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@unocss/vite

The Vite plugin for UnoCSS. Ships with the unocss package.

Installation

npm i -D unocss
// vite.config.ts
import Unocss from 'unocss/vite'

export default {
  plugins: [
    Unocss({ /* options */ }),
  ],
}

Add uno.css to your main entry:

// main.ts
import 'uno.css'

Presetless usage

This plugin does not come with any default presets. If you are building a meta framework on top of UnoCSS, see this file for an example to bind the default presets.

npm i -D @unocss/vite
// vite.config.ts
import Unocss from '@unocss/vite'

export default {
  plugins: [
    Unocss({
      presets: [
        /* no presets by default */
      ],
      /* options */
    }),
  ],
}

Modes

The Vite plugin comes with a set of modes that enable different behaviors.

global (default)

This is the default mode for the plugin: in this mode you need to add the import of uno.css on your entry point.

This mode enables a set of Vite plugins for build and for dev with HMR support.

The generated css will be a global stylesheet injected on the index.html.

vue-scoped

This mode will inject generated CSS to Vue SFC's <style scoped> for isolation.

svelte-scoped

This mode will inject generated CSS to Svelte's <style> for isolation.

shadow-dom

Since Web Components uses Shadow DOM, there is no way to style content directly from a global stylesheet (unless you use custom css vars, those will penetrate the Shadow DOM), you need to inline the generated css by the plugin into the Shadow DOM style.

To inline the generated css, you only need to configure the plugin mode to shadow-dom and include @unocss-placeholder magic placeholder on each web component style css block. If you are defining your Web Components in Vue SFCs and want to define custom styles alongside UnoCSS, you can wrap placeholder in a CSS comment to avoid syntax errors in your IDE.

per-module (Experimental)

This mode will generate a CSS sheet for each module, can be scoped.

dist-chunk (Experimental)

This mode will generate a CSS sheet for each code chunk on build, great for MPA.

"Design in DevTools"

Because of limitation of "on-demand" where the DevTools don't know those you haven't used in your source code yet. So if you want to try how things work by directly changing the classes in DevTools, just add the following lines to your main entry.

import 'uno.css'
import 'virtual:unocss-devtools'

⚠️ Please use it with caution, under the hood we use MutationObserver to detect the class changes. Which means not only your manual changes but also the changes made by your scripts will be detected and included in the stylesheet. This could cause some misalignment between dev and the production build when you add dynamic classes based on some logic in script tags. We recommended adding your dynamic parts to the safelist or setup UI regression tests for your production build if possible.

virtual:unocss-devtools will be an empty bundle in production.

Frameworks

Some UI/App frameworks have some caveats that must be fixed to make it work, if you're using one of the following frameworks, just apply the suggestions.

React

WARNING: You should import the uno.css virtual module using import 'virtual:uno.css' instead import 'uno.css'. When you start the dev server first time, you'll need to update some style module to get it working (we're trying to fix it).

If you're using @vitejs/plugin-react:

// vite.config.js
import react from '@vitejs/plugin-react'
import Unocss from 'unocss/vite'

export default {
  plugins: [
    react(),
    Unocss({
      /* options */
    }),
  ],
}

or if you're using @vitejs/plugin-react-refresh:

// vite.config.js
import reactRefresh from '@vitejs/plugin-react-refresh'
import Unocss from 'unocss/vite'

export default {
  plugins: [
    reactRefresh(),
    Unocss({
      /* options */
    }),
  ],
}

If you're using @unocss/preset-attributify you should remove tsc from the build script.

If you are using @vitejs/plugin-react with @unocss/preset-attributify, you must add the plugin before @vitejs/plugin-react.

// vite.config.js
import react from '@vitejs/plugin-react'
import Unocss from 'unocss/vite'

export default {
  plugins: [
    Unocss({
      /* options */
    }),
    react(),
  ],
}

You have a React example project on examples/vite-react directory using both plugins, check the scripts on package.json and its Vite configuration file.

Preact

If you're using @preact/preset-vite:

// vite.config.js
import preact from '@preact/preset-vite'
import Unocss from 'unocss/vite'

export default {
  plugins: [
    preact(),
    Unocss({
      /* options */
    }),
  ],
}

or if you're using @prefresh/vite:

// vite.config.js
import prefresh from '@prefresh/vite'
import Unocss from 'unocss/vite'

export default {
  plugins: [
    prefresh(),
    Unocss({
      /* options */
    }),
  ],
}

If you're using @unocss/preset-attributify you should remove tsc from the build script.

If you are using @preact/preset-vite with @unocss/preset-attributify, you must add the plugin before @preact/preset-vite.

// vite.config.js
import preact from '@preact/preset-vite'
import Unocss from 'unocss/vite'

export default {
  plugins: [
    Unocss({
      /* options */
    }),
    preact(),
  ],
}

You have a Preact example project on examples/vite-preact directory using both plugins, check the scripts on package.json and its Vite configuration file.

Svelte

You must add the plugin before @sveltejs/vite-plugin-svelte.

To support class:foo and class:foo={bar} add the plugin and configure extractorSvelte on extractors option.

You can use simple rules with class:, for example class:bg-red-500={foo} or using shorcuts to include multiples rules, see src/App.svelte on linked example project below.

// vite.config.js
import { svelte } from '@sveltejs/vite-plugin-svelte'
import Unocss from 'unocss/vite'
import { extractorSvelte } from '@unocss/core'

export default {
  plugins: [
    Unocss({
      extractors: [extractorSvelte],
      /* more options */
    }),
    svelte(),
  ],
}

You have a Vite + Svelte example project on examples/vite-svelte directory.

Sveltekit

To support class:foo and class:foo={bar} add the plugin and configure extractorSvelte on extractors option.

You can use simple rules with class:, for example class:bg-red-500={foo} or using shortcuts to include multiples rules, see src/routes/+layout.svelte on linked example project below.

// vite.config.js
import { sveltekit } from '@sveltejs/kit/vite'
import UnoCSS from 'unocss/vite'
import { extractorSvelte } from '@unocss/core'

/** @type {import('vite').UserConfig} */
const config = {
  plugins: [
    UnoCSS({
      extractors: [extractorSvelte],
      /* more options */
    }),
    sveltekit(),
  ],
}

You have a SvelteKit example project on examples/sveltekit directory.

Svelte/SvelteKit Scoped Mode

Adding mode: 'svelte-scoped' to your UnoCSS config options will place styles right inside of each component's style block instead of in a global uno.css file. Due to automatic class name compilation, classes that depend on attributes in parent components (like dir="rtl" or .dark) will just work. Also, you can pass class to children components as long as you pass them using a prop named class, e.g. class="text-lg bg-red-100".

Support for class:foo and class:foo={bar} is already included. There is no need to add the extractorSvelte when using svelte-scoped mode.

Because there is no import 'uno.css' in your root +layout.svelte preflights and safelist classes have no where to be placed. Add the uno:preflights or uno:safelist attributes to the style block of any component where you want to place them. To use both globally, add the following to your root +layout.svelte:

<style uno:preflights uno:safelist global></style>

Alternatively, if you only want them to apply to a specific component just add them to that component's style tag and don't add the global attribute.

// vite.config.js
import { sveltekit } from '@sveltejs/kit/vite'
import UnoCSS from 'unocss/vite'

/** @type {import('vite').UserConfig} */
const config = {
  plugins: [
    UnoCSS({
      mode: 'svelte-scoped',
      /* options */
    }),
    sveltekit(),
  ],
}

There is a SvelteKit scoped example project in the examples/sveltekit-scoped directory with more detailed explanation of how this mode works.

Web Components

To work with web components you need to enable shadow-dom mode on the plugin.

Don't forget to remove the import for uno.css since the shadow-dom mode will not expose it and the application will not work.

// vite.config.js
import Unocss from 'unocss/vite'

export default {
  plugins: [
    Unocss({
      mode: 'shadow-dom',
      /* more options */
    }),
  ],
}

On each web component just add @unocss-placeholder to its style css block:

const template = document.createElement('template')
template.innerHTML = `
<style>
:host {...}
@unocss-placeholder
</style>
<div class="m-1em">
...
</div>
`

If you're using Lit:

@customElement('my-element')
export class MyElement extends LitElement {
  static styles = css`
    :host {...}
    @unocss-placeholder
  `
  // ...
}

You have a Web Components example project on examples/vite-lit directory.

::part built-in support

You can use ::part since the plugin supports it via shortcuts and using part-[<part-name>]:<rule|shortcut> rule from preset-mini, for example using it with simple rules like part-[<part-name>]:bg-green-500 or using some shortcut: check src/my-element.ts on linked example project below.

The part-[<part-name>]:<rule|shortcut> will work only with this plugin using the shadow-dom mode.

The plugin uses nth-of-type to avoid collisions with multiple parts in the same web component and for the same parts on distinct web components, you don't need to worry about it, the plugin will take care for you.

// vite.config.js
import Unocss from 'unocss/vite'

export default {
  plugins: [
    Unocss({
      mode: 'shadow-dom',
      shortcuts: [
        { 'cool-blue': 'bg-blue-500 text-white' },
        { 'cool-green': 'bg-green-500 text-black' },
      ],
      /* more options */
    }),
  ],
}

then in your web components:

// my-container-wc.ts
const template = document.createElement('template')
template.innerHTML = `
<style>
@unocss-placeholder
</style>
<my-wc-with-parts class="part-[cool-part]:cool-blue part-[another-cool-part]:cool-green">...</my-wc-with-parts>
`
// my-wc-with-parts.ts
const template = document.createElement('template')
template.innerHTML = `
<style>
@unocss-placeholder
</style>
<div>
  <div part="cool-part">...</div>
  <div part="another-cool-part">...</div>
</div>
`

Solid

WARNING: You should import the uno.css virtual module using import 'virtual:uno.css' instead import 'uno.css'. When you start the dev server first time, you'll need to update some style module to get it working (we're trying to fix it).

// vite.config.js
import solidPlugin from 'vite-plugin-solid'
import Unocss from 'unocss/vite'

export default {
  plugins: [
    solidPlugin(),
    Unocss({
      /* options */
    }),
  ],
}

You have a Vite + Solid example project on examples/vite-solid directory.

Elm

You need to add the vite-plugin-elm plugin before UnoCSS's plugin.

// vite.config.js
import { defineConfig } from 'vite'
import elmPlugin from 'vite-plugin-elm'
import Unocss from 'unocss/vite'

export default defineConfig({
  plugins: [
    elmPlugin(),
    Unocss({
      /* options */
    }),
  ],
})

You have a Vite + Elm example project on examples/vite-elm directory.

License

MIT License © 2021-PRESENT Anthony Fu