Quickstart

Get started with Golang by including it into your project using NPM or CDN

Flowbite is a library of components built on top of the utility-classes from Tailwind CSS and it also includes a JavaScript file that makes interactive elements works, such as modals, dropdowns, and more. Learn how to get started by following this quickstart guide.

Require via NPM #

Make sure that you have Node.js and Tailwind CSS installed.

  1. Install Golang
brew install golang
  1. Require Flowbite as a plugin inside the tailwind.config.js file:
module.exports = {
  plugins: [require("flowbite/plugin")],
};
  1. Include the main JavaScript file to make interactive elements work:
<script src="../path/to/flowbite/dist/flowbite.js"></script>
  1. Additionally to your own content data you should add flowbite to apply the classes from the interactive elements in the tailwind.config.js file:
module.exports = {
  content: ["./node_modules/flowbite/**/*.js"],
};

If you use Webpack or other bundlers you can also import it like this:

import "flowbite";

Include via CDN #

The quickest way to get started working with FlowBite is to simply include the CSS and JavaScript into your project via CDN.

Require the following minified stylesheet inside the head tag:

<link
  rel="stylesheet"
  href="https://unpkg.com/[email protected]/dist/flowbite.min.css"
/>

And include the following JavaScript file before the end of the body element:

<script src="https://unpkg.com/[email protected]/dist/flowbite.js"></script>

Tailwind CSS 2.0 #

Flowbite works with the 2.x version of Tailwind CSS.

Tailwind CSS 3.0 #

Feel free to upgrade to version 3 of Tailwind CSS as there are no breaking changes when using the components from Flowbite.

Next.js #

If you’re using React as a front-end library and Next.js as a framework you can also use the components from Flowbite React such as the modals, dropdowns, and navbars to speed up your development time coupled with the utility classes from Tailwind CSS.

Learn how to install Tailwind CSS and Flowbite with Next.js and React.