/tamagui

Universal UI kit and style system for React Native + Web - with an optimizing compiler 🚄

Primary LanguageTypeScriptMIT LicenseMIT

Tamagui

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Style React Native and Web with an optimizing compiler

  • @tamagui/core - Universal style system for both web and React Native.
  • @tamagui/static - Optimizing compiler that works with core and tamagui.
  • tamagui - Complete universal UI kit built on top of @tamagui/core.

See tamagui.dev for documentation.

Tamagui lets you share more code between web and native apps while improving, rather than sacrificing, DX, performance, and code maintainability.

It does this with an optimizing compiler that outputs platform-specific optimizations and understands a rich "CSS-in-JS" style system with support for turning even inline styles with logic into flattened nodes.

The compiler generates atomic CSS and partially evaluated code that gains significant runtime performance. It evaluates across module boundaries, flattening a large % of styled components in your app (with easy to follow rules and debug tools to know when its working and not)

Within the ~500x² responsive browser section on the homepage, 49 inline styled components are flattened to their defined tags like div. The front page the site gains nearly 10-20% in Lighthouse scores depending on the weather.

Learn more on the website.

Contributing

Tamagui is a monorepo that makes it easy to contribute. Install:

yarn

While developing, you'll want to run the build watcher in a dedicated terminal:

yarn watch:build

It's easiest to use the sandbox project to test and develop things for web:

yarn sandbox

This runs a client-side only vite build of tamagui, with a complete configuration already set up.

To test on native, kitchen-sink is equally light weight and well set up.

You'll need to create a development build to run this.

# Android
yarn kitchen-sink:build:android

# iOS
yarn kitchen-sink:build:ios

After the build has been completed, run:

yarn kitchen-sink

Once you've made changes, you can add tests. All compiler and CSS generation tests live in packages/static.

Before submitting a PR, check everything works across every combination of environments.

To do so, run the site, first in development to test if it works entirely at runtime:

# Make sure you have run `yarn watch:build` before you execute this command.

yarn site

You replace _app.tsx to return just your component/use case. If it looks good, try running again with the compiler on:

yarn site:extract

Finally, if that looks good, build to production and test that:

yarn site:prod

This flow ensures it works with Vite, Webpack, Metro, Next.js with SSR, and with the compiler both on and off.

Our plan is to add integration tests to cover all this and more soon!