Using Tailwind CSS to style your site in dark mode.
Now that dark mode is a first-class feature of many operating systems, it's becoming more and more common to design a dark version of your website to go along with the default design.
To make this as easy as possible, Tailwind includes a dark
variant that lets you style your site differently when dark mode is enabled:
<div class="bg-white dark:bg-gray-800">
<h1 class="text-gray-900 dark:text-white">Dark mode is here!</h1>
<p class="text-gray-600 dark:text-gray-300">
Lorem ipsum...
</p>
</div>
It's important to note that because of file size considerations, the dark mode variant is not enabled in Tailwind by default.
To enable it, set the darkMode
option in your tailwind.config.js
file to media
:
// tailwind.config.js
module.exports = {
darkMode: 'media',
// ...
}
Now whenever dark mode is enabled on the user's operating system, dark:{class}
classes will take precedence over unprefixed classes. The media
strategy uses the prefers-color-scheme
media feature under the hood, but if you'd like to support toggling dark mode manually, you can also use the 'class' strategy for more control.
By default, when darkMode
is enabled dark
variants are only generated for color-related classes, which includes text color, background color, border color, gradients, and placeholder color.
The dark
variant can be combined with both responsive variants and state variants (like hover and focus):
<button class="lg:dark:hover:bg-white ...">
<!-- ... -->
</button>
The responsive variant needs to come first, then dark
, then the state variant for this to work.
To enable the dark
variant for other utilities, add dark
to the the variants list for whatever utility you'd like to enable it for:
// tailwind.config.js
module.exports = {
// ...
variants: {
extend: {
textOpacity: ['dark']
}
}
}
By default, the dark
variant is enabled for backgroundColor
, borderColor
, gradientColorStops
, placeholderColor
, and textColor
.
If you want to support toggling dark mode manually instead of relying on the operating system preference, use the class
strategy instead of the media
strategy:
// tailwind.config.js
module.exports = {
darkMode: 'class',
// ...
}
Now instead of dark:{class}
classes being applied based on prefers-color-scheme
, they will be applied whenever dark
class is present earlier in the HTML tree.
<!-- Dark mode not enabled -->
<html>
<body>
<!-- Will be white -->
<div class="bg-white dark:bg-black">
<!-- ... -->
</div>
</body>
</html>
<!-- Dark mode enabled -->
<html class="dark">
<body>
<!-- Will be black -->
<div class="bg-white dark:bg-black">
<!-- ... -->
</div>
</body>
</html>
How you add the dark
class to the html
element is up to you, but a common approach is to use a bit of JS that reads a preference from somewhere (like localStorage
) and updates the DOM accordingly.
Here's a simple example of how you can support light mode, dark mode, as well as respecting the operating system preference:
// On page load or when changing themes, best to add inline in `head` to avoid FOUC
if (localStorage.theme === 'dark' || (!('theme' in localStorage) && window.matchMedia('(prefers-color-scheme: dark)').matches)) {
document.documentElement.classList.add('dark')
} else {
document.documentElement.classList.remove('dark')
}
// Whenever the user explicitly chooses light mode
localStorage.theme = 'light'
// Whenever the user explicitly chooses dark mode
localStorage.theme = 'dark'
// Whenever the user explicitly chooses to respect the OS preference
localStorage.removeItem('theme')
Again you can manage this however you like, even storing the preference server-side in a database and rendering the class on the server — it's totally up to you.