Best approach for styling 3rd party libraries / themes? #861
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andymerskin
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I was skimming through the docs and couldn't find a sensible solution to what I'm looking into for a feature we're adding to our project soon. We want to give Lexical a go for rich text editing, which has its own theming system.
With Twin, the whole idea is to use Tailwind exclusively as a CSS-in-JS solution, where your config's classes aren't necessarily available normally for a use case like this. In a traditional Tailwind project, you'd be able to pass a string of Tailwind utilities to each element in a theme configuration like this, and you're good to go.
Related discussion at Lexical: facebook/lexical#6338
Example
Take this Lexical theme for example, which accepts a string of classNames for each element:
https://github.com/tomoima525/lexical-tailwind-css/blob/main/components/Editor/EditorThemes.ts
However, there's no way I've found to do something like this:
Workaround
So the only workaround I can think of would be to create a global style that would define classNames with
tw
calls embedded inside of it:And repeat for 64 unique classNames, this turns into a real slog where I can't just edit the Tailwind utilities directly in the theme config because it's defined in a messy, verbose CSS object tucked away in a global style definition. Definitely not the end of the world, but if you were to fully style a theme this large, it would get a bit unwieldy.
Is there a better approach to this that's available in Twin today that I'm not aware of? How have others approached theming/styling 3rd party components? In some cases, libraries expose the ability to swizzle components (i.e. swap them out), where you could provide
tw
-styled elements, but not all libraries do this.Any suggestions are appreciated! Thanks!
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