You cannot select more than 25 topics Topics must start with a letter or number, can include dashes ('-') and can be up to 35 characters long.

125 lines
4.4 KiB
Markdown

# @tailwindcss/forms
A plugin that provides a basic reset for form styles that makes form elements easy to override with utilities.
## Installation
Install the plugin from npm:
```sh
npm install -D @tailwindcss/forms
```
Then add the plugin to your `tailwind.config.js` file:
```js
// tailwind.config.js
module.exports = {
theme: {
// ...
},
plugins: [
require('@tailwindcss/forms'),
// ...
],
}
```
## Basic usage
[**View the live demo**](https://tailwindcss-forms.vercel.app/)
All of the basic form elements you use will now have some simple default styles that are easy to override with utilities.
Currently we add basic utility-friendly form styles for the following form element types:
- `input[type='text']`
- `input[type='password']`
- `input[type='email']`
- `input[type='number']`
- `input[type='url']`
- `input[type='date']`
- `input[type='datetime-local']`
- `input[type='month']`
- `input[type='week']`
- `input[type='time']`
- `input[type='search']`
- `input[type='tel']`
- `input[type='checkbox']`
- `input[type='radio']`
- `select`
- `select[multiple]`
- `textarea`
**Note that for text inputs, you must add the `type="text"` attribute for these styles to take effect.** This is a necessary trade-off to avoid relying on the overly greedy `input` selector and unintentionally styling elements we don't have solutions for yet, like `input[type="range"]` for example.
Every element has been normalized/reset to a simple visually consistent style that is easy to customize with utilities, even elements like `<select>` or `<input type="checkbox">` that normally need to be reset with `appearance: none` and customized using custom CSS:
```html
<!-- You can actually customize padding on a select element now: -->
<select class="px-4 py-3 rounded-full">
<!-- ... -->
</select>
<!-- Or change a checkbox color using text color utilities: -->
<input type="checkbox" class="rounded text-pink-500" />
```
More customization examples and best practices coming soon.
### Using classes to style
In addition to the global styles, we also generate a set of corresponding classes which can be used to explicitly apply the form styles to an element. This can be useful in situations where you need to make a non-form element, such as a `<div>`, look like a form element.
```html
<input type="email" class="form-input px-4 py-3 rounded-full">
<select class="form-select px-4 py-3 rounded-full">
<!-- ... -->
</select>
<input type="checkbox" class="form-checkbox rounded text-pink-500" />
```
Here is a complete table of the provided `form-*` classes for reference:
| Base | Class |
| ------------------------- | ------------------ |
| `[type='text']` | `form-input` |
| `[type='email']` | `form-input` |
| `[type='url']` | `form-input` |
| `[type='password']` | `form-input` |
| `[type='number']` | `form-input` |
| `[type='date']` | `form-input` |
| `[type='datetime-local']` | `form-input` |
| `[type='month']` | `form-input` |
| `[type='search']` | `form-input` |
| `[type='tel']` | `form-input` |
| `[type='time']` | `form-input` |
| `[type='week']` | `form-input` |
| `textarea` | `form-textarea` |
| `select` | `form-select` |
| `select[multiple]` | `form-multiselect` |
| `[type='checkbox']` | `form-checkbox` |
| `[type='radio']` | `form-radio` |
### Using only global styles or only classes
Although we recommend thinking of this plugin as a "form reset" rather than a collection of form component styles, in some cases our default approach may be too heavy-handed, especially when integrating this plugin into existing projects.
If generating both the global (base) styles and classes doesn't work well with your project, you can use the `strategy` option to limit the plugin to just one of these approaches.
```js
// tailwind.config.js
plugins: [
require("@tailwindcss/forms")({
strategy: 'base', // only generate global styles
strategy: 'class', // only generate classes
}),
],
```
When using the `base` strategy, form elements are styled globally, and no `form-{name}` classes are generated.
When using the `class` strategy, form elements are not styled globally, and instead must be styled using the generated `form-{name}` classes.