5

I want to give 2 box shadows using tailwind css

CSS:

button{
     box-shadow: inset 0px 0px 0px 1px var(--primary-500), inset 0px 0px 0px 2px red;
      }

This is what I'm able to achieve using tailwind css:

<button class="shadow-[inset_0_0_0_1px_var(--primary-500)]"> Hello World! </button>

4 Answers 4

7

To use multiple box-shadows you can use comma separated box-shadow's values inside square brackets.

<button
 class="shadow-[inset_0_0_0_1px_var(--primary-500),inset_0px_0px_0px_2px_red]">
 Hello World!
</button>
1
  • Aga's example is correct for using arbitrary values. Luke's info is still relevant if you want to add custom classes or modify Tailwind defaults.
    – kenput3r
    Mar 21, 2023 at 15:03
2

The shadow classes that come with Tailwind use multiple shadows, e.g. the class shadow translates to box-shadow: 0 1px 3px 0 rgb(0 0 0 / 0.1), 0 1px 2px -1px rgb(0 0 0 / 0.1); in CSS.

If you need to add additional shadows or customise these values, you can do so by editing theme.boxShadow or theme.extend.boxShadow in your tailwind.config.js file.

If a DEFAULT shadow is provided, it will be used for the non-suffixed shadow utility. Any other keys will be used as suffixes, for example the key '2' will create a corresponding shadow-2 utility.

2
0

You can also use the Tailwind Extended Shadows plugin to auto-generate box-shadow layers based on the "base" shadow, among other things like controlling shadow offset and spread... all with utility classes!

For example:

<div class="shadow-sm shadow-y-[4px] shadows-4 shadows-scale-2">...</div>

In the example, the default shadow-sm class is applied, but its y-offset is adjusted to 4px (via shadow-y-[4px]), and 3 additional shadow layers are auto-generated (thanks to the shadows-4 class.. you can choose between 2-8 layers). The shadow layers' offset/blur values are also scaled up using the multiplier specified by the shadows-scale-* class; you can even apply an easing function to the scaling math via shadows-ease-{in|out}.

Here's a demo playground: https://play.tailwindcss.com/Wk1G8cIkr3

Note: I authored this plugin -- very open to feedback!

0

I don't know exactly your issue but if someone is facing this issue where they want to apply multiple box shadows using Tailwind utilities inside class attribute and where some of the values are CSS variables like var(--box-shadow-top). Tailwind will be confused and will think that the arbitrary values are for shadow color!

You can try this:

shadow-[shadow:var(--box-shadow-top),inset_0_0_0_1px_var(--orange-9),var(--box-shadow-bottom)]

Please note shadow: inside the [...] to avoid ambiguity between box shadow and shadow color. Refer to Tailwind Docs for how to resolve issues like this.

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