c => c.endsWith('/**/*.{vue,js,ts}')
).map(
c => c.replace('/**/*.{vue,js,ts}', '/**/!(*.{test,spec,story}).{vue,js,ts}')
),
]
}
}
export default config
plugins
and content
since the default value is defined as an Array
.Safelisting classes
If you need to safelist classes and avoid the content purging system, you need to specify the safelist
option:
module.exports = {
// Safelisting some classes to avoid content purge
safelist: [
'safelisted',
{
pattern: /bg-(red|green|blue)-(100|200|300)/,
},
]
}
Referencing in the application
It can often be useful to reference Tailwind configuration values at runtime, e.g. to access some of your theme values when dynamically applying inline styles in a component.
If you need resolved Tailwind config at runtime, you can enable the exposeConfig option:
export default {
tailwindcss: {
exposeConfig: true
}
}
Then, import where needed from #tailwind-config
:
// Import fully resolved config
import tailwindConfig from '#tailwind-config'
// Import only part which is required to allow tree-shaking
import { theme } from '#tailwind-config'
Please be aware this adds ~19.5KB
(~3.5KB
) to the client bundle size. If you want to only import really specific parts of your tailwind config, you can enable imports for each property in the config:
export default {
tailwindcss: {
exposeConfig: {
level: 4,
alias: '#twcss' // if you want to change alias
}
}
}
// Import within properties for further tree-shaking
import screens from '#twcss/theme/screens' // default import
import { _neutral } from '#twcss/theme/colors' // named (with _ prefix)
import { _800 as slate800 } from '#twcss/theme/colors/slate' // alias
level
to ever be over 4 - the usual depth of a Tailwind config. A higher value is also likely to increase boot-time and disk space in dev. Refer to the Nuxt Virtual File System to see generated files._
(_colors
, _900
, _2xl
) to ensure safe variable names. You can use default imports to provide any identifier or rename named imports using as
. Properties with unsafe variable names (spacing['1.5']
, height['1/2']
, keyframes.ping['75%, 100%']
) do not get exported individually.