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Tailwind CSS produces thousands of classes most of which will never be used. Changes to the Tailwind configuration might take seconds to take effect, and who has seconds to waste these days? There are articles describing how to speed up Tailwind build times indicating the problem.
Headlong is a runtime version of Tailwind CSS which requires no PostCSS nor purging. Instead of generating all the classes beforehand it adds classes on the fly to the stylesheet whenever they are introduced in the DOM.
This library is not intended to replace the original Tailwind. Yet, there are environments where one cannot use PostCSS or maybe needs to interpolate class names a lot, or play with configuration.
Natural advantage of this approach is zero extra build time, all classes are available by default, no need to enable responsive or whatever plugin.
Headlong was built entirely using Ellx. Here's source code and demo.
$ npm install headlong
import headlong from "headlong";
const {
unsubscribe,
parse,
config,
// returns { styles, classes } of styles string and set of classes
output,
apply,
} = headlong(
config,
{
container, // container element
classes // list of classes to ignore
});
// ...
// stop listening to changes when you're done
unsubscribe();
2021/2/20
@apply
as a function (apart from combined variants just like in Tailwind 1.x)calc
function relying on PostCSS pluginFAQs
Tailwind CSS on the fly
The npm package headlong receives a total of 3 weekly downloads. As such, headlong popularity was classified as not popular.
We found that headlong demonstrated a not healthy version release cadence and project activity because the last version was released a year ago. It has 1 open source maintainer collaborating on the project.
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Socket for GitHub automatically highlights issues in each pull request and monitors the health of all your open source dependencies. Discover the contents of your packages and block harmful activity before you install or update your dependencies.
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