Socket
Socket
Sign inDemoInstall

github.com/pmndrs/use-gesture

Package Overview
Dependencies
0
Alerts
File Explorer

Install Socket

Detect and block malicious and high-risk dependencies

Install

    github.com/pmndrs/use-gesture


Version published

Readme

Source

react-use-gesture

npm (tag) npm bundle size NPM BuildStatus

React-use-gesture is a hook that lets you bind richer mouse and touch events to any component or view. With the data you receive, it becomes trivial to set up gestures, and often takes no more than a few lines of code.

You can use it stand-alone, but to make the most of it you should combine it with an animation library like react-spring, though you can most certainly use any other.

The demos are real click them!

Api

Simple example

import { useSpring, animated } from 'react-spring'
import { useDrag } from 'react-use-gesture'

function PullRelease() {
  const [{ xy }, set] = useSpring(() => ({ xy: [0, 0] }))

  // 1. Define the gesture
  const bind = useDrag(({ down, movement }) => set({ xy: down ? movement : [0, 0] }))

  return (
    <animated.div
      // 2. Bind it to a component
      {...bind()}
      style={{ transform: xy.to((x, y) => `translate3D(${x}px, ${y}px, 0)`) }} />

The example above makes a div draggable so that it follows your mouse on drag, and returns to its initial position on release.

➡️ Why using react-spring instead of React.useState?

Available hooks

React-use-gesture exports several hooks that can handle different gestures.

HookDescription
useDragHandles the drag gesture
useMoveHandles mouse move events (touch devices not supported)
useHoverHandles mouse over events (touch devices not supported)
useScrollHandles scroll events
useWheelHandles wheel events
usePinchHandles pinch events
useGestureHandles multiple gestures in one hook (read more here)

Gesture event state

Every time a handler is called, it will get passed a gesture state that includes the source event and adds multiple attributes such as speed, previous value, and much mroe.

useDrag, useScroll, useWheel, useHover event state
const bind = useDrag(({
  event,      // * the source event
              // * event.gesture indicates which gesture originated the event
  xy,         // [x,y] position of the pointer or scroll value for useScroll or useWheel
  previous,   // * previous xy
  initial,    // * xy value when the gesture has started
  delta,      // * delta between current and previous values (xy - previous)
  movement,   // * last gesture offset (xy - initial)
  offset,     // * offset since the first gesture (movement with book-keeping)
  vxvy,       // [vx, vy] momentum / speed of the gesture
  velocity,   // combined moment / speed of the gesture
  distance,   // offset distance
  direction,  // * [dirx, diry] direction per axis
  time,       // * timestamp of the current gesture
  first,      // * true when it's the first event
  last,       // * true when it's the last event
  active,     // * true when the gesture is active
  memo,       // * stores the value returned by your handler during its previous run
  cancel,     // * function you can call to interrupt relevant gestures (drag and pinch only)
  canceled,   // * whether the gesture has been canceled (drag and pinch only)
  down,       // * true when a mouse button or touch is down
  buttons,    // * buttons pressed (see https://developer.mozilla.org/fr/docs/Web/API/MouseEvent/button)
  touches     // * numbers of touches pressing the screen
  shiftKey, altKey, ctrlKey, metaKey,    // * true when modifier keys are pressed
  args        // * arguments you passed to bind
}) => {
    /* gesture logic */
  }
)

➡️ How do I use memo?

usePinch event state

Pinch is about scaling and rotating, therefore the keys xy and vxvy are renamed da (for distance and angle) and vdva respectively.

const bind = usePinch(({
  da,         // [d,a] absolute distance and angle of the two pointers
  vdva,       // momentum / speed of the distance and rotation
  origin      // coordinates of the center between the two touch event
}) => {
  /* gesture logic */
  }
)

Gesture options

You can pass a an object as an optional second argument to use[Gesture] hooks to customize their behavior.

const bind = useScroll(handler, {
  // lets you specify a dom node or ref you want to attach the gesture to
  domTarget: undefined,
  // the event config attribute lets you configure `passive` and `capture` options passed to event listeners
  event: { passive: true, capture: false },
  // uses PointerEvent handlers for compatible gestures (disabled by default)
  dragDelay: false // you can set a delay in ms that will prevent drag from triggering if you just "click" on your element
  pointerEvents: false,
  // lets you specify which window element the gesture should use.
  window: window,
  // enables or disables gestures
  enabled: true,
  // enables or disables gestures individually (relevant for the useGesture hook)
  drag: true,
  pinch: true,
  scroll: true,
  wheel: true,
  move: true
})

➡️ How do I use domTarget?

➡️ See this thread for a relevant use case of window.

Advanced usage

useGesture hook: supporting multiple gestures at once

If you want your component to support multiple gestures at once, it is preferred that you use the useGesture hook as below.

const bind = useGesture({
  onDrag: state => {...},     // fires on drag
  onPinch: state => {...},    // fires on pinch
  onScroll: state => {...},   // fires on scroll
  onHover: state => {...},    // fires on mouse enter, mouse leave
  onMove: state => {...},     // fires on mouse move over the element
  onWheel: state => {...}     // fires on mouse wheel over the element
})
on[Gesture]Start and on[Gesture]End handlers

Drag, pinch, move, scroll and wheel gestures also have two additional handlers that let you perform actions when they start or end. For example, onScrollEnd fires when the user finished scrolling.

Note #1: on[Gesture]Start and on[Gesture]End methods are provided as a commodity. on[Gesture] handlers also receive first and last properties that indicate if the event fired is the first (i.e. gesture has started) or the last one (i.e. gesture has ended).

// this:
useGesture({ onDragStart: doStuffOnStart, onDragEnd:doStuffOnEnd })

// is equivalent to this:
useDrag(({first, last}) {
  if (first) { /* do stuff on drag start */ }
  if (last) { /* do stuff on drag end */ }
})
Adding gestures to dom nodes

React-use-gesture also supports adding handlers to dom nodes directly (or the window or document objects). In that case, you shouldn't spread the bind() object returned by use[Gesture] hooks as a prop, but use the React.useEffect hook as below.

// this will add a scroll listener to the window
const bind = useScroll(state => doStuff, { domTarget: window })
React.useEffect(bind, [bind])

You can also directly pass a ref to domTarget:

const myRef = React.useRef(null)
// this will add a scroll listener the div
const bind = useScroll(state => doStuff, { domTarget: myRef })
React.useEffect(bind, [bind])
/*...*/
return <div ref={myRef} />

Note that using useEffect will also take care of removing event listeners when the component is unmounted.

How do I use memo?

This demo reads out further data like velocity and direction to calculate decay. memo in this case is a simple storage that picks up whatever value you (optionally) return inside the event handler. It's valid as long as the gesture is active. Without this you would need to store the initial pos value somewhere else and conditionally update it when the gesture begins.

const [{ pos }, set] = useSpring(() => ({ pos: [0, 0] }))
const bind = useDrag(({ active, movement, velocity, direction, memo = pos.getValue() }) => {
  set({
    pos: addV(movement, memo),
    immediate: active,
    config: { velocity: scale(direction, velocity), decay: true },
  })
  return memo
})
return <animated.div {...bind()} style={{ transform: pos.to((x, y) => `translate3d(${x}px,${y}px,0)`) }} />
Using PointerEvents

You can set gestures to use PointerEvent instead of traditional mouse or touch events. It might be useful if you use React-three-fiber. Note that only drag, move and hover gestures currently support this option.

const bind = useDrag(fn, { pointerEvents: true })

Other examples

Utilities

React-use-gesture also exports two methods that add or substract vectors formed as arrays. They might be handy in the case you need to manipulate positions.

import { addV, subV } from 'react-use-gesture'

const sum = addV([10, 10], [5, 5]) // => [15, 15]
const sub = subV([10, 10], [5, 5]) // => [5, 5]

Frequently Asked Questions

Why using react-spring instead of React.useState?

Simply because setting state in the gesture handler would re-render the component on each gesture frame, which isn't always good for performance. react-spring lets us animate components without triggering renders. You could still use useState if you'd like though!

️What are the differences between using use[Gesture] hooks and adding listeners manually?

Not a lot! Essentially these use[Gesture] hooks simplify the implementation of the drag and pinch gestures, calculate kinematics values you wouldn't get out of the box from the listeners, and debounce move, scroll and wheel events to let you know when they end.

Why onMove when onDrag already exists?

onDrag only fires while you touch or press the element. You just need to hover your mouse above the element to trigger onMove.

Why onWheel and onScroll?

Scrolling and wheeling are structurally different events although they produce similar results (i.e. scrolling a page). First of all, wheel is a mouse-only event. Then, for onScroll to be fired, the element you're scrolling needs to actually scroll, therefore have content overflowing, while you just need to wheel over an element to trigger onWheel. If you use react-three-fiber, onWheel might prove useful to simulate scroll on canvas elements.

Accessing source event triggers a warning in the console!

You're probably trying to access an event in onScroll, onMove or onWheel handlers. The last event is debounced, and therefore not accessible asynchronously because of how React pools events. A possible solution would be to make sure the event is not part of the last state update:

useScroll(({ event, last }) => {
  !last && event.preventDefault() // <-- event will not be accessed in the last event
})
Why do I need to return memo?

As you've seen in some examples, whenever memo is used, it is imperatively returned in the handler function. Essentially memo is a gesture state attribute that is undefined when the gesture starts, but then takes the return value of the handler function.

In many use cases, we want memo to hold the original value of our element position when the gesture starts so that it becomes our point of reference when adding the gesture movement. So we set memo to the value of our position when memo is undefined, which is in fact when the gesture starts. Usually it looks like so:

const [{ x }, set] = useSpring(() => ({ x: 0 }))
const bind = useDrag(({ movement: [mx], memo = x.getValue() }) => {
  set({ x: ox + memo })
  return memo
})

If we don’t return memo, then memo will remain undefined and in the next drag frame memo will take again the value of x, which will have updated in the meantime (therefore not being the point of reference when the gesture starts anymore).

It may sound silly but returning memo makes sure that we continue holding a reference to the initial value of memo, ie the original value of x when the gesture started.

Why is drag being triggered when I just click on an element?

This is typically a-feature-not-a-bug situation 🙃 Drag is triggered as soon as you mouse down on your component, which means it will be triggered when you "just" briefly click on it. However, there is an option to not trigger the drag before a certain delay, using the config option dragDelay.

// using the default delay
const bind = useDrag(() => {
  console.log(`Won't show if you hold your mouse less than 180ms`)
}, { dragDelay: true })

// using a custom delay
const bind = useDrag(() => {
  console.log(`Won't show if you hold your mouse less than 1000ms`)
}, { dragDelay: 1000 })
Why am I getting warnings from preventDefault() after I pass { passive: false }

The basic use of <Component {...bind()) /> passes the task of attaching listeners to React. React does not (yet) support binding passive listeners via props. To have useGesture attach the listeners, you must also use a domTarget. This is only required if you plan to preventDefault or cancel the event.

FAQs

Last updated on 23 Oct 2019

Did you know?

Socket for GitHub automatically highlights issues in each pull request and monitors the health of all your open source dependencies. Discover the contents of your packages and block harmful activity before you install or update your dependencies.

Install

Related posts

SocketSocket SOC 2 Logo

Product

  • Package Alerts
  • Integrations
  • Docs
  • Pricing
  • FAQ
  • Roadmap

Stay in touch

Get open source security insights delivered straight into your inbox.


  • Terms
  • Privacy
  • Security

Made with ⚡️ by Socket Inc