This article assumes you have completed the setup steps:
Having set up your local Project Folder with:
A Text Editor for viewing your Folder Structure inside a Project Folder
A Siteglide-CLI environment which connects your Project Folder to a Site
An npm script which runs a Tailwind compilation process
This article will delve a little deeper into the files you can modify to take full control of your Tailwind build!
We recommend if you are using VSCode that you download and enable this extension, which will help VSCode understand Tailwind's syntax and give you tips on things like colours: bradlc.vscode-tailwindcss
Also if you are using VS Code, this extension is useful for creating shortcuts to your favourite project folders: https://marketplace.visualstudio.com/items?itemName=alefragnani.project-manager
This tool is really helpful for fetching colours with all the shades you need generated for you: https://uicolors.app/create
(For Editing a Siteglide Site Which Uses a Tailwind Theme.)
Open up the Project Folder for your Site
In case your team have made any changes while you've been away, run siteglide-cli pull <env>
Split your terminal and simultaneously run:
siteglide-cli sync <env>
to push any code changes to the site
npm run tailwind
to watch for code changes and re-compile your Tailwind build (see #the-tailwind.min.css-file)
Make the necessary changes to your code.
src
is short for source. These files are not designed to be seen by the browser. Instead think of them as the recipe for a final Tailwind CSS file.
When you sync these files, they are still pushed to your Site because they are inside the marketplace_builder folder. This allows you to share changes with other users on the Site (or yourself on different machines).
tailwind.config.js
FileThis file is a configuration file and a Tailwind CSS feature which can be used to:
Create and modify Tailwind Variables e.g. Colour, Spacing
Include Plugins, for example we by default include the Flowbite plugin
You can learn all about Tailwind CSS configuration files here: https://tailwindcss.com/docs/configuration
You can find an example of default config variables here: https://github.com/tailwindlabs/tailwindcss/blob/master/stubs/config.full.js If you leave any variables blank, default values from this file will be used.
tailwind.css
FileThis file can be used to write ordinary CSS, or you can use Tailwind's documented features. The file should not be linked to on a website, instead it will be compiled into a new production-ready CSS file when you save it and run the npm run tailwind
build process.
Often with Tailwind CSS, you will find you will not need to enter this file often, as you can achieve most of the styling you want by using existing:
Utility Classes
Arbitrary Values in Utility Classes
Prefixes instead of Media Queries
However, if you do want to write your own CSS, you will not find yourself limited!
See here to understand how to insert your CSS into one of Tailwind's layers: https://tailwindcss.com/docs/adding-custom-styles#using-css-and-layer
See here to understand how to add custom classes which combine existing Tailwind utility classes: https://tailwindcss.com/docs/functions-and-directives#apply
tailwind.min.css
Final CSS FileSee the folder structure above to find this file. You should not need to create it or edit it manually. The npm run tailwind command will compile it automatically from the src files.
It should be linked in your Page Template, but by default a SiteBuilder Page Template will do this via a tailwind/head
Liquid include. You could optionally replace this with a <link> tag instead.
When you make changes to any of the following while npm run tailwind
is running in your terminal:
Your HTML (adding or removing new Tailwind classes)
Your JavaScript (adding or removing new Tailwind classes) (in case classes will be added via JavaScript, e.g. when a Flowbite Component changes state.
Your tailwind.config.js
file
Your tailwind.css
file
A new version of the tailwind.min.css
file will be generated. Use the Siteglide CLI to sync or deploy this to your Site to see your changes applied: Reference
Tailwind uses tree-shaking so that any classes which aren't used by the files referenced above will be removed from the final CSS file to make it as fast as possible. It will also be minified.