Use the
rotate-*
utilities to rotate an element.
rotate-0
<img class="rotate-0 ...">
<img class="rotate-45 ...">
<img class="rotate-90 ...">
<img class="rotate-180 ...">
To use a negative rotate value, prefix the class name with a dash to convert it to a negative value.
<img class="-rotate-45 ...">
To remove all of the transforms on an element at once, use the
transform-none
utility:
<div class="scale-75 translate-x-4 skew-y-3 md:transform-none">
</div>
This can be useful when you want to remove transforms conditionally, such as on hover or at a particular breakpoint.
If your transition performs better when rendered by the GPU instead of the CPU, you can force hardware acceleration by adding the
transform-gpu
utility:
<div class="rotate-45 transform-gpu">
</div>
Use
transform-cpu
to force things back to the CPU if you need to undo this conditionally.
Tailwind lets you conditionally apply utility classes in different states using variant modifiers. For example, use
hover
:
rotate-45
to only apply the
rotate-45
utility on
hover
.
<div class="hover:rotate-45">
</div>
For a complete list of all available state modifiers, check out the
Hover, Focus, & Other States
documentation.
You can also use variant modifiers to target media queries like responsive breakpoints, dark mode, prefers-reduced-motion, and more. For example, use
md:
rotate-45
to apply the
rotate-45
utility at only medium screen sizes and above.
<div class="md:rotate-45">
</div>
To learn more, check out the documentation on
Responsive Design
,
Dark Mode
and
other media query modifiers
.
By default, Tailwind includes a handful of general purpose
rotate
utilities. You can customize these values by editing
theme.rotate
or
theme.extend.rotate
in your
tailwind.config.js
file.
tailwind.config.js
module.exports = {
theme: {
extend: {
rotate: {
'17': '17deg',