I agree - dividing code into small pieces like components helps a lot and for me tailwind is great example of framework / library that force you to use some patterns in code.
Using @apply isn't great idea. Tailwind after build removes unused classes so if you create new one it won't be removed but created as new one which means that Tailwind doesn't make sense to use - it now reminds me some things like BEM
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I agree - dividing code into small pieces like components helps a lot and for me tailwind is great example of framework / library that force you to use some patterns in code.
Using
@apply
isn't great idea. Tailwind after build removes unused classes so if you create new one it won't be removed but created as new one which means that Tailwind doesn't make sense to use - it now reminds me some things like BEM