Skip to content

L-Blondy/tw-colors

Repository files navigation

Introducing the ultimate game-changer for your Tailwind app! Say goodbye to cluttered dark variants and messy CSS variables. With this tailwind plugin, switching between color themes is as effortless as changing one className.

Highlights

  • 🚀 Scalable, add as many themes and colors as you want. There is no limit on the number of themes and color you can use
  • 💫 Flexible, don't limit yourself to colors, with the built-in variants you can theme any css property
  • Easy to adopt, no need to change your markup, it just works!
  • 🤩 Nested themes are supported for complex use cases
  • 🎯 Full Tailwind CSS Intellisense support 🔥🔥🔥

Changelog

See the full changelog here

Usage

npm i -D tw-colors

Take an existing tailwind config and move the colors in the createThemes plugin, giving it a name (e.g. light).

tailwind.config.js

+  const { createThemes } = require('tw-colors');

   module.exports = {
      content: ['./src/**/*.{astro,html,js,jsx,md,mdx,svelte,ts,tsx,vue}'],
      theme: {
         extends: {
-           colors: {
-              'primary': 'steelblue',
-              'secondary': 'darkblue',
-              'brand': '#F3F3F3',
-              // ...other colors
-           }
         },
      },
      plugins: [
+        createThemes({
+           light: { 
+              'primary': 'steelblue',
+              'secondary': 'darkblue',
+              'brand': '#F3F3F3',
+              // ...other colors
+           }
+        })
      ],
   };

💡 tip: you can use any color name as you usually do, not just the ones from the example. The same goes for the theme names.

Apply class='light' or data-theme='light' anywhere in your app (the html or the body tag is a good spot for it)

See the options to customize the className

-  <html>
+  <html class='light'>
      ...
      <div class='bg-brand'>
         <h1 class='text-primary'>...</h1>
         <p class='text-secondary'>...</p>
      </div>
      ...
   </html>

That's it, you site has a light theme!

Adding more themes

tailwind.config.js

   const { createThemes } = require('tw-colors');

   module.exports = {
      content: ['./src/**/*.{astro,html,js,jsx,md,mdx,svelte,ts,tsx,vue}'],
      plugins: [
         createThemes({
            light: { 
               'primary': 'steelblue',
               'secondary': 'darkblue',
               'brand': '#F3F3F3',
            },
+           dark: { 
+              'primary': 'turquoise',
+              'secondary': 'tomato',
+              'brand': '#4A4A4A',
+           },
+           forest: { 
+              'primary': '#2A9D8F',
+              'secondary': '#E9C46A',
+              'brand': '#264653',
+           },
+           winter: { 
+              'primary': 'hsl(45 39% 69%)',
+              'secondary': 'rgb(120 210 50)',
+              'brand': 'hsl(54 93% 96%)',
+           },
         })
      ],
   };

You now have a light, a dark and a forest theme!

Switching themes

Simply switch the class or the data-theme attribute

-  <html class='light'>
+  <html class='dark'>
      ...
   </html>

Variants

Based on the current theme, specific styles can be applied using variants.

Note: In the following example the variants would have no effect with data-theme='light'

   <!-- Use "serif" font for the dark theme only -->
   <div data-theme='dark' class='font-sans dark:font-serif'>
      ...
      <div>Serif font here</div>

      <!-- this button is rounded when the theme is `dark` -->
      <button class='dark:rounded'>Click Me</button>
   </div>

See the options to customize the variant name

Caveat: group-{modifier} Always use the group variant before the theme variant.
   <html class='theme-dark'>
      ...
      <div class='group'>
         <div class='theme-dark:group-hover:bg-red-500'>
            ❌ the group variant does not work
         </div>
         <div class='group-hover:theme-dark:bg-red-500'>
            ✅ the group variant works properly
         </div>
      </div>    
   </html>

Nested themes

With data-theme

Just nest the themes...

   <html data-theme='dark'>
      ...
      <div data-theme='winter'>
         ...
      </div>

      <div data-theme='forest'>
         ...
      </div>
   </html>

With class

For variants to work properly in nested themes, an empty data-theme attribute must be added alongside the nested theme class

   <html class='dark'>
      ...
      <div data-theme class='winter'>
         ...
      </div>

      <div data-theme class='forest'>
         ...
      </div>
   </html>

Caveats:

Do not set opacity in the color definition When using nested themes, it is better not to provide a base opacity in your color definitions.

With this setup the 0.8 opacity defined on the primary color of the "parent" theme will be inherited by the "child" theme's primary color.

createThemes({
   parent: { 
      'primary': 'hsl(50 50% 50% / 0.8)', // don't do this, the default opacity will propagate to the child theme
      'secondary': 'darkblue',
   },
   child: { 
      'primary': 'turquoise',
      'secondary': 'tomato',
   },
})
<html data-theme='parent'>

   <div data-theme='child'>
      <!-- The primary color has an unexpected 0.8 opacity -->
      <button class='bg-primary'>Click me</button>
     
     ...
   </div>
</html>  
Inherited properties

Inherited properties (e.g. "font-family") are inherited by all descendants, including nested themes. In order to stop the propagation the base styles should be re-declared on nested themes

❌ Unexpected behavior

   <html class='theme-dark font-sans theme-dark:font-serif'>
      ...
      <div>
         ✅ Serif is active
      </div>

      <div class="theme-light">
         ❌ Serif is still active, it got inherited from the parent theme
      </div>     
   </html>

✅ Works as expected

   <html class='theme-dark font-sans theme-dark:font-serif'>
      ...
      <div>
         ✅ Serif is active
      </div>

      <div class="theme-light font-sans theme-dark:font-serif">
         ✅ Sans is active
      </div>   
   </html>

CSS color-scheme

createThemes also accepts a function that exposes the light and dark functions.
To apply the color-scheme CSS property, simply wrap a theme with light or dark."

See the MDN docs for more details on this feature.

tailwind.config.js

createThemes(({ light, dark }) => ({
   'winter': light({ 
      'primary': 'steelblue',
      'base': 'darkblue',
      'surface': '#F3F3F3',
   }),
   'forest': dark({ 
      'primary': 'turquoise',
      'base': 'tomato',
      'surface': '#4A4A4A',
   }),
}))

CSS Variables

tw-colors creates CSS variables using the format --twc-[color name] by default, they contain HSL values.

For example, with the following configuration, the variables --twc-primary, --twc-base, --twc-surface will be created.

tailwind.config.js

   module.exports = {
      // ...your tailwind config
      plugins: [
         createThemes({
            'winter': { 
               'primary': 'steelblue',
               'base': 'darkblue',
               'surface': '#F3F3F3',
            },
            'forest': { 
               'primary': 'turquoise',
               'base': 'tomato',
               'surface': '#4A4A4A',
            },
         })
      ],
   };

Example usage:

.my-class {
   color: hsl(var(--twc-primary));
   background: hsl(var(--twc-primary) / 0.5);
}

See the options to customize the css variables

Options

The options can be passed as the second argument to the plugin

createThemes({
   // your colors config here...
}, {
   produceCssVariable: (colorName) => `--twc-${colorName}`,
   produceThemeClass: (themeName) => `theme-${themeName}`
   produceThemeVariant: (themeName) => `theme-${themeName}`
   defaultTheme: 'light'
   strict: false
})

defaultTheme

The default theme to use, think of it as a fallback theme when no theme is declared.

Example: simple default theme

createThemes({
   'winter': { 
      'primary': 'steelblue',
   },
   'halloween': { 
      'primary': 'crimson',
   },
}, {
   defaultTheme: 'winter' // 'winter' | 'halloween'
})

The default theme can also be chosen according to the user light or dark preference (see MDN prefers-color-scheme)

Example: adapting to user preference

createThemes({
   'winter': { 
      'primary': 'steelblue',
   },
   'halloween': { 
      'primary': 'crimson',
   },
}, {
   defaultTheme: {
      /**
       * when `@media (prefers-color-scheme: light)` is matched, 
       * the default theme is the "winter" theme 
       */
      light: 'winter', 
      /**
       * when `@media (prefers-color-scheme: dark)` is matched, 
       * the default theme is the "halloween" theme 
       */
      dark: 'halloween', 
   }
})

strict

default: false

If false invalid colors are ignored.
If true invalid colors produce an error.

Example

createThemes({
   'christmas': { 
      // invalid color
      'primary': 'redish',
   },
   'darkula': { 
      'primary': 'crimson',
   },
}, {
   // an error will be thrown
   strict: true
})

produceCssVariable

default: (colorName) => `--twc-${colorName}`

Customize the css variables generated by the plugin.

With the below configuration, the following variables will be created:

  • --a-primary-z (instead of twc-primary)
  • --a-secondary-z (instead of twc-secondary)
  • --a-base-z (instead of twc-base)
createThemes({
   'light': { 
      'primary': 'steelblue',
      'secondary': 'darkblue',
      'base': '#F3F3F3',
   },
   'dark': { 
      'primary': 'turquoise',
      'secondary': 'tomato',
      'base': '#4A4A4A',
   },
}, {
   produceCssVariable: (colorName) => `--a-${colorName}-z`
})

produceThemeClass

default: (themeName) => themeName

Customize the classNames of the themes and variants

With the below configuration, the following theme classNames and variants will be created:

  • theme-light (instead of light)
  • theme-dark (instead of dark)
createThemes({
   'light': { 
      'primary': 'steelblue',
      'secondary': 'darkblue',
      'base': '#F3F3F3',
   },
   'dark': { 
      'primary': 'turquoise',
      'secondary': 'tomato',
      'base': '#4A4A4A',
   },
}, {
   produceThemeClass: (themeName) => `theme-${themeName}`
})
<html class='theme-dark'>
   ...
   <button class='theme-dark:rounded'>
      Click Me
   </button>
   ...
</html>

produceThemeVariant

default: same as produceThemeClass

Customize the variants

With the below configuration, the following variants will be created:

  • theme-light (instead of light)
  • theme-dark (instead of dark)
createThemes({
   'light': { 
      'primary': 'steelblue',
      'secondary': 'darkblue',
      'base': '#F3F3F3',
   },
   'dark': { 
      'primary': 'turquoise',
      'secondary': 'tomato',
      'base': '#4A4A4A',
   },
}, {
   produceThemeVariant: (themeName) => `theme-${themeName}`
})
<html data-theme='dark'>
   ...
   <button class='theme-dark:rounded'>
      Click Me
   </button>
   ...
</html>

From the same Author

up-fetch: Tiny 1kb configuration tool for the fetch API with sensible default

Please share