npm package discovery and stats viewer.

Discover Tips

  • General search

    [free text search, go nuts!]

  • Package details

    pkg:[package-name]

  • User packages

    @[username]

Sponsor

Optimize Toolset

I’ve always been into building performant and accessible sites, but lately I’ve been taking it extremely seriously. So much so that I’ve been building a tool to help me optimize and monitor the sites that I build to make sure that I’m making an attempt to offer the best experience to those who visit them. If you’re into performant, accessible and SEO friendly sites, you might like it too! You can check it out at Optimize Toolset.

About

Hi, 👋, I’m Ryan Hefner  and I built this site for me, and you! The goal of this site was to provide an easy way for me to check the stats on my npm packages, both for prioritizing issues and updates, and to give me a little kick in the pants to keep up on stuff.

As I was building it, I realized that I was actually using the tool to build the tool, and figured I might as well put this out there and hopefully others will find it to be a fast and useful way to search and browse npm packages as I have.

If you’re interested in other things I’m working on, follow me on Twitter or check out the open source projects I’ve been publishing on GitHub.

I am also working on a Twitter bot for this site to tweet the most popular, newest, random packages from npm. Please follow that account now and it will start sending out packages soon–ish.

Open Software & Tools

This site wouldn’t be possible without the immense generosity and tireless efforts from the people who make contributions to the world and share their work via open source initiatives. Thank you 🙏

© 2026 – Pkg Stats / Ryan Hefner

elm-tailwind-modules

v0.5.0

Published

Turn your Tailwind CSS into Elm code using Elm-css, which purges using Elm's --optimize!

Readme

Elm Tailwind Modules

Generate Elm code for Tailwind Utilities and Components which purges using Elm's dead code elimination!

Use Tailwind with Elm-Css!

Quick Start

If you want to try out how using elm-css with tailwind feels like without using npm, try out the package with prebuilt modules: elm-default-tailwind-modules

Install

$ npm i --save-dev elm-tailwind-modules tailwindcss postcss
$ npx elm-tailwind-modules --dir ./gen
Saved
 - gen/Tailwind/Utilities.elm
 - gen/Tailwind/Theme.elm
 - gen/Tailwind/Breakpoints.elm
$ elm install rtfeldman/elm-css
$ elm install matheus23/elm-tailwind-modules-base # used by the generated code internally

This will generate these files:

Use

Now you simply import these modules and use them in your elm code:

import Css
import Css.Global
import Html.Styled as Html
import Html.Styled.Attributes as Attr
import Tailwind.Breakpoints as Breakpoints
import Tailwind.Utilities as Tw
import Tailwind.Theme as Tw


main =
    Html.toUnstyled <|
        Html.div [ Attr.css [ Tw.bg_color Tw.gray_50 ] ]
            [ -- This will give us the standard tailwind style-reset as well as the fonts
              Css.Global.global Tw.globalStyles
            , Html.div
                [ Attr.css
                    [ Tw.mt_8
                    , Tw.flex

                    -- We use breakpoints like this
                    -- However, you need to order your breakpoints from high to low :/
                    , Breakpoints.lg [ Tw.mt_0, Tw.flex_shrink_0 ]
                    ]
                ]
                [ Html.div [ Attr.css [ Tw.inline_flex, Tw.rounded_md, Tw.shadow ] ]
                    [ Html.a
                        [ Attr.css
                            [ Tw.inline_flex
                            , Tw.items_center
                            , Tw.justify_center
                            , Tw.px_5
                            , Tw.py_3
                            , Tw.border
                            , Tw.border_color Tw.transparent
                            , Tw.text_base
                            , Tw.font_medium
                            , Tw.rounded_md
                            , Tw.text_color Tw.white
                            , Tw.bg_color Tw.indigo_600

                            -- We can use hover styles via elm-css :)
                            , Css.hover [ Tw.bg_color Tw.indigo_700 ]
                            ]
                        , Attr.href "#"
                        ]
                        [ Html.text "Get started" ]
                    ]
                ]
            ]

The result looks like this:

Screenshot

(For a bigger example, see test-example/src/Main.elm and related files.)

CLI


$ elm-tailwind-modules --help
Usage: elm-tailwind-modules [options]

Options:
  -V, --version             output the version number
  --dir <dir>               destination folder for generated elm modules, e.g. "src/" or "gen/". Add this folder to your elm.json
                            source-directories.
  --module-name <name>      module name prefix for generated elm modules, e.g. "Tailwind" or "Css.Gen"
  --tailwind-config <file>  your tailwind config file (default: null)
  -h, --help                display help for command

Nodejs API

This package is written in typescript, so you can use it from node via the same npm package, too.

The nodejs API allows you to do more stuff, for example, include additional postcss plugins like autoprefixer.

It boils down to this:

const elmTailwindModules = require("elm-tailwind-modules");
const tailwindConfig = require("./my-tailwind.js");
const autoprefixer = require("autoprefixer");

elmTailwindModules.run({
    directory: "./gen",
    moduleName: "Tailwind",
    postcssPlugins: [autoprefixer],
    tailwindConfig,
});

Full control

If you need even more control, you can integrate elm-tailwind-modules with your existing postcss pipeline by using it as a postcss plugin.

Below is an example of using elm-tailwind-modules asPostcssPlugin function to get following control:

  • Providing your own postcss file to consume

  • Adding the postcss-import plugin at the start of your postcss pipeline

  • Writing css that wasn't turned into elm definitions back as a css file

    (This can be useful, as the generated globalStyles definition has its limits, for example you can't use @font-face in elm-css.)

const elmTailwindModules = require("elm-tailwind-modules");
const tailwindConfig = require("./my-tailwind.js");
const autoprefixer = require("autoprefixer");
const postcssImport = require("postcss-import");
const postcss = require("postcss");
const tailwindcss = require("tailwindcss");
const fs = require("fs").promises;

const logFunction = message => console.log(message);

const moduleName = "Tailwind";

const elmTailwindModulesPlugin = elmTailwindModules.asPostcssPlugin({
    moduleName,
    tailwindConfig,
    generateDocumentation: true,
    logFunction,
    modulesGeneratedHook: async generated => elmTailwindModules.writeGeneratedFiles({
        directory: "gen",
        moduleName,
        logFunction,
        generated
    })
});

// This file has the postcss superpowers. So it includes things like
// * @tailwind base; @tailwind components; @tailwind utilities;
// * postcss-import's @import
// * tailwindcss' @apply
const inputCssFile = "./my-postcss.css";

// This file will contain basic css that every browser understands
const outputCssFile = "./build/stylesheet.css";

(async () => {
    const inputCss = await fs.readFile(inputCssFile, {
        encoding: "utf8"
    });

    const result = await postcss.default([
        // We can specify our own order of postcss plugins.
        postcssImport,
        tailwindcss(tailwindConfig),
        autoprefixer,
        elmTailwindModulesPlugin
    ]).process(inputCss, {
        from: inputCssFile,
        to: outputCssFile,
    });

    logFunction(`Saving remaining global css to ${outputCssFile}`);
    await fs.writeFile(outputCssFile, result.content);
})()

Node API Documentation

You can find the documentation at matheus23.github.io/elm-tailwind-modules.

Comparisons

  • monty5811/postcss-elm-tailwind:
    • You still need to include a .css file
    • You need to purge the .css file (which is a somewhat involved process, including having to run postcss twice)
    • The generated files contain a definition for all variants, which makes them much bigger (150+kLOC vs. 30+kLOC)
    • Has more configuration options
    • More mature and robust
  • Using classes via tailwind directly:
    • No type checking (typos might not get noticed)
    • global namespaces for classes

So mainly, the cool things about this package are:

  • You can use elm-css with tailwind. So:
    • No writing css by hand
    • No global css class namespaces
    • All the features of tailwindcss, its plugins and ecosystem
    • Simply import some elm files after generating them, and they're all you need

Acknowledgements

The idea for this is not original. It's a fork from justinrassier/postcss-elm-css-tailwind. Thanks!