$ npm install tailwind-merge
Utility function to efficiently merge Tailwind CSS classes in JS without style conflicts.
import { twMerge } from 'tailwind-merge'
twMerge('px-2 py-1 bg-red hover:bg-dark-red', 'p-3 bg-[#B91C1C]')
// → 'hover:bg-dark-red p-3 bg-[#B91C1C]'
If you use Tailwind with a component-based UI renderer like React or Vue, you're probably familiar with the situation that you want to change some styles of a component, but only in one place.
import React from 'react'
function MyGenericInput(props) {
const className = `border rounded px-2 py-1 ${props.className || ''}`
return <input {...props} className={className} />
}
function MySlightlyModifiedInput(props) {
return (
<MyGenericInput
{...props}
className="p-3" // ← Only want to change some padding
/>
)
}
When the MySlightlyModifiedInput
is rendered, an input with the className border rounded px-2 py-1 p-3
gets created. But because of the way the CSS cascade works, the styles of the p-3
class are ignored. The order of the classes in the className
string doesn't matter at all and the only way to apply the p-3
styles is to remove both px-2
and py-1
.
This is where tailwind-merge comes in.
function MyGenericInput(props) {
// ↓ Now `props.className` can override conflicting classes
const className = twMerge('border rounded px-2 py-1', props.className)
return <input {...props} className={className} />
}
tailwind-merge overrides conflicting classes and keeps everything else untouched. In the case of the MySlightlyModifiedInput
, the input now only renders the classes border rounded p-3
.
extendTailwindMerge
.twMerge
calls without a cache hit stay fast.twMerge
to prevent it from impacting app startup performance if it isn't used initially.twMerge('p-5 p-2 p-4') // → 'p-4'
twMerge('p-3 px-5') // → 'p-3 px-5'
twMerge('inset-x-4 right-4') // → 'inset-x-4 right-4'
twMerge('inset-x-px -inset-1') // → '-inset-1'
twMerge('bottom-auto inset-y-6') // → 'inset-y-6'
twMerge('inline block') // → 'block'
twMerge('p-2 hover:p-4') // → 'p-2 hover:p-4'
twMerge('hover:p-2 hover:p-4') // → 'hover:p-4'
twMerge('hover:focus:p-2 focus:hover:p-4') // → 'focus:hover:p-4'
twMerge('bg-black bg-[color:var(--mystery-var)]') // → 'bg-[color:var(--mystery-var)]'
twMerge('grid-cols-[1fr,auto] grid-cols-2') // → 'grid-cols-2'
twMerge('[mask-type:luminance] [mask-type:alpha]') // → '[mask-type:alpha]'
twMerge('[--scroll-offset:56px] lg:[--scroll-offset:44px]')
// → '[--scroll-offset:56px] lg:[--scroll-offset:44px]'
// Don't do this!
twMerge('[padding:1rem] p-8') // → '[padding:1rem] p-8'
Watch out for mixing arbitrary properties which could be expressed as Tailwind classes. tailwind-merge does not resolve conflicts between arbitrary properties and their matching Tailwind classes to keep the bundle size small.
twMerge('[&:nth-child(3)]:py-0 [&:nth-child(3)]:py-4') // → '[&:nth-child(3)]:py-4'
twMerge('dark:hover:[&:nth-child(3)]:py-0 hover:dark:[&:nth-child(3)]:py-4')
// → 'hover:dark:[&:nth-child(3)]:py-4'
// Don't do this!
twMerge('[&:focus]:ring focus:ring-4') // → '[&:focus]:ring focus:ring-4'
Similarly to arbitrary properties, tailwind-merge does not resolve conflicts between arbitrary variants and their matching predefined modifiers for bundle size reasons.
twMerge('!p-3 !p-4 p-5') // → '!p-4 p-5'
twMerge('!right-2 !-inset-x-1') // → '!-inset-x-1'
twMerge('p-5 p-2 my-non-tailwind-class p-4') // → 'my-non-tailwind-class p-4'
twMerge('text-red text-secret-sauce') // → 'text-secret-sauce'
undefined
, null
and false
valuestwMerge('some-class', undefined, null, false) // → 'some-class'
If you're using Tailwind CSS without any extra config, you can use twMerge
right away. You can safely stop reading the documentation here.
If you're using a custom Tailwind config, you may need to configure tailwind-merge as well to merge classes properly.
The default twMerge
function is configured in a way that you can still use it if all the following points apply to your Tailwind config:
If some of these points don't apply to you, you can test whether twMerge
still works as intended with your custom classes. Otherwise, you need create your own custom merge function by either extending the default tailwind-merge config or using a completely custom one.
The tailwind-merge config is different from the Tailwind config because it's expected to be shipped and run in the browser as opposed to the Tailwind config which is meant to run at build-time. Be careful in case you're using your Tailwind config directly to configure tailwind-merge in your client-side code because that could result in an unnecessarily large bundle size.
The tailwind-merge config is an object with a few keys.
const tailwindMergeConfig = {
// ↓ Set how many values should be stored in cache.
cacheSize: 500,
// ↓ Optional prefix from TaiLwind config
prefix: 'tw-',
theme: {
// Theme scales are defined here
// This is not the theme object from your Tailwind config
},
classGroups: {
// Class groups are defined here
},
conflictingClassGroups: {
// Conflicts between class groups are defined here
},
}
The library uses a concept of class groups which is an array of Tailwind classes which all modify the same CSS property. E.g. here is the position class group.
const positionClassGroup = ['static', 'fixed', 'absolute', 'relative', 'sticky']
tailwind-merge resolves conflicts between classes in a class group and only keeps the last one passed to the merge function call.
twMerge('static sticky relative') // → 'relative'
Tailwind classes often share the beginning of the class name, so elements in a class group can also be an object with values of the same shape as a class group (yes, the shape is recursive). In the object each key is joined with all the elements in the corresponding array with a dash (-
) in between.
E.g. here is the overflow class group which results in the classes overflow-auto
, overflow-hidden
, overflow-visible
and overflow-scroll
.
const overflowClassGroup = [{ overflow: ['auto', 'hidden', 'visible', 'scroll'] }]
Sometimes it isn't possible to enumerate all elements in a class group. Think of a Tailwind class which allows arbitrary values. In this scenario you can use a validator function which takes a class part and returns a boolean indicating whether a class is part of a class group.
E.g. here is the fill class group.
const isArbitraryValue = (classPart: string) => /^\[.+\]$/.test(classPart)
const fillClassGroup = [{ fill: ['current', isArbitraryValue] }]
Because the function is under the fill
key, it will only get called for classes which start with fill-
. Also, the function only gets passed the part of the class name which comes after fill-
, this way you can use the same function in multiple class groups. tailwind-merge exports its own validators, so you don't need to recreate them.
You can use an empty string (''
) as a class part if you want to indicate that the preceding part was the end. This is useful for defining elements which are marked as DEFAULT
in the Tailwind config.
// ↓ Resolves to filter and filter-none
const filterClassGroup = [{ filter: ['', 'none'] }]
Each class group is defined under its ID in the classGroups
object in the config. This ID is only used internally, and the only thing that matters is that it is unique among all class groups.
Sometimes there are conflicts across Tailwind classes which are more complex than "remove all those other classes when a class from this group is present in the class list string".
One example is the combination of the classes px-3
(setting padding-left
and padding-right
) and pr-4
(setting padding-right
).
If they are passed to twMerge
as pr-4 px-3
, I think you most likely intend to apply padding-left
and padding-right
from the px-3
class and want pr-4
to be removed, indicating that both these classes should belong to a single class group.
But if they are passed to twMerge
as px-3 pr-4
, I assume you want to set the padding-right
from pr-4
but still want to apply the padding-left
from px-3
, so px-3
shouldn't be removed when inserting the classes in this order, indicating they shouldn't be in the same class group.
To summarize, px-3
should stand in conflict with pr-4
, but pr-4
should not stand in conflict with px-3
. To achieve this, we need to define asymmetric conflicts across class groups.
This is what the conflictingClassGroups
object in the tailwind-merge config is for. You define a key in it which is the ID of a class group which creates a conflict and the value is an array of IDs of class group which receive a conflict.
const conflictingClassGroups = {
px: ['pr', 'pl'],
}
If a class group creates a conflict, it means that if it appears in a class list string passed to twMerge
, all preceding class groups in the string which receive the conflict will be removed.
When we think of our example, the px
class group creates a conflict which is received by the class groups pr
and pl
. This way px-3
removes a preceding pr-4
, but not the other way around.
In the Tailwind config you can modify theme scales. tailwind-merge follows the same keys for the theme scales, but doesn't support all of them. tailwind-merge only supports theme scales which are used in multiple class groups to save bundle size (more info to that in PR 55). At the moment these are:
colors
spacing
blur
brightness
borderColor
borderRadius
borderSpacing
borderWidth
contrast
grayscale
hueRotate
invert
gap
gradientColorStops
inset
margin
opacity
padding
saturate
scale
sepia
skew
space
translate
If you modified one of these theme scales in your Tailwind config, you can add all your keys right here and tailwind-merge will take care of the rest. If you modified other theme scales, you need to figure out the class group to modify in the default config.
If you only need to extend the default tailwind-merge config, extendTailwindMerge
is the easiest way to extend the config. You provide it a configExtension
object which gets merged with the default config. Therefore, all keys here are optional.
import { extendTailwindMerge } from 'tailwind-merge'
const customTwMerge = extendTailwindMerge({
// ↓ Add values to existing theme scale or create a new one
theme: {
spacing: ['sm', 'md', 'lg'],
},
// ↓ Add values to existing class groups or define new ones
classGroups: {
foo: ['foo', 'foo-2', { 'bar-baz': ['', '1', '2'] }],
bar: [{ qux: ['auto', (value) => Number(value) >= 1000] }],
},
// ↓ Here you can define additional conflicts across class groups
conflictingClassGroups: {
foo: ['bar'],
},
})
If you need to modify the tailwind-merge config and need more control than extendTailwindMerge
gives you or don't want to use the default config (and tree-shake it out of your bundle), you can use createTailwindMerge
.
The function takes a callback which returns the config you want to use and returns a custom twMerge
function.
import { createTailwindMerge } from 'tailwind-merge'
const customTwMerge = createTailwindMerge(() => ({
cacheSize: 500,
theme: {},
classGroups: {
foo: ['foo', 'foo-2', { 'bar-baz': ['', '1', '2'] }],
bar: [{ qux: ['auto', (value) => Number(value) >= 1000] }],
},
conflictingClassGroups: {
foo: ['bar'],
},
}))
The callback passed to createTailwindMerge
will be called when customTwMerge
is called the first time, so you don't need to worry about the computations in it affecting app startup performance in case you aren't using tailwind-merge at app startup.
You can use both extendTailwindMerge
and createTailwindMerge
with third-party plugins. Just add them as arguments after your config.
import { extendTailwindMerge, createTailwindMerge } from 'tailwind-merge'
import { withMagic } from 'tailwind-merge-magic-plugin'
import { withMoreMagic } from 'tailwind-merge-more-magic-plugin'
// With your own config
const twMerge1 = extendTailwindMerge({ … }, withMagic, withMoreMagic)
// Only using plugin with default config
const twMerge2 = extendTailwindMerge(withMagic, withMoreMagic)
// Using `createTailwindMerge`
const twMerge3 = createTailwindMerge(() => ({ … }), withMagic, withMoreMagic)
Reference to all exports of tailwind-merge.
twMerge
function twMerge(...classLists: Array<string | undefined | null | false>): string
Default function to use if you're using the default Tailwind config or are close enough to the default config. Check out basic usage for more info.
If twMerge
doesn't work for you, you can create your own custom merge function with extendTailwindMerge
.
getDefaultConfig
function getDefaultConfig(): Config
Function which returns the default config used by tailwind-merge. The tailwind-merge config is different from the Tailwind config. It is optimized for small bundle size and fast runtime performance because it is expected to run in the browser.
fromTheme
function fromTheme(key: string): ThemeGetter
Function to retrieve values from a theme scale, to be used in class groups.
fromTheme
doesn't return the values from the theme scale, but rather another function which is used by tailwind-merge internally to retrieve the theme values. tailwind-merge can differentiate the theme getter function from a validator because it has a isThemeGetter
property set to true
.
It can be used like this:
extendTailwindMerge({
theme: {
'my-scale': ['foo', 'bar']
},
classGroups: {
'my-group': [{ 'my-group': [fromTheme('my-scale'), fromTheme('spacing')] }]
'my-group-x': [{ 'my-group-x': [fromTheme('my-scale')] }]
}
})
extendTailwindMerge
function extendTailwindMerge(
configExtension: Partial<Config>,
...createConfig: Array<(config: Config) => Config>
): TailwindMerge
function extendTailwindMerge(...createConfig: Array<(config: Config) => Config>): TailwindMerge
Function to create merge function with custom config which extends the default config. Use this if you use the default Tailwind config and just extend it in some places.
You provide it a configExtension
object which gets merged with the default config.
const customTwMerge = extendTailwindMerge({
cacheSize: 0, // ← Disabling cache
// ↓ Add values to existing theme scale or create a new one
// Not all theme keys form the Tailwind config are supported by default.
theme: {
spacing: ['sm', 'md', 'lg'],
},
// ↓ Here you define class groups
classGroups: {
// ↓ The `foo` key here is the class group ID
// ↓ Creates group of classes which have conflicting styles
// Classes here: foo, foo-2, bar-baz, bar-baz-1, bar-baz-2
foo: ['foo', 'foo-2', { 'bar-baz': ['', '1', '2'] }],
// ↓ Functions can also be used to match classes.
// Classes here: qux-auto, qux-1000, qux-1001, …
bar: [{ qux: ['auto', (value) => Number(value) >= 1000] }],
},
// ↓ Here you can define additional conflicts across different groups
conflictingClassGroups: {
// ↓ ID of class group which creates a conflict with …
// ↓ … classes from groups with these IDs
foo: ['bar'],
},
})
Additionally, you can pass multiple createConfig
functions (more to that in createTailwindMerge
) which is convenient if you want to combine your config with third-party plugins.
const customTwMerge = extendTailwindMerge({ … }, withSomePlugin)
If you only use plugins, you can omit the configExtension
object as well.
const customTwMerge = extendTailwindMerge(withSomePlugin)
createTailwindMerge
function createTailwindMerge(
...createConfig: [() => Config, ...Array<(config: Config) => Config>]
): TailwindMerge
Function to create merge function with custom config. Use this function instead of extendTailwindMerge
if you don't need the default config or want more control over the config.
You need to provide a function which resolves to the config tailwind-merge should use for the new merge function. You can either extend from the default config or create a new one from scratch.
// ↓ Callback passed to `createTailwindMerge` is called when
// `customTwMerge` gets called the first time.
const customTwMerge = createTailwindMerge(() => {
const defaultConfig = getDefaultConfig()
return {
cacheSize: 0,
classGroups: {
...defaultConfig.classGroups,
foo: ['foo', 'foo-2', { 'bar-baz': ['', '1', '2'] }],
bar: [{ qux: ['auto', (value) => Number(value) >= 1000] }],
},
conflictingClassGroups: {
...defaultConfig.conflictingClassGroups,
foo: ['bar'],
},
}
})
Same as in extendTailwindMerge
you can use multiple createConfig
functions which is convenient if you want to combine your config with third-party plugins. Just keep in mind that the first createConfig
function does not get passed any arguments, whereas the subsequent functions get each passed the config from the previous function.
const customTwMerge = createTailwindMerge(getDefaultConfig, withSomePlugin, (config) => ({
// ↓ Config returned by `withSomePlugin`
...config,
classGroups: {
...config.classGroups,
mySpecialClassGroup: [{ special: ['1', '2'] }],
},
}))
But don't merge configs like that. Use mergeConfigs
instead.
mergeConfigs
function mergeConfigs(baseConfig: Config, configExtension: Partial<Config>): Config
Helper function to merge multiple config objects. Objects are merged, arrays are concatenated, scalar values are overridden and undefined
does nothing. The function assumes that both parameters are tailwind-merge config objects and shouldn't be used as a generic merge function.
const customTwMerge = createTailwindMerge(getDefaultConfig, (config) =>
mergeConfigs(config, {
classGroups: {
// ↓ Adding new class group
mySpecialClassGroup: [{ special: ['1', '2'] }],
// ↓ Adding value to existing class group
animate: ['animate-magic'],
},
})
)
validators
interface Validators {
isLength(classPart: string): boolean
isArbitraryLength(classPart: string): boolean
isInteger(classPart: string): boolean
isArbitraryValue(classPart: string): boolean
isTshirtSize(classPart: string): boolean
isArbitrarySize(classPart: string): boolean
isArbitraryPosition(classPart: string): boolean
isArbitraryUrl(classPart: string): boolean
isArbitraryWeight(classPart: string): boolean
isArbitraryShadow(classPart: string): boolean
isAny(classPart: string): boolean
}
An object containing all the validators used in tailwind-merge. They are useful if you want to use a custom config with extendTailwindMerge
or createTailwindMerge
. E.g. the classGroup
for padding is defined as
const paddingClassGroup = [{ p: [validators.isLength] }]
A brief summary for each validator:
isLength
checks whether a class part is a number (3
, 1.5
), a fraction (3/4
), a arbitrary length ([3%]
, [4px]
, [length:var(--my-var)]
), or one of the strings px
, full
or screen
.isArbitraryLength
checks for arbitrary length values ([3%]
, [4px]
, [length:var(--my-var)]
).isInteger
checks for integer values (3
) and arbitrary integer values ([3]
).isArbitraryValue
checks whether the class part is enclosed in brackets ([something]
)isTshirtSize
checks whether class part is a T-shirt size (sm
, xl
), optionally with a preceding number (2xl
).isArbitrarySize
checks whether class part is an arbitrary value which starts with size:
([size:200px_100px]
) which is necessary for background-size classNames.isArbitraryPosition
checks whether class part is an arbitrary value which starts with position:
([position:200px_100px]
) which is necessary for background-position classNames.isArbitraryUrl
checks whether class part is an arbitrary value which starts with url:
or url(
([url('/path-to-image.png')]
, url:var(--maybe-a-url-at-runtime)]
) which is necessary for background-image classNames.isArbitraryWeight
checks whether class part is an arbitrary value which starts with number:
or is a number ([number:var(--value)]
, [450]
) which is necessary for font-weight classNames.isArbitraryShadow
checks whether class part is an arbitrary value which starts with the same pattern as a shadow value ([0_35px_60px_-15px_rgba(0,0,0,0.3)]
), namely with two lengths separated by a underscore.isAny
always returns true. Be careful with this validator as it might match unwanted classes. I use it primarily to match colors or when I'm certain there are no other class groups in a namespace.Config
interface Config { … }
TypeScript type for config object. Useful if you want to build a createConfig
function but don't want to define it inline in extendTailwindMerge
or createTailwindMerge
.
This library supports classes of the core Tailwind library out of the box, but not classes of any plugins. But it's possible and hopefully easy to write third-party plugins for tailwind-merge. In case you want to write a plugin, I invite you to follow these steps:
tailwind-merge-magic-plugin
with tailwind-merge as peer dependency which exports a function withMagic
and replace "magic" with your plugin name.createConfig
function which takes a config object as argument and returns the modified config object.magic.
(your plugin name with a dot at the end) so they don't collide with class group names from other plugins or even future class groups in tailwind-merge itself.validators
and mergeConfigs
from tailwind-merge to extend the config with magic.Here is an example of how a plugin could look like:
import { mergeConfigs, validators, Config } from 'tailwind-merge'
export function withMagic(config: Config): Config {
return mergeConfigs(config, {
classGroups: {
'magic.my-group': [{ magic: [validators.isLength, 'wow'] }],
},
})
}
This plugin can then be used like this:
import { extendTailwindMerge } from 'tailwind-merge'
import { withMagic } from 'tailwind-merge-magic-plugin'
const twMerge = extendTailwindMerge(withMagic)
Also, feel free to check out tailwind-merge-rtl-plugin as a real example of a tailwind-merge plugin.
This package follows the SemVer versioning rules. More specifically:
Patch version gets incremented when unintended behavior is fixed, which doesn't break any existing API. Note that bug fixes can still alter which styles are applied. E.g. a bug gets fixed in which the conflicting classes inline
and block
weren't merged correctly so that both would end up in the result.
Minor version gets incremented when additional features are added which don't break any existing API. However, a minor version update might still alter which styles are applied if you use Tailwind features not yet supported by tailwind-merge. E.g. a new Tailwind prefix magic
gets added to this package which changes the result of twMerge('magic:px-1 magic:p-3')
from magic:px-1 magic:p-3
to magic:p-3
.
Major version gets incremented when breaking changes are introduced to the package API. E.g. the return type of twMerge
changes.
alpha
releases might introduce breaking changes on any update. Whereas beta
releases only introduce new features or bug fixes.
Releases with major version 0 might introduce breaking changes on a minor version update.
A non-production-ready version of every commit pushed to the main branch is released under the dev
tag for testing purposes. It has the format 0.0.0-dev.<git SHA>
.
A changelog is documented in GitHub Releases.
Please see CONTRIBUTING for details.
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