HubSpot/react-select-plus

Name: react-select-plus

Owner: HubSpot

Description: Fork of https://github.com/JedWatson/react-select with option group support

Created: 2016-02-04 19:16:44.0

Updated: 2018-05-18 03:09:41.0

Pushed: 2018-05-24 16:59:32.0

Homepage: http://github.hubspot.com/react-select-plus/

Size: 12277

Language: JavaScript

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README

React-Select-Plus

A fork of JedWatson/React-Select with support for option groups.

:rotating_light: Project status :rotating_light:

This fork is no longer actively maintained. The primary purpose of this project was to add option group support to react-select, a feature that will be supported in the upcoming react-select 2.0. Another alternative worth checking out is downshift, which provides low-level building blocks for building custom dropdown components.

Demo & Examples

Live demo: github.hubspot.com/react-select-plus/

Installation

The easiest way to use react-select is to install it from npm and build it into your app with Webpack.

 add react-select-plus

You can then import react-select-plus and its styles in your application as follows:

rt Select from 'react-select-plus';
rt 'react-select-plus/dist/react-select-plus.css';

You can also use the standalone UMD build by including dist/react-select-plus.js and dist/react-select-plus.css in your page. If you do this you'll also need to include the dependencies. For example:

ipt src="https://unpkg.com/react@15.6.1/dist/react.js"></script>
ipt src="https://unpkg.com/react-dom@15.6.1/dist/react-dom.js"></script>
ipt src="https://unpkg.com/prop-types@15.5.10/prop-types.js"></script>
ipt src="https://unpkg.com/classnames@2.2.5/index.js"></script>
ipt src="https://unpkg.com/react-input-autosize@2.0.0/dist/react-input-autosize.js"></script>
ipt src="https://unpkg.com/react-select-plus/dist/react-select-plus.js"></script>

k rel="stylesheet" href="https://unpkg.com/react-select-plus/dist/react-select-plus.css">
Usage

React-Select generates a hidden text field containing the selected value, so you can submit it as part of a standard form. You can also listen for changes with the onChange event property.

Options should be provided as an Array of Objects, each with a value and label property for rendering and searching. You can use a disabled property to indicate whether the option is disabled or not.

The value property of each option should be either a string or a number.

When the value is changed, onChange(selectedValueOrValues) will fire. Note that (as of 1.0) you must handle the change and pass the updated value to the Select.

rt React from 'react';
rt Select from 'react-select-plus';

s App extends React.Component {
ate = {
selectedOption: '',

ndleChange = (selectedOption) => {
this.setState({ selectedOption });
console.log(`Selected: ${selectedOption.label}`);

nder() {
const { selectedOption } = this.state;
const value = selectedOption && selectedOption.value;

return (
  <Select
    name="form-field-name"
    value={value}
    onChange={this.handleChange}
    options={[
      { value: 'one', label: 'One' },
      { value: 'two', label: 'Two' },
    ]}
  />
);


You can customise the valueKey and labelKey props to use a different option shape.

Option Groups

You can generate option groups by structuring your options in a nested way as follows:

t options = [
{
    label: 'Primary Colors', options: [
        { label: 'Yellow', value: 'yellow' },
        { label: 'Red', value: 'red' },
        { label: 'Blue', value: 'blue' }
    ]
},
{
    label: 'Secondary Colors', options: [
        { label: 'Orange', value: 'orange' },
        {
            label: 'Purple', options: [
                { label: 'Light Purple', value: 'light_purple' },
                { label: 'Medium Purple', value: 'medium_purple' },
                { label: 'Dark Purple', value: 'dark_purple' }
            ]
        },
        { label: 'Green', value: 'green' }
    ]
},
{
    label: 'White',
    value: 'white',
}

Custom classNames

You can provide a custom className prop to the <Select> component, which will be added to the base .Select className for the outer container.

The built-in Options renderer also support custom classNames, just add a className property to objects in the options array.

Multiselect options

You can enable multi-value selection by setting multi={true}. In this mode:

Accessibility Note

Selected values aren't focus targets, which means keyboard users can't tab to them, and are restricted to removing them using backspace in order. This isn't ideal and I'm looking at other options for the future; in the meantime if you want to use a custom valueComponent that implements tabIndex and keyboard event handling, see #2098 for an example.

Async options

If you want to load options asynchronously, use the Async export and provide a loadOptions Function.

The function takes two arguments String input, Function callbackand will be called when the input text is changed.

When your async process finishes getting the options, pass them to callback(err, data) in a Object { options: [] }.

The select control will intelligently cache options for input strings that have already been fetched. The cached result set will be filtered as more specific searches are input, so if your async process would only return a smaller set of results for a more specific query, also pass complete: true in the callback object. Caching can be disabled by setting cache to false (Note that complete: true will then have no effect).

Unless you specify the property autoload={false} the control will automatically load the default set of options (i.e. for input: '') when it is mounted.

rt { Async } from 'react-select-plus';

t getOptions = (input, callback) => {
tTimeout(() => {
callback(null, {
  options: [
    { value: 'one', label: 'One' },
    { value: 'two', label: 'Two' }
  ],
  // CAREFUL! Only set this to true when there are no more options,
  // or more specific queries will not be sent to the server.
  complete: true
});
 500);


nc
name="form-field-name"
loadOptions={getOptions}

Note about filtering async options

The Async component doesn't change the default behaviour for filtering the options based on user input, but if you're already filtering the options server-side you may want to customise or disable this feature (see filtering options below)

Async options with Promises

loadOptions supports Promises, which can be used in very much the same way as callbacks.

Everything that applies to loadOptions with callbacks still applies to the Promises approach (e.g. caching, autoload, …)

An example using the fetch API and ES6 syntax, with an API that returns an object like:

rt { Async } from 'react-select-plus';


ssuming the API returns something like this:
 const json = [
    { value: 'one', label: 'One' },
    { value: 'two', label: 'Two' }
 ]


t getOptions = (input) => {
turn fetch(`/users/${input}.json`)
.then((response) => {
  return response.json();
}).then((json) => {
  return { options: json };
});


nc
me="form-field-name"
lue="one"
adOptions={getOptions}

Async options loaded externally

If you want to load options asynchronously externally from the Select component, you can have the Select component show a loading spinner by passing in the isLoading prop set to true.

rt Select from 'react-select-plus';

isLoadingExternally = true;

ect
me="form-field-name"
Loading={isLoadingExternally}
.

User-created tags

The Creatable component enables users to create new tags within react-select. It decorates a Select and so it supports all of the default properties (eg single/multi mode, filtering, etc) in addition to a couple of custom ones (shown below). The easiest way to use it is like so:

rt { Creatable } from 'react-select-plus';

tion render (selectProps) {
turn <Creatable {...selectProps} />;

Combining Async and Creatable

Use the AsyncCreatable HOC if you want both async and creatable functionality. It ties Async and Creatable components together and supports a union of their properties (listed above). Use it as follows:

rt { AsyncCreatable } from 'react-select-plus';

tion render (props) {
 props can be a mix of Async, Creatable, and Select properties
turn (
<AsyncCreatable {...props} />


Filtering options

You can control how options are filtered with the following props:

matchProp and matchPos both default to "any". ignoreCase defaults to true. ignoreAccents defaults to true.

Advanced filters

You can also completely replace the method used to filter either a single option, or the entire options array (allowing custom sort mechanisms, etc.)

For multi-select inputs, when providing a custom filterOptions method, remember to exclude current values from the returned array of options.

Filtering large lists

The default filterOptions method scans the options array for matches each time the filter text changes. This works well but can get slow as the options array grows to several hundred objects. For larger options lists a custom filter function like react-select-fast-filter-options will produce better results.

Efficiently rendering large lists with windowing

The menuRenderer property can be used to override the default drop-down list of options. This should be done when the list is large (hundreds or thousands of items) for faster rendering. Windowing libraries like react-virtualized can then be used to more efficiently render the drop-down menu like so. The easiest way to do this is with the react-virtualized-select HOC. This component decorates a Select and uses the react-virtualized VirtualScroll component to render options. Demo and documentation for this component are available here.

You can also specify your own custom renderer. The custom menuRenderer property accepts the following named parameters:

| Parameter | Type | Description | |:—|:—|:—| | focusedOption | Object | The currently focused option; should be visible in the menu by default. | | focusOption | Function | Callback to focus a new option; receives the option as a parameter. | | labelKey | String | Option labels are accessible with this string key. | | optionClassName | String | The className that gets used for options | | optionComponent | ReactClass | The react component that gets used for rendering an option | | optionRenderer | Function | The function that gets used to render the content of an option | | options | Array<Object> | Ordered array of options to render. | | selectValue | Function | Callback to select a new option; receives the option as a parameter. | | valueArray | Array<Object> | Array of currently selected options. |

Updating input values with onInputChange

You can manipulate the input by providing a onInputChange callback that returns a new value. Please note: When you want to use onInputChange only to listen to the input updates, you still have to return the unchanged value!

tion cleanInput(inputValue) {
// Strip all non-number characters from the input
return inputValue.replace(/[^0-9]/g, "");


ect
name="form-field-name"
onInputChange={cleanInput}

Overriding default key-down behaviour with onInputKeyDown

Select listens to keyDown events to select items, navigate drop-down list via arrow keys, etc. You can extend or override this behaviour by providing a onInputKeyDown callback.

tion onInputKeyDown(event) {
switch (event.keyCode) {
    case 9:   // TAB
        // Extend default TAB behaviour by doing something here
        break;
    case 13: // ENTER
        // Override default ENTER behaviour by doing stuff here and then preventing default
        event.preventDefault();
        break;
}


ect
{...otherProps}
onInputKeyDown={onInputKeyDown}

Select Props

| Property | Type | Default | Description | |:—|:—|:—|:—| | aria-describedby | string | undefined | HTML ID(s) of element(s) that should be used to describe this input (for assistive tech) | | aria-label | string | undefined | Aria label (for assistive tech) | | aria-labelledby | string | undefined | HTML ID of an element that should be used as the label (for assistive tech) | | arrowRenderer | function | undefined | Renders a custom drop-down arrow to be shown in the right-hand side of the select: arrowRenderer({ onMouseDown, isOpen }). Won't render when set to null | autoBlur | boolean | false | Blurs the input element after a selection has been made. Handy for lowering the keyboard on mobile devices | | autofocus | boolean | undefined | deprecated; use the autoFocus prop instead | | autoFocus | boolean | undefined | autofocus the component on mount | | autoload | boolean | true | whether to auto-load the default async options set | | autosize | boolean | true | If enabled, the input will expand as the length of its value increases | | backspaceRemoves | boolean | true | whether pressing backspace removes the last item when there is no input value | | backspaceToRemoveMessage | string | 'Press backspace to remove {last label}' | prompt shown in input when at least one option in a multiselect is shown, set to '' to clear | | className | string | undefined | className for the outer element | | clearable | boolean | true | should it be possible to reset value | | clearAllText | string | 'Clear all' | title for the “clear” control when multi is true | | clearRenderer | function | undefined | Renders a custom clear to be shown in the right-hand side of the select when clearable true: clearRenderer() | | clearValueText | string | 'Clear value' | title for the “clear” control | | closeOnSelect | boolean | true | whether to close the menu when a value is selected | deleteRemoves | boolean | true | whether pressing delete key removes the last item when there is no input value | | delimiter | string | ',' | delimiter to use to join multiple values | | disabled | boolean | false | whether the Select is disabled or not | | escapeClearsValue | boolean | true | whether escape clears the value when the menu is closed | | filterOption | function | undefined | method to filter a single option (option, filterString) => boolean | | filterOptions | boolean or function | undefined | boolean to enable default filtering or function to filter the options array ([options], filterString, [values]) => [options] | | id | string | undefined | html id to set on the input element for accessibility or tests | ignoreAccents | boolean | true | whether to strip accents when filtering | | ignoreCase | boolean | true | whether to perform case-insensitive filtering | | inputProps | object | undefined | custom attributes for the Input (in the Select-control) e.g: {'data-foo': 'bar'} | | inputRenderer | function | undefined | renders a custom input component | | instanceId | string | increment | instance ID used internally to set html ids on elements for accessibility, specify for universal rendering | | isLoading | boolean | false | whether the Select is loading externally or not (such as options being loaded) | | joinValues | boolean | false | join multiple values into a single hidden input using the delimiter | | labelKey | string | 'label' | the option property to use for the label | | matchPos | string | 'any' | (any, start) match the start or entire string when filtering | | matchProp | string | 'any' | (any, label, value) which option property to filter on | | menuBuffer | number | 0 | buffer of px between the base of the dropdown and the viewport to shift if menu doesnt fit in viewport | | menuContainerStyle | object | undefined | optional style to apply to the menu container | | menuRenderer | function | undefined | Renders a custom menu with options; accepts the following named parameters: menuRenderer({ focusedOption, focusOption, options, selectValue, valueArray }) | | menuStyle | object | undefined | optional style to apply to the menu | | multi | boolean | undefined | multi-value input | | name | string | undefined | field name, for hidden <input /> tag | | noResultsText | string | 'No results found' | placeholder displayed when there are no matching search results or a falsy value to hide it (can also be a react component) | | onBlur | function | undefined | onBlur handler: function(event) {} | | onBlurResetsInput | boolean | true | Whether to clear input on blur or not. If set to false, it only works if onCloseResetsInput is false as well. | | onChange | function | undefined | onChange handler: function(newOption) {} | | onClose | function | undefined | handler for when the menu closes: function () {} | | onCloseResetsInput | boolean | true | whether to clear input when closing the menu through the arrow | | onFocus | function | undefined | onFocus handler: function(event) {} | | onInputChange | function | undefined | onInputChange handler/interceptor: function(inputValue: string): string | | onInputKeyDown | function | undefined | input keyDown handler; call event.preventDefault() to override default Select behaviour: function(event) {} | | onMenuScrollToBottom | function | undefined | called when the menu is scrolled to the bottom | | onOpen | function | undefined | handler for when the menu opens: function () {} | | onSelectResetsInput | boolean | true | whether the input value should be reset when options are selected. Also input value will be set to empty if 'onSelectResetsInput=true' and Select will get new value that not equal previous value. | | onValueClick | function | undefined | onClick handler for value labels: function (value, event) {} | | openOnClick | boolean | true | open the options menu when the control is clicked (requires searchable = true) | | openOnFocus | boolean | false | open the options menu when the control gets focus | | optionClassName: string | undefined | additional class(es) to apply to the

Async Props

| Property | Type | Default | Description | |:—|:—|:—|:—| | autoload | boolean | true | automatically call the loadOptions prop on-mount | | cache | object | undefined | Sets the cache object used for options. Set to false if you would like to disable caching. | loadingPlaceholder | string or node | 'Loading…' | label to prompt for loading search result | | loadOptions | function | undefined | function that returns a promise or calls a callback with the options: function(input, [callback]) |

Creatable properties

| Property | Type | Description | :—|:—|:—| | children | function | Child function responsible for creating the inner Select component. This component can be used to compose HOCs (eg Creatable and Async). Expected signature: (props: Object): PropTypes.element | | isOptionUnique | function | Searches for any matching option within the set of options. This function prevents duplicate options from being created. By default this is a basic, case-sensitive comparison of label and value. Expected signature: ({ option: Object, options: Array, labelKey: string, valueKey: string }): boolean | | isValidNewOption | function | Determines if the current input text represents a valid option. By default any non-empty string will be considered valid. Expected signature: ({ label: string }): boolean | | newOptionCreator | function | Factory to create new option. Expected signature: ({ label: string, labelKey: string, valueKey: string }): Object | | onNewOptionClick | function | new option click handler, it calls when new option has been selected. function(option) {} | | shouldKeyDownEventCreateNewOption | function | Decides if a keyDown event (eg its keyCode) should result in the creation of a new option. ENTER, TAB and comma keys create new options by default. Expected signature: ({ keyCode: number }): boolean | | promptTextCreator | function | Factory for overriding default option creator prompt label. By default it will read 'Create option “{label}“'. Expected signature: (label: String): String |

Methods

Use the focus() method to give the control focus. All other methods on <Select> elements should be considered private.

ocuses the input element
tance>.focus();

Contributing

See our CONTRIBUTING.md for information on how to contribute.

Thanks to the projects this was inspired by: Selectize (in terms of behaviour and user experience), React-Autocomplete (as a quality React Combobox implementation), as well as other select controls including Chosen and Select2.

License

MIT Licensed. Copyright (c) HubSpot 2017.


This work is supported by the National Institutes of Health's National Center for Advancing Translational Sciences, Grant Number U24TR002306. This work is solely the responsibility of the creators and does not necessarily represent the official views of the National Institutes of Health.