@storefront-ui/nuxt
Install all dependencies
With Nuxt 3, the fastest way to get started is to use the @storefront-ui/nuxt
module. The Storefront-io Nuxt module will automatically install @nuxtjs/tailwindcss
inside nuxt
and storefront-ui tailwindcss presets.
# npm
npm i -D @storefront-ui/nuxt
# yarn
yarn add -D @storefront-ui/nuxt
# pnpm
pnpm add -D @storefront-ui/nuxt
Add the Nuxt Tailwind module to your nuxt.config.ts
// nuxt.config.ts
export default defineNuxtConfig({
modules: ['@storefront-ui/nuxt']
})
Tailwind configuration
Since we use @nuxtjs/tailwindcss
under the hood, there is possibility to use tailwindcss
property in nuxt.config.ts
file. Other than that there is default tailwind
way to create config via tailwind.config.ts
file.
Internally, @nuxtjs/tailwindcss
will merge the three places that you can add configurations. In order of priority, the options are:
tailwind.config.ts
filenuxt.config.ts
file withtailwindcss
property- Storefront UI default configuration
::tip Add a path to your installed package
In order for Tailwind to properly detect the utility classes used in Storefront UI components, you need to add a path to wherever your node_modules
folder is located to the content
property. In the example below, we're using the default location for node_modules
, but this may change if you're working in a monorepo.
::
// tailwind.config.ts
import type { Config } from 'tailwindcss';
export default <Config>{
content: ['./**/*.vue'],
};
Custom tailwind.css
file
If you're going to create your own Tailwind CSS file, make sure to add the @tailwind directives for each of Tailwind’s layer types (base, components, and utilities).
/* ~/assets/css/tailwind.css */
@tailwind base;
@tailwind components;
@tailwind utilities;
You're ready to go
Now, you can import Storefront UI components in your app and all the Tailwind utilities from the @storefront-ui/vue
library will be available in your project. Because storefront-ui
is served as well from module, @storefront-ui/vue
is available from Nuxt autoimport.