Transforms
Utilities for transforming elements.
| Class | Styles | 
|---|---|
| transform-(<custom-property>) | transform: var(<custom-property>); | 
| transform-[<value>] | transform: <value>; | 
| transform-none | transform: none; | 
| transform-gpu | transform: translateZ(0) var(--tw-rotate-x) var(--tw-rotate-y) var(--tw-rotate-z) var(--tw-skew-x) var(--tw-skew-y); | 
| transform-cpu | transform: var(--tw-rotate-x) var(--tw-rotate-y) var(--tw-rotate-z) var(--tw-skew-x) var(--tw-skew-y); | 
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="scale-150 transform-gpu">  <!-- ... --></div>Use the transform-cpu utility to force things back to the CPU if you need to undo this conditionally.
Use the transform-none utility to remove all of the transforms on an element at once:
<div class="skew-y-3 md:transform-none">  <!-- ... --></div>Use the transform-[<value>] syntax to set the transform based on a completely custom value:
<div class="transform-[matrix(1,2,3,4,5,6)] ...">  <!-- ... --></div>For CSS variables, you can also use the transform-(<custom-property>) syntax:
<div class="transform-(--my-transform) ...">  <!-- ... --></div>This is just a shorthand for transform-[var(<custom-property>)] that adds the var() function for you automatically.