Isn't Tailwind easy to understand when you look at the codebase, rather than putting in more effort to learn a pure CSS codebase? Isn't that part of the argument of Tailwind being easier to scale?
Isn't Tailwind easy to understand when you look at the codebase, rather than putting in more effort to learn a pure CSS codebase? Isn't that part of the argument of Tailwind being easier to scale?
> Isn't Tailwind easy to understand when you look at the codebase, rather than putting in more effort to learn a pure CSS codebase?
No, I don’t think that’s the case at all.
Isn't that part of the argument of Tailwind being easier to scale?
I think that was true at the beginning. But Tailwind is quickly approaching the multi-headed hydra it was trying to replace.
What exactly has changed about Tailwind in, like, years? There are a few more properties for new CSS features, a few convenience features (like size-x instead of w-x h-x for the same values of x), but other than that? If you've grown accustomed to the utility classes eight years ago, then disappeared under a rock until today, you should be able to continue working in an unrelated, Tailwind-using project immediately.