2.3.1 • Published 3 years ago

@galiojs/classnames v2.3.1

Weekly downloads
-
License
MIT
Repository
github
Last release
3 years ago

Classnames

NPM version Node.js CI NPM Weekly Downloads License Supported by Thinkmill

A simple JavaScript utility for conditionally joining classNames together.

Install with npm, or Yarn:

# via npm
npm install classnames

# or Yarn (note that it will automatically save the package to your `dependencies` in `package.json`)
yarn add classnames

Use with Node.js, or webpack:

import classNames from 'classnames';
classNames('foo', 'bar'); // => 'foo bar'

Project philosophy

We take the stability and performance of this package seriously, because it is run millions of times a day in browsers all around the world. Updates are thoroughly reviewed for performance impacts before being released, and we have a comprehensive test suite.

Classnames follows the SemVer standard for versioning.

There is also a Changelog.

Usage

The classNames function takes any number of arguments which can be a string or object. The argument 'foo' is short for { foo: true }. If the value associated with a given key is falsy, that key won't be included in the output.

classNames('foo', 'bar'); // => 'foo bar'
classNames('foo', { bar: true }); // => 'foo bar'
classNames({ 'foo-bar': true }); // => 'foo-bar'
classNames({ 'foo-bar': false }); // => ''
classNames({ foo: true }, { bar: true }); // => 'foo bar'
classNames({ foo: true, bar: true }); // => 'foo bar'

// lots of arguments of various types
classNames('foo', { bar: true, duck: false }, 'baz', { quux: true }); // => 'foo bar baz quux'

// other falsy values are just ignored
classNames(null, false, 'bar', undefined, 0, 1, { baz: null }, ''); // => 'bar 1'

Arrays will be recursively flattened as per the rules above:

const arr = ['b', { c: true, d: false }];
classNames('a', arr); // => 'a b c'

Dynamic class names with ES2015

If you're in an environment that supports computed keys (available in ES2015 and Babel) you can use dynamic class names:

const buttonType = 'primary';
classNames({ [`btn-${buttonType}`]: true });

Usage with React.js

This package is the official replacement for classSet, which was originally shipped in the React.js Addons bundle.

One of its primary use cases is to make dynamic and conditional className props simpler to work with (especially more so than conditional string manipulation). So where you may have the following code to generate a className prop for a <button> in React:

function Button(props) {
  let btnClass = 'btn';

  if (props.isPressed) {
    btnClass += ' btn-pressed';
  }
  
  if (props.isHovered) {
    btnClass += ' btn-over';
  }

  return <button className={btnClass}>{props.label}</button>;
}

You can express the conditional classes more simply as an object:

import classNames from 'classnames';

function Button(props) {
  const btnClass = classNames({
    btn: true,
    'btn-pressed': props.isPressed,
    'btn-over': !props.isPressed && props.isHovered
  });

  return <button className={btnClass}>{props.label}</button>;
}

Because you can mix together object, array and string arguments, supporting optional className props is also simpler as only truthy arguments get included in the result:

const btnClass = classNames('btn', props.className, {
  'btn-pressed': props.isPressed,
  'btn-over': !props.isPressed && props.isHovered
});

Alternate dedupe version

There is an alternate version of classNames available which correctly dedupes classes and ensures that falsy classes specified in later arguments are excluded from the result set.

This version is slower (about 5x) so it is offered as an opt-in.

To use the dedupe version with Node.js, or webpack:

import classNames from 'classnames/dedupe';

classNames('foo', 'foo', 'bar'); // => 'foo bar'
classNames('foo', { foo: false, bar: true }); // => 'bar'

Alternate bind version (for css-modules)

If you are using css-modules, or a similar approach to abstract class "names" and the real className values that are actually output to the DOM, you may want to use the bind variant.

Note that in ES2015 environments, it may be better to use the "dynamic class names" approach documented above.

import classNames from 'classnames/bind';

const styles = {
  foo: 'abc',
  bar: 'def',
  baz: 'xyz'
};

const cx = classNames.bind(styles);
const className = cx('foo', ['bar'], { baz: true }); // => "abc def xyz"

Real-world example:

/* components/submit-button.js */
import classNames from 'classnames/bind';
import styles from './submit-button.css';

const cx = classNames.bind(styles);

export default function SubmitButton(props) {
  const text = props.store.submissionInProgress ? 'Processing...' : 'Submit';
  const className = cx({
    base: true,
    inProgress: props.store.submissionInProgress,
    error: props.store.errorOccurred,
    disabled: props.form.valid,
  });

  return <button className={className}>{text}</button>;
}

Polyfills needed to support older browsers

classNames >=2.0.0

Array.isArray: see MDN for details about unsupported older browsers (e.g. <= IE8) and a simple polyfill.

LICENSE MIT

Copyright (c) 2018 Jed Watson. Copyright of the Typescript bindings are respective of each contributor listed in the definition file.