There are 2 ways to declare negative arbitrary values:
a) Dash prefixed classname with absolute arbitrary value like -top-[1px]
❌
b) Unprefixed classname (no dash) with negative value inside the square brackets like top-[-1px]
✅
I believe, we should always prefer the (b) approach "Unprefixed classname" for few reasons:
- In Tailwind CSS v2.x.x the (a) was not supported (example: https://play.tailwindcss.com/fsS91hkyKx)
- You can get nasty using (a) like
-top-[-1px]
🥴 - Using
var()
you simply don't know if you are dealing with a negative or positive value - Adam recommends the unprefixed approach 🎉
Examples of incorrect code for this rule:
<div
class="-top-[-10px] -right-[var(--my-var)] -left-[5px] -right-[var(--my-var)*-1]"
>
Negative arbitrary values
</div>
-right-[var(--my-var)*-1]
will generate this non sense: right: calc(var(--my-var) * -1 * -1);
Examples of correct code for this rule:
<div
class="top-[10px] right-[var(--my-var)*-1] left-[-5px] right-[var(--my-var)]"
>
Negative arbitrary values
</div>
...
"tailwindcss/enforces-negative-arbitrary-values": [<enabled>, {
"callees": Array<string>,
"config": <string>|<object>,
"skipClassAttribute": <boolean>,
"tags": Array<string>,
}]
...
If you use some utility library like @netlify/classnames-template-literals, you can add its name to the list to make sure it gets parsed by this rule.
For best results, gather the declarative classnames together, avoid mixing conditional classnames in between, move them at the end.
Using libraries like cva
, some of its object keys are not meant to contain classnames in its value(s).
You can specify which key(s) won't be parsed by the plugin using this setting.
For example, cva
has compoundVariants
and defaultVariants
.
NB: As compoundVariants
can have classnames inside its class
property, you can also use a callee to make sure this inner part gets parsed while its parent is ignored.
By default the plugin will try to load the file returned by the official loadConfig()
utility.
This allows the plugin to use your customized colors
, spacing
, screens
...
You can provide another path or filename for your Tailwind CSS config file like "config/tailwind.js"
.
If the external file cannot be loaded (e.g. incorrect path or deleted file), an empty object {}
will be used instead.
It is also possible to directly inject a configuration as plain object
like { prefix: "tw-", theme: { ... } }
.
Finally, the plugin will merge the provided configuration with Tailwind CSS's default configuration.
Set skipClassAttribute
to true
if you only want to lint the classnames inside one of the callees
.
While, this will avoid linting the class
and className
attributes, it will still lint matching callees
inside of these attributes.
Optional, if you are using tagged templates, you should provide the tags in this array.
Optional, can be used to support custom attributes