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The internal package will let developers within our monorepo style React components using props, instead of adding Tailwind CSS classes directly

Package Exports

    This package does not declare an exports field, so the exports above have been automatically detected and optimized by JSPM instead. If any package subpath is missing, it is recommended to post an issue to the original package (react-tailwind-converter) to support the "exports" field. If that is not possible, create a JSPM override to customize the exports field for this package.

    Readme

    React Tailwind Converter

    Version: 1.0.97

    Description

    react-tailwind-converter is a utility package that allows developers to style React components using props, instead of adding Tailwind CSS classes directly. This enables a more structured and consistent approach to component styling in projects, particularly within a monorepo setup.

    This package includes support for dynamic class generation, a predefined color system, and a configurable safe list of classes. It’s especially useful for teams looking to streamline their Tailwind usage in a React environment.

    Features

    • Prop-Based Styling: Pass Tailwind-compatible styles as props to components, making them more readable and maintainable.
    • Color Tokens: Use predefined colors to ensure consistency across your components.
    • Safe List Generation: Dynamically generates and extends Tailwind’s safe list to avoid purging necessary styles.
    • Box Component: A flexible Box component that leverages Tailwind CSS through prop-based styling.

    Installation

    Install the package via npm or yarn:

    npm install react-tailwind-converter
    # or
    yarn add react-tailwind-converter

    Usage

    Basic Usage

    The package exports a styled Box component that you can use in your React application.

    Here’s a quick example:

    import { Box } from "react-tailwind-converter";
    
    function App() {
      return (
        <Box
          mt="16"
          mb="8"
          ml={{ xs: "80", lg: "32" }}
          borderRadius="3xl"
          padding="20"
          borderWidth="4"
          borderColor="danger-400"
          textColor="black"
          bgc="warning-500"
          borderStyle="solid"
        >
          Testing Box
        </Box>
      );
    }

    Tailwind Configuration

    In your tailwind.config.js, import the safeList and colorMap and add them as follows:

    import type { Config } from "tailwindcss";
    import { safeList } from "react-tailwind-converter";
    import { colorMap } from "react-tailwind-converter";
    
    export default {
      content: [
        "./pages/**/*.{js,ts,jsx,tsx,mdx}",
        "./components/**/*.{js,ts,jsx,tsx,mdx}",
        "./app/**/*.{js,ts,jsx,tsx,mdx}",
      ],
      safelist: safeList(),
      theme: {
        extend: {
          colors: colorMap,
          screens: {
            xs: '0px',
            sm: '640px',
            md: '768px',
            lg: '1024px',
            xl: '1280px',
            '2xl': '1536px',
          },
        },
      },
      plugins: [],
    } satisfies Config;
    

    Available Components

    Box

    A flexible container component with prop-based styling.

    import { Box } from "react-tailwind-converter";
    
    <Box padding="10" bgc="primary-500" borderRadius="lg">
      Content goes here
    </Box>

    Color Configuration

    The package provides two ways to configure your colors:

    1. Using Default Colors (Inspired by NextUI)

    The simplest way is to use our default color tokens (inspired by NextUI's color system):

    import type { Config } from "tailwindcss";
    import { safeList, colorMap } from "react-tailwind-converter";
    
    export default {
      content: [
        "./pages/**/*.{js,ts,jsx,tsx,mdx}",
        "./components/**/*.{js,ts,jsx,tsx,mdx}",
        "./app/**/*.{js,ts,jsx,tsx,mdx}",
      ],
      safelist: safeList(),
      theme: {
        colors: colorMap,  // Uses our default color system
      },
      plugins: [],
    } satisfies Config;

    2. Custom Colors

    You can define your own colors, but you must maintain the same token structure. Your colors object needs to include these specific keys:

    import type { Config } from "tailwindcss";
    import { safeList } from "react-tailwind-converter";  // Don't import colorMap when using custom colors
    
    export default {
      content: [...],
      safelist: safeList(),
      theme: {
        colors: {
          // Required base colors
          background: string,      // e.g., '#FFFFFF'
          foreground: string,      
          white: string,
          black: string,
          transparent: string,
          divider: string,
          focus: string,
          'content-1': string,
          'content-2': string,
          'content-3': string,
          'content-4': string,
          whiteTransparent: string,
          backgroundOneLight: string,
          backgroundTwoLight: string,
          backgroundOneDark: string,
          backgroundTwoDark: string,
    
          // Required color scales (must include 50-900)
          primary: {
            50: string,
            100: string,
            // ... through 900
          },
          default: {
            // same structure as primary
          },
          success: {
            // same structure as primary
          },
          warning: {
            // same structure as primary
          },
          danger: {
            // same structure as primary
          }
        }
      },
      plugins: [],
    } satisfies Config;

    For example, you could use different color values while maintaining the structure:

    theme: {
      colors: {
        background: 'peachpuff',
        primary: {
          50: '#your-color',
          100: '#your-color',
          // ... etc
        },
        // ... other required tokens
      }
    }

    The Box component will use these color tokens via props like bgc="primary-500" or textColor="danger-200".

    Development

    1. Clone the repo
    2. Install dependencies
    3. Run pnpm dev to start the dev environment

    Publishing

    The package is automatically published to NPM when changes are pushed to the main branch. Remember to update the version in package.json and here before pushing.