A higher-order component that displaces your component into a remote region of the DOM. When your component mounts, it renders to the end of document.body
(or into any specified DOM node), instead of its expected place within the React component tree; but it still maintains its normal life cycle within the tree, mounting, updating, and unmounting as expected.
This is useful when the HTML source order enforced by React's component tree won't serve your purposes. For example: if initialization and props for a modal or an obstructive overlay (e.g. "Loading...") will come from some component deeply nested within you app, but you want to render the modal or overlay as a direct child of document.body
so that you can easily position
it and set its z-index
.
npm install react-displace
You'll need to be using a bundler like Browserify, Webpack, or Rollup.
dist/displace.js
is the Babel-compiled code that you will use.
Version 2.3+ uses React 16's Portals, if available. If not, it resorts to the old ways, so is still compatible with previous versions of React.
Version 2+ is compatible with React >=0.14.x.
Version 1+ is compatible with React 0.13.x.
IE9+.
react-displace is a "higher-order component": a function that takes your component as an argument and returns a new component that includes your component wrapped in some special functionality.
It has a simple signature:
const DisplacedComponent = displace(YourComponent[, options]);
Type: DOM node or string selector
By default, the displaced component is appended to a new <div>
attached directly to document.body
. If instead you would like to specify a node that the component should be displaced to, do that with renderTo
.
If renderTo
is a DOM node, the displaced component will be rendered there.
If renderTo
is a selector string, it is passed to document.querySelector()
, and the displaced component will be rendered to that result.
const React = require('react');
const displace = require('react-displace');
class Foo extends React.Component { .. }
const FooDisplacedToBody = displace(Foo);
const FooDisplacedToBar = displace(Foo, document.getElementById('bar'));
const FooDisplacedToBaz = displace(Foo, '#baz');
In the example above, you can use any FooDisplacedTo*
exactly as you would use Foo
; and any props
you provide to FooDisplacedTo*
will be passed through to its internal Foo
component. (e.g. If Foo
has a prop
called severity
, so does FooDisplacedTo*
.)
The only differences are that all of the FooDisplacedTo*
components will be rendered to some special place in the DOM, instead of being inserted wherever it is used within the React component tree.
FooDisplacedToBody
will be rendered into a new<div>
appended directly todocument.body
,FooDisplacedToBar
andFooDisplacedToBaz
will be appended into their designated containers.
The FooDisplacedTo*
components will also have an additional prop
: mounted
. The mounted
prop can be used to declare whether the component should be rendered or not — which can also be done by actually mounting and unmounting the component.
So let's say you have the following HTML:
<div id="app-container"></div>
<div id="bar"></div>
<div id="baz"></div>
And you have something like the following JS:
const React = require('react');
const displace = require('react-displace');
class Foo extends React.Component { .. }
const FooDisplacedToBody = displace(Foo);
const FooDisplacedToBar = displace(Foo, document.getElementById('bar'));
const FooDisplacedToBaz = displace(Foo, '#baz');
class App extends React.Component {
render() {
return (
<div id="rendered-app">
<Foo text='in my normal place' />
<FooDisplacedToBody text='displaced to body' />
<FooDisplacedToBar text='displaced to bar' />
<FooDisplacedToBaz text='displaced to baz' />
</div>
);
},
}
What ends up rendering should look something like this:
<div id="app-container">
<div id="rendered-app">
<div>in my normal place</div>
</div>
</div>
<div id="bar">
<div>displaced to bar</div>
</div>
<div id="baz">
<div>displaced to baz</div>
</div>
<div>
<div>displaced to body</div>
</div>
The component that you pass to displace()
is available on the class it returns as the static property WrappedComponent
.
class MyComponent extends React.Component { .. }
const MyComponentDisplaced = displace(MyComponent);
MyComponentDisplaced.WrappedComponent === MyComponent; // true
Please note that this project is released with a Contributor Code of Conduct. By participating in this project you agree to abide by its terms.
Lint with npm run lint
.
Test with npm run jest
.
- Will my displaced element understand the
context
from its React element tree? Yes!
- If there is no
document
(e.g. usingReactDOMServer.renderToString()
server-side), this thing won't work, so it just returns a component that renders nothing. You'll have to initiate it when there is adocument
.