packages/@tailwindcss-postcss/README.md
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For help, discussion about best practices, or feature ideas:
Discuss Tailwind CSS on GitHub
If you're interested in contributing to Tailwind CSS, please read our contributing docs before submitting a pull request.
@tailwindcss/postcss plugin APIYou can use the base option (defaults to the current working directory) to change the directory in which the plugin searches for source files:
import tailwindcss from '@tailwindcss/postcss'
export default {
plugins: [
tailwindcss({
base: path.resolve(__dirname, './path'),
}),
],
}
By default, this plugin detects whether or not the CSS is being built for production by checking the NODE_ENV environment variable. When building for production Lightning CSS will be enabled otherwise it is disabled.
If you want to always enable or disable Lightning CSS the optimize option may be used:
import tailwindcss from '@tailwindcss/postcss'
export default {
plugins: [
tailwindcss({
// Enable or disable Lightning CSS
optimize: false,
}),
],
}
It's also possible to keep Lightning CSS enabled but disable minification:
import tailwindcss from '@tailwindcss/postcss'
export default {
plugins: [
tailwindcss({
optimize: { minify: false },
}),
],
}
url(…) rewritingOur PostCSS plugin can rewrite url(…)s for you since it also handles @import (no postcss-import is needed). This feature is enabled by default.
In some situations the bundler or framework you're using may provide this feature itself. In this case you can set transformAssetUrls to false to disable this feature:
import tailwindcss from '@tailwindcss/postcss'
export default {
plugins: [
tailwindcss({
// Disable `url(…)` rewriting
transformAssetUrls: false,
// Enable `url(…)` rewriting (the default)
transformAssetUrls: true,
}),
],
}