A plugin for customizing styles for the View Transitions Web API.
npm install -D tailwindcss-view-transitionsThen add the plugin to your tailwind.config.js file:
// tailwind.config.js
module.exports = {
theme: {
// ...
},
plugins: [
require("tailwindcss-view-transitions"),
// ...
],
}Use the vt-name-[ANY_STRING] utility class to create a separate view transition on specific elements.
<div class="vt-name-[main-content]">
</div>Use vt-name-none to disable a view transition. Can be used with any Tailwind variant, such as md:*.
<div class="vt-name-[main-content] md:vt-name-none">
</div>
<div class="vt-name-[main-content] motion-reduce:vt-name-none">
</div>The name can be any string except root (❌ vt-name-[root]), which is reserved for the default top-level view transition.
| Class | CSS properties |
|---|---|
vt-name-[foo] |
view-transition-name: foo; |
vt-name-[main-content] |
view-transition-name: main-content; |
vt-name-none |
view-transition-name: none; |
Style the view transition pseudo-elements from your global CSS file.
/* input.css */
@tailwind base;
@tailwind components;
@tailwind utilities;
::view-transition-old(root),
::view-transition-new(root) {
animation: none;
}
::view-transition-old(main-content) {
/* Add custom animation or style here */
/* animation: ... */
}
::view-transition-new(main-content) {
/* Add custom animation or style here */
/* animation: ... */
}Alternatively, you can define styles from plugin configuration in your tailwind.config.js file.
// tailwind.config.js
module.exports = {
plugins: [
require("tailwindcss-view-transitions")({
disableAllReduceMotion: false,
styles: {
// ...
},
}),
// ... other plugins
],
}The plugin config accepts an options object as argument which contains these properties. All are optional.
- Type:
boolean - Default:
false
Disables all view transitions animation if user has set preference for reduced motion. (Note: Consider this point before disabling animations completely.)
If true, it applies this code globally:
@media (prefers-reduced-motion) {
::view-transition-group(*),::view-transition-old(*),::view-transition-new(*) {
animation: none !important;
}
}- Type:
Record<string, CSSRuleObject & { old?: CSSRuleObject; new?: CSSRuleObject }> - Default:
{}
Defines CSS styles for the view transition pseudo-elements.
The styles object may contain any number of properties.
- The key is the view transition name (
rootor any string value assigned here) - The value is one or more of these:
- a CSS rule object, which will be applied to both outgoing (
::view-transition-old(VT_NAME)) and incoming (::view-transition-new(VT_NAME)) pseudo-elements - a propery
oldcontaining a CSS rule object, which will be applied only to::view-transition-old(VT_NAME) - a propery
newcontaining a CSS rule object, which will be applied only to::view-transition-new(VT_NAME)
- a CSS rule object, which will be applied to both outgoing (
| styles config | Generated CSS |
|---|---|
{ |
::view-transition-old(root), |
{ |
::view-transition-old(root) { |
{ |
::view-transition-old(root), |
@keyframes separately in your CSS file or through Tailwind theme configuration, or alternatively use an existing @keyframes animation.
Detailed examples: https://github.com/ekafyi/tailwindcss-view-transitions/blob/main/docs/examples.md
You may not need this plugin if:
- You don’t need to customize the default browser transition styles
- You do styling outside of Tailwind configuration
- You exclusively use a (meta)framework that has its own API for conveniently styling view transitions, such as Astro
As an unofficial plugin, it will be deprecated when/if Tailwind adds an official plugin for styling view transitions.
While I'm not actively accepting feature requests, I outlined future plans in the Discussions.
Found a bug? Feel free to open an issue.