1.0.5 • Published 1 year ago

react-fade-modal v1.0.5

Weekly downloads
-
License
MIT
Repository
github
Last release
1 year ago

React Fade Modal

Responsive react modal with fade in-out effect included without any external libraries.

works with: React >= 16.8

Motivation

Most famous react modals refers to real DOM. This modal is 100% purely made using virtual DOM instead. Also, you can customize the UI based on your needs without worrying about css conflicts, thanks to the :where css pseudo-class and module.css. Not less important, extreme small size.

Getting Started

You can install the module via npm or yarn:

npm install react-fade-modal
yarn add react-fade-modal

Demo

Live Demo

Usage

Basic example

import {Modal} from 'react-fade-modal'

function App() {
    const [isOpen, setIsOpen] = useState(false)
    return (
       <div>
           <p>
               <div>Basic example</div>
               <button onClick={() => setIsOpen(true)}>click to open modal</button>
               {isOpen &&
                   <Modal
                       title={"Title"}
                       setIsOpen={setIsOpen}>
                       <div>
                           <p>Modal content.</p>
                       </div>
                   </Modal>
               }
           </p>      
       </div>
    );
}

Note that Modal does not accept an isOpen prop. You must put the component into a conditional wrap, so it will be unmounted and mounted every time the condition change.

ModalProvider Example

Sometimes, Modal does not render well when you are using in a complex nested DOM component.

In this case, it's better to use ModalProvider in order to ensure that the Modal is on top of the DOM and the graphic does not change:

import {ModalProvider} from 'react-fade-modal'

function App() {
    return (
        <ModalProvider>
            <Panel/>
        </ModalProvider>
    );
}

In this example, App.js render <Panel/> only. Let's call useModalContext:

import {useModalContext} from 'react-fade-modal'

const Panel = () => {
    const {showModal} = useModalContext()
    return <p>
        {items.map(item =>
            <Button onClick={() => {
                showModal({
                    title: 'Custom title',
                    children: <div>You can pass any component. This is the Item {item}</div>,
                    closeOnClickOutside: false
                })
            }}>
                item {item}
            </Button>)}
    </p>
}

Note that I could also call the context inside any child of <Panel/>, that's how the context work basically.

showModal is a function that accept any Modal props. You can pass props as object properties as shown in the example above.

More examples available on demo/src/App.tsx

Props

NameTypeDefaultDescription
setIsOpenFunctionrequiredShow the modal. Accept 1 boolean value
transitionDurationInMsnumber200Transition duration in milliseconds. Used for fade in-out the Modal
titlestring''Title of the Modal
childrenReactNodeundefinedAny JSX Component
closeOnClickOutsidebooleantrueIf true, the Modal will closed when you click outside
containerCssstring''Optional CSS Classes applied to Modal container. A grey background layer will be shown as default
modalCssstring''Optional CSS classes applied to the Modal itself
modalStyleCSSProperties{}Optional style applied to the Modal itself
titleCssstring''Optional CSS classes applied to the title
contentCssstring''Optional CSS classes applied to the children
closeIconCssstring''Optional CSS classes applied to the close icon
showCloseIconbooleantrueIf true, it will be rendered the default close icon
customCloseIconReactElementundefinedIf not undefined, this component will be rendered instead of the default close icon

No CSS Conflicts

Every css classes used in this component are written into module.css file and wrapped into :where pseudo-class, which gives them 0 specificity, so you can override current css properties through your custom css classes. More about :where pseudo-class, Specificity and the :where exception More about css modules

Project Structure

The project includes a demo folder initialized with Create React App.

When you run the command build from first-level package.json, a dist and a lib folder will be generated.

The lib folder will be placed automatically into the demo project.

You can move into demo directory and start project from its own package.json script, just like any other Create React App.

Questions

🐛 Did you find any bugs? Cool! Report it in "issues" section under the label "bug" and I'll check it.

🚀 Do you have any questions or feature request? Nice! Write it into "issues" section under the label "enhancement" and I'll check it.

⭐ Did you find this package useful and meet your requirements? Great! Consider to put a ⭐ into the GitHub project!

License

MIT