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@researchgate/react-intersection-list
Advanced tools
React List Component using the Intersection Observer API
Agent Smith: ...we have no choice but to continue as planned. Deploy the sentinels. Immediately.
React Intersection List builds on top of React Intersection Observer, using a sentinel in the DOM to deliver a high-performance and smooth scrolling experience, even on low-end devices.
$ npm install --save @researchgate/react-intersection-list
And optionally the polyfill:
$ npm install --save intersection-observer
Next create a <List> and two instance methods as props children and
itemRenderer:
import React, { Component } from 'react';
import List from '@researchgate/react-intersection-list';
export default class InfiniteList extends Component {
itemsRenderer = (items, ref) => (
<ul className="list" ref={ref}>
{items}
</ul>
);
itemRenderer = (index, key) => <li key={key}>{index}</li>;
render() {
return (
<List
itemCount={1000}
itemsRenderer={this.itemsRenderer}
renderItem={this.itemRenderer}
/>
);
}
}
Note that <List> is a PureComponent so it can keep itself from re-rendering.
It's highly recommended to avoid creating new functions for renderItem and
itemsRenderer so that it can successfully shallow compare props on re-render.
The approach to infinite scrolling was commonly done by devs implementing
throttled scroll event callbacks. This keeps the main thread unnecessarily
busy... No more! IntersectionObservers invoke callbacks in a low-priority
and asynchronous way by design.
Agent Smith: Never send a human to do a machine's job.
The implementation follows these steps:
Provided an itemsRenderer prop you must attach the ref argument to your
scrollable DOM element:
<div ref={ref}>{items}</div>
This element specifies overflow: auto|scroll and it'll become the
IntersectionObserver root. If the overflow property isn't found, then
window will be used as the root instead.
The sentinel element is by default detached from the list when the current
size reaches the available length, unless you're using awaitMore. In case your
list is in memory and you rely on the list for incremental rendering only, the
default detaching behavior suffices. If you're loading more items in an
asynchoronous way, make sure you switch awaitMore once you reach the total
length (bottom of the list).
The prop itemCount must be used if the prop items is not provided, and
viceversa. Calculating the list size is done by adding the current size and the
page size until the items' length is reached.
The sentinel detected a viewport with a bigger size than the size of its items...The prop `pageSize` is `10` by default, so make sure you're not falling short on items when you first render the component. The idea of an infinite scrolling list is that items overflow the viewport, so that users have the impression that there're always more items available.
| property | type | default | description |
|---|---|---|---|
renderItem/children | (index: number, key: number) => React.Element | (index, key) => <div key={key}>{index}</div> | render function as children or render props; gets call once for each item. |
itemsRenderer | (items: Array(React.Element), ref: HTMLElement) => React.Element | (items, ref) => <div ref={ref}>{items}</div> | render function for the list's root element, often returning a scrollable element. |
itemCount/items | number/Array (or Iterable Object) | 0 | item count to render. |
awaitMore | boolean | if true keeps the sentinel from detaching. | |
onIntersection | (size: number, pageSize: number) => void | invoked when the sentinel comes into view. | |
threshold | string | 100px | value in absolute px or %as spacing before the sentinel hits the edge of the list's viewport. |
axis | string | y | scroll direction: y == vertical and x == horizontal |
pageSize | number | 10 | number of items to render each hit. |
initialIndex | number | 0 | start position of iterator of items. |
Find multiple examples under: https://researchgate.github.io/react-intersection-list/
We'd love your help on creating React Intersection List!
Before you do, please read our Code of Conduct so you know what we expect when you contribute to our projects.
Our Contributing Guide tells you about our development process and what we're looking for, gives you instructions on how to issue bugs and suggest features, and explains how you can build and test your changes.
Haven't contributed to an open source project before? No problem! Contributing Guide has you covered as well.
FAQs
React List Component using the Intersection Observer API
The npm package @researchgate/react-intersection-list receives a total of 140 weekly downloads. As such, @researchgate/react-intersection-list popularity was classified as not popular.
We found that @researchgate/react-intersection-list demonstrated a not healthy version release cadence and project activity because the last version was released a year ago. It has 10 open source maintainers collaborating on the project.
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