.. | ||
components | ||
pages | ||
styles | ||
package.json | ||
README.md |
Tailwind CSS example
This is an example of how you can include a global stylesheet in a next.js webapp.
How to use
If you like create-next-app and/or yarn simply run:
yarn create next-app --example with-tailwindcss my-app
cd my-app
Otherwise:
Download the example or clone the repo:
curl https://codeload.github.com/zeit/next.js/tar.gz/master | tar -xz --strip=2 next.js-master/examples/with-tailwindcss
cd with-tailwindcss
Running
To get this example running you just need to
yarn install .
yarn dev
Visit http://localhost:3000 and try to modify styles/index.css
.
Deploy it to the cloud with now (download)
now
Extras
In the package.json
you'll see some extra commands.
yarn dev:css
- used by
yarn dev
generate css bundle and watch css files for changes - includes css imported into
index.css
- will not autoreload browser when css changes
- used by
yarn build:css
- used by
yarn build
to generate css bundle
- used by
These can be used manually but using the usual commands will run them anyways.
The idea behind the example
This setup is a basic starting point for using tailwind css and next. Along with tailwind, this example
also uses some other postcss plugins for imports, autoprefixing, and stripping whitespace/comments. The imports simply
allow for an easy way to split up css files but still get one bundled css file in static/css/bundle.css
.
Changing stylesheets does not trigger auto-reloads. Setting up auto-reloads was avoided
because the next.js read me does not recommend doing so. Although, that can easily be done with
some webpack loaders. If you are curious about using loaders with next look at this
example.
This project shows how you can set it up. Have a look at:
- pages/_document.js
- styles/config/postcss.config.js
- styles/config/tailwind.config.js
- styles/index.css
- styles/button.css