Utilities for controlling the variant of numbers.
Use the font-variant-numeric utilities to enable additional glyphs for numbers, fractions, and ordinal markers (in fonts that support them).
These utilities are composable so you can enable multiple font-variant-numeric features by combining multiple classes in your HTML:
<p class="ordinal slashed-zero tabular-nums ...">1234567890</p>Note that many fonts don't support these features (stacked fractions support for example is especially rare), so some of these utilities may have no effect depending on the font family you are using.
Use the ordinal utility to enable special glyphs for the ordinal markers.
1st
<p class="ordinal ...">1st</p>Use the slashed-zero utility to force a 0 with a slash; this is useful when a clear distinction between O and 0 is needed.
0
<p class="slashed-zero ...">0</p>Use the lining-nums utility to use the numeric glyphs that are all aligned by their baseline. This corresponds to the lnum OpenType feature. This is the default for most fonts.
1234567890
<p class="lining-nums ...">1234567890</p>Use the oldstyle-nums utility to use numeric glyphs where some numbers have descenders. This corresponds to the onum OpenType feature.
1234567890
<p class="oldstyle-nums ...">1234567890</p>Use the proportional-nums utility to use numeric glyphs that have proportional widths (rather than uniform/tabular). This corresponds to the pnum OpenType feature.
12121
90909
<p class="proportional-nums ...">12121</p>
<p class="proportional-nums ...">90909</p>Use the tabular-nums utility to use numeric glyphs that have uniform/tabular widths (rather than proportional). This corresponds to the tnum OpenType feature.
12121
90909
<p class="tabular-nums ...">12121</p>
<p class="tabular-nums ...">90909</p>Use the diagonal-fractions utility to replace numbers separated by a slash with common diagonal fractions. This corresponds to the frac OpenType feature.
1/2 3/4 5/6
<p class="diagonal-fractions ...">1/2 3/4 5/6</p>Use the stacked-fractions utility to replace numbers separated by a slash with common stacked fractions. This corresponds to the frac OpenType feature. Very few fonts seem to support this feature — we've used Ubuntu Mono here.
1/2 3/4 5/6
<p class="stacked-fractions ...">1/2 3/4 5/6</p>Use the normal-nums propery to reset numeric font variants. This is usually useful for resetting a font feature at a particular breakpoint:
<p class="slashed-zero tabular-nums md:normal-nums ...">12345</p>To control font-variant-numeric property of an element at a specific breakpoint, add a {screen}: prefix to any existing font-variant-numeric utility. For example, use md:tabular-nums to apply the tabular-nums utility at only medium screen sizes and above.
<div class="proportional-nums md:tabular-nums">
<!-- ... -->
</div>For more information about Tailwind's responsive design features, check out the Responsive Design documentation.
By default, only responsive variants are generated for font variant numeric utilities.
You can control which variants are generated for the font variant numeric utilities by modifying the fontVariantNumeric property in the variants section of your tailwind.config.js file.
For example, this config will also generate hover and focus variants:
// tailwind.config.js
module.exports = {
variants: {
extend: {
// ...
+ fontVariantNumeric: ['hover', 'focus'],
}
}
}If you don't plan to use the font variant numeric utilities in your project, you can disable them entirely by setting the fontVariantNumeric property to false in the corePlugins section of your config file:
// tailwind.config.js
module.exports = {
corePlugins: {
// ...
+ fontVariantNumeric: false,
}
}