prettier-plugin-tailwindcss
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prettier-plugin-tailwindcss | lint-staged | |
---|---|---|
14 | 50 | |
4,693 | 12,836 | |
5.5% | 1.3% | |
8.3 | 8.4 | |
9 days ago | 14 days ago | |
JavaScript | JavaScript | |
MIT License | MIT License |
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prettier-plugin-tailwindcss
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Use TailwindCSS prefixes for shared design system components
It's not as if the correct order for the rules is mysterious. It's implemented in the Tailwind compiler. Tools like prettier-plugin-tailwindcss, which automatically sorts the class names in your HTML code to match the order in which Tailwind generates them in your CSS output, use a public API in Tailwind to get this order.
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Tailwind CSS Tips and Tricks Worth Knowing
Other than that, you can get Prettier sorting your classes with the Tailwind Prettier plugin. And one more quality-of-life extension that might help your eye sores from a long list of classes is Tailwind Fold.
- Automatic Class Sorting with Tailwind and Prettier
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How do you get the tailwindcss prettier plugin to work in electron-react-boilerplate?
I everyone. I am using Electron react boilerplate and I have successfully added tailwindcss to the project. However, I am struggling to get the Prettier plugin tailwindcss to work. Iāve tried following the instructions in the readme but no luck. Iāve tried moving my prettier.config.js to the .erc/config dir with no luck either.
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Why is tailwind so hyped?
Others have already replied, but if you need to structure your TailwindCSS classes, I recommend their official Prettier plugin which integrates well into an ESLint setup.
- I've started breaking tailwind classes into multiple lines and feel like this is much easier to read than having all the classes on one line. Does anyone else do that? Any drawback to it?
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Tailwind CSS v3.2 ā Introducing Container Queries, Multiple Configs and More
> Except that I read that it's great for writing, but a nightmare for reading.
This is true at first. I can see it being pretty daunting to come into an existing project and trying to understand the styling of components. Starting from scratch and easing it into an existing project is much easier imo. That's what I did for a personal website. Now that I understand it and have converted the entire website to Tailwind, I don't want to switch to anything else going forward.
Here's a Prettier plugin that sort the classes to keep everything consistent across components: https://github.com/tailwindlabs/prettier-plugin-tailwindcss
Tailwind combined with classnames (https://github.com/JedWatson/classnames) makes it really easy to have conditional styling based on component state.
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Fastest Frontend Tools in 2022
Despite the existence of Prettier, arguments about code style such as how to sort ES module imports still exist. Manually sorting ES modules wastes time, and usually leads to losing context when you are writing code and then have to navigate to the top of a file to modify your import statements. I love using the @trivago/prettier-plugin-sort-imports plugin which automatically sorts new imports, and works perfectly together with TypeScript's auto-import feature. Similarly, prettier-plugin-tailwindcss automatically sorts Tailwind classes in your code.
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HyperUI Rewritten... What's Changed?
Added the tailwind-prettier-plugin as not everyone uses headwind
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class order
I used to use Headwind (mentioned in another comment) but the Tailwind CSS team now maintains an official Prettier plugin which I'd recommend using on every project. It sorts the classes the same way they appear in Tailwind's compiled CSS so precedence is easy to see straight from your HTML. I've also found it's much faster than Headwind. They talk about it more in this blog post.
lint-staged
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How Automation Saved Me from Oops Moments: Never Skip Tests in Production Again!
We were already using lint-staged and have a pre-commit hook in place using Husky in our project for linter and prettier. So it made sense to add a check here.
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Pre-commit with husky & lint-staged
Now you can config it in your package.json, here is the guide doc:
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Automating code patterns with Husky
In the world of software development, maintaining consistent code quality and ensuring that the codebase adheres to predefined patterns and guidelines is crucial. However, manually enforcing these standards can be time-consuming and error-prone. This is where automation tools like Husky, Lint-Staged, Commitlint, and Commitizen come to the rescue. In this post, we will explore how these tools can be combined to streamline your development workflow.
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500 lines in 2013 is 10k in 2023, inflation you know
This is wasted work that can and should be automated. Adding a linter and formatter on CI and a pre-commit hook such as lint-staged can do wonders.
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Set up linting and formatting for code and (S)CSS files in a Next.js project
lint-staged is a package that can be used to run formatting and linting commands on staged files in a Git repo.
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How do you handle eslint/prettier configs across multiple repos?
To answer your next question: I lint and format on save, and I use Git hooks installed by Husky and executed through Lint-Staged (this tool helps ensure your Git hooks only run on modified files, etc) to ensure there are no lint or formatting errors whenever making a commit or pushing code. This is helpful for teams, as some developers tend to forget to run lint tasks, or don't have the Prettier extension installed in their IDE. If there are lint errors, the commit is rejected until fixed. YMMV - you'll need to fine-tune the strictness of this based on the team's needs.
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How to create and publish a TypeScript library with ease
Uses Husky Git hooks and Lint-staged pre-commit hooks.
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How to Contribute on the First Day of a FrontendĀ Project
Something else to consider is applying linting and formatting before every git commit. A package like Lint-staged only lints and formats on staged items, ensuring all pushed code follows the standards in the repo. This allows developers to have their own formatting preferences when developing, while the code homogenizes on push. Linting pre-commit also avoids strict rules like no-console or no-unused-vars restricting a developer when writing code, when it should only apply in production. Imagine not being able to console log anything during development!
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Commit Like a PRO
Lint-Staged Docs
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How to beautify your code and make contributions easy?
Additionally, there are pre-commit hooks which can be setup to seamlessly validate and modify the source code before every commit. I followed Prettier documentation to create one. I ran npx mrm@2 lint-staged which installed husky and lint-stagedand added a configuration to the projectās package.json. Then, I modified the commands a little and that's it.
What are some alternatives?
headwind - An opinionated Tailwind CSS class sorter built for Visual Studio Code
commitlint - š Lint commit messages
eslint-plugin-tailwindcss - ESLint plugin for Tailwind CSS usage
Nest - A progressive Node.js framework for building efficient, scalable, and enterprise-grade server-side applications with TypeScript/JavaScript š
Visual Studio Code - Visual Studio Code
stylelint - A mighty CSS linter that helps you avoid errors and enforce conventions.
ESLint - Find and fix problems in your JavaScript code.
prettier - Prettier is an opinionated code formatter.
husky - Git hooks made easy š¶ woof!
graphql-code-generator - A tool for generating code based on a GraphQL schema and GraphQL operations (query/mutation/subscription), with flexible support for custom plugins.
volar - ā” Explore high-performance tooling for Vue [Moved to: https://github.com/vuejs/language-tools]