Originally published at https://sergiodxa.com/articles/next-tailwind/
Tailwind's a CSS library that comes with a collection of utility classes to be used in your HTML when using it, most of the time you wouldn't write custom CSS, it let you focus on your app and gives you good design constraints to work with.
Next.js it's a React meta-framework that gives you a lot of features out of the box and lets you create complex applications without caring too much about tooling and configuration, instead it lets you focus on building your applications and give you good defaults for most things.
Both tools come from the idea of let you care about what makes your application unique and let you stop thinking about the same things all the time. Let's see how to use them together.
Running Demo
This is the final project running in CodeSandbox
Create the Next.js Application
To create a Next.js application run the following command:
$ npx create-next-app my-app
This will create a basic Next.js application with the required libraries already installed, the package.json
scripts configured and an example page.
Adding PostCSS Configuration
To use Tailwind we need to use PostCSS too, it's not a hard requirement however, you can always load the CSS of Tailwind from a CDN or static file, but PostCSS will let us add some nice plugins to improve the performance.
$ yarn add -D tailwindcss autoprefixer @fullhuman/postcss-purgecss
- tailwindcss - The CSS library itself
- autoprefixer - A PostCSS plugin to automatically add prefixes for CSS properties to work cross browser
- @fullhuman/postcss-purgecss - A PostCSS plugin to remove unused CSS
Configuring PostCSS
Now let's configure PostCSS, we need to create a postcss.config.js
in the root of our project, side by side with the package.json
.
module.exports = {
plugins: [
"tailwindcss",
process.env.NODE_ENV === "production"
? [
"@fullhuman/postcss-purgecss",
{
content: [
"./pages/**/*.{js,jsx,ts,tsx}",
"./components/**/*.{js,jsx,ts,tsx}"
],
defaultExtractor: content => content.match(/[\w-/:]+(?<!:)/g) || []
}
]
: undefined,
"autoprefixer"
]
};
Note: We need to use this syntax of using strings instead of requires due Next.js requirements.
Here we are telling PostCSS what plugins we want to use, and in which order, first we need to tell PostCSS to inline @import
statements, then load Tailwind, then, if we are in production (more about this below), purge unused CSS, then autoprefix the CSS not purged and finally minify the final resulting CSS.
Why only purge CSS in production? If we are developing we will want to be able to use any Tailwind, or custom CSS, class without running the build process of PostCSS again, in production however we want to remove the classes we are not using to reduce the size of our CSS bundle.
And when we are finally in production we want to check all of our code in pages/
and components/
, all of them, either .js
, .jsx
, .ts
or .tsx
. To see what classes match we will configure it to use the RegEx /[\w-/:]+(?<!:)/g
, this will support using :
in the classes, something Tailwind does for styling focus
, hover
and active
states and media queries.
Add PostCSS to Next.js
Note: This is not required anymore if you are using Next.js v9.2 or greater.
Now we need to tell Next.js to run PostCSS as part of its build process. Luckily for us, the Next.js team maintains an official plugin to add external CSS support using PostCSS, we only need to install it.
$ yarn add -D @zeit/next-css
And now we need to create a next.config.js
file, this lets us customize the Next.js configuration, it's a file you usually don't need but in our case, we will need it.
const withCSS = require("@zeit/next-css");
module.exports = withCSS({});
That's what we will need to add, require the plugin and then export it passing an empty object, that empty object is any extra configuration you may want to pass to Next.js, we will let it be empty this time.
Create Global Stylesheet for Tailwind
Now let's create a styles.css
file at the root of our project.
/* purgecss start ignore */
@tailwind base;
@tailwind components;
/* purgecss end ignore */
@tailwind utilities;
That's all we need to add to this file, with this we are loading Tailwind base, components, and utility styles. We are also telling PurgeCSS to don't purge the base and components styles.
Using Tailwind
Now that we have everything configured and our styles.css
ready let's update the basic components that create-next-app
give us to use Tailwind instead.
// components/nav.js
import React from "react";
import Link from "next/link";
const links = [
{ href: "https://zeit.co/now", label: "ZEIT" },
{ href: "https://github.com/zeit/next.js", label: "GitHub" }
].map(link => {
link.key = `nav-link-${link.href}-${link.label}`;
return link;
});
const Nav = () => (
<nav className="text-center">
<ul className="flex justify-between px-4 my-4 py-1">
<li className="flex px-2 py-1">
<Link href="/">
<a className="text-blue-500 no-underline text-sm">Home</a>
</Link>
</li>
{links.map(({ key, href, label }) => (
<li key={key} className="flex px-2 py-1">
<a className="text-blue-500 no-underline text-sm" href={href}>
{label}
</a>
</li>
))}
</ul>
</nav>
);
export default Nav;
import React from "react";
import Head from "next/head";
import Nav from "../components/nav";
const Home = () => (
<div className="text-sans">
<Head>
<title>Home</title>
<link rel="icon" href="/favicon.ico" />
</Head>
<Nav />
<div className="w-full text-gray-900">
<h1 className="m-0 w-full pt-20 leading-tight text-5xl text-center font-bold">
Welcome to Next.js!
</h1>
<p className="text-center my-4 text-m">
To get started, edit <code>pages/index.js</code> and save to reload.
</p>
<div className="max-w-4xl mx-auto pt-20 py-auto pb-8 flex flex-row justify-around">
<a
href="https://nextjs.org/docs"
className="pt-4 px-5 pb-6 w-64 text-left no-underline text-gray-800 border border-gray-400 hover:border-blue-500"
>
<h3 className="m-0 text-blue-500 text-lg font-bold">
Documentation →
</h3>
<p className="m-0 pt-3 py-0 pb-0 text-sm text-gray-900">
Learn more about Next.js in the documentation.
</p>
</a>
<a
href="https://nextjs.org/learn"
className="pt-4 px-5 pb-6 w-64 text-left no-underline text-gray-800 border border-gray-400 hover:border-blue-500"
>
<h3 className="m-0 text-blue-500 text-lg font-bold">
Next.js Learn →
</h3>
<p className="m-0 pt-3 py-0 pb-0 text-sm text-gray-900">
Learn about Next.js by following an interactive tutorial!
</p>
</a>
<a
href="https://github.com/zeit/next.js/tree/master/examples"
className="pt-4 px-5 pb-6 w-64 text-left no-underline text-gray-800 border border-gray-400 hover:border-blue-500"
>
<h3 className="m-0 text-blue-500 text-lg font-bold">
Examples →
</h3>
<p className="m-0 pt-3 py-0 pb-0 text-sm text-gray-900">
Find other example boilerplates on the Next.js GitHub.
</p>
</a>
</div>
</div>
</div>
);
export default Home;
If we check our application right now it will load without styles, let's create a pages/_app.js
file to import our styles.css
.
// pages/_app.js
import React from "react";
import App from "next/app";
import "../styles.css";
export default class TailwindApp extends App {
render() {
const { Component, pageProps } = this.props;
return <Component {...pageProps} />;
}
}
This file will load our CSS one time and ensure it's always loaded. Next.js (starting at v9.2) will take care of loading our styles.css
globally in every page and minified it in production.
If we try it now we will see a website, not exactly equal, but similar to the example website Next.js comes with, from this point, we could start using Tailwind however we want and once we are ready to deploy build for production and only get the CSS we are using.
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