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by omer_balyali
882 days ago
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Tailwind is just a way of writing/architecting CSS. There is nothing in it that "enables" rich web applications which browsers doesn't let you do with (vanilla) CSS, at the end it's just using CSS under the hood (utility classes). And CSS is not the alternative to Tailwind; there are numerous ways to write/architect CSS and Tailwind is just one of them, very opinionated and rigid that you should follow it's way of doing it. But you don't need any specific tool to write CSS, that's the point of the article. Instead of learning/memorising CSS properties and values, you learn and memorise Tailwind classes which are just abstractions to regular CSS properties and values and you need to write them inside class tags. I think the lure of Tailwind comes from IDE integrations and its documentation. But it doesn't add any "new features" that enables rich web applications which CSS lacks in anyways. |
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