
Security News
The Hidden Blast Radius of the Axios Compromise
The Axios compromise shows how time-dependent dependency resolution makes exposure harder to detect and contain.
@spayco/react-image-editor
Advanced tools
This is a React component wrapping TOAST UI Image Editor.
React Wrapper of TOAST UI Image Editor applies Google Analytics (GA) to collect statistics on the use of open source, in order to identify how widely TOAST UI Image Editor is used throughout the world. It also serves as important index to determine the future course of projects. location.hostname (e.g. > “ui.toast.com") is to be collected and the sole purpose is nothing but to measure statistics on the usage. To disable GA, use the usageStatistics props like the example below.
<ImageEditor usageStatistics={false} />
Or, include tui-code-snippet.js (v1.4.0 or later) and then immediately write the options as follows:
tui.usageStatistics = false;
npm install --save @toast-ui/react-image-editor
You can use Toast UI Image Editor for React as a ECMAScript module or a CommonJS module. As this module does not contain CSS files, you should import tui-image-editor.css from tui-image-editor/dist manually.
import 'tui-image-editor/dist/tui-image-editor.css';
import ImageEditor from '@toast-ui/react-image-editor';
require('tui-image-editor/dist/tui-image-editor.css');
const ImageEditor = require('@toast-ui/react-image-editor');
All the options of the TOAST UI Image Editor are supported in the form of props.
const myTheme = {
// Theme object to extends default dark theme.
};
const MyComponent = () => (
<ImageEditor
includeUI={{
loadImage: {
path: 'img/sampleImage.jpg',
name: 'SampleImage',
},
theme: myTheme,
menu: ['shape', 'filter'],
initMenu: 'filter',
uiSize: {
width: '1000px',
height: '700px',
},
menuBarPosition: 'bottom',
}}
cssMaxHeight={500}
cssMaxWidth={700}
selectionStyle={{
cornerSize: 20,
rotatingPointOffset: 70,
}}
usageStatistics={true}
/>
);
Importing black/white-theme.js file is not working directly import yet. You want to use a white theme, please write own theme object by copy and paste.
For using instance methods of TOAST UI Image Editor, first thing to do is creating Refs of wrapper component using createRef(). But the wrapper component does not provide a way to call instance methods of TOAST UI Image Editor directly. Instead, you can call getInstance() method of the wrapper component to get the instance, and call the methods on it.
const imageEditorOptions = {
// sort of option properties.
};
class MyComponent extends React.Component {
editorRef = React.createRef();
handleClickButton = () => {
const editorInstance = this.editorRef.current.getInstance();
editorInstance.flipX();
};
render() {
return (
<>
<ImageEditor ref={this.editorRef} {...imageEditorOptions} />
<button onClick={this.handleClickButton}>Flip image by X Axis!</button>
</>
);
}
}
An instance of the wrapper component also provides a handy method for getting the root element. If you want to manipulate the root element directly, you can call getRootElement to get the element.
class MyComponent extends React.Component {
editorRef = React.createRef();
handleClickButton = () => {
this.editorRef.current.getRootElement().classList.add('image-editor-root');
};
render() {
return (
<>
<ImageEditor ref={this.editorRef} {...imageEditorOptions} />
<button onClick={this.handleClickButton}>Click!</button>
</>
);
}
}
All the events of TOAST UI Image Editor are supported in the form of on[EventName] props. The first letter of each event name should be capitalized. For example, for using mousedown event you can use onMousedown prop like the example below.
class MyComponent extends React.Component {
handleMousedown = () => {
console.log('Mouse button is downed!');
};
render() {
return <ImageEditor onMousedown={this.handleMousedown} />;
}
}
FAQs
TOAST UI Image-Editor for React
We found that @spayco/react-image-editor demonstrated a not healthy version release cadence and project activity because the last version was released a year ago. It has 1 open source maintainer collaborating on the project.
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.

Security News
The Axios compromise shows how time-dependent dependency resolution makes exposure harder to detect and contain.

Research
A supply chain attack on Axios introduced a malicious dependency, plain-crypto-js@4.2.1, published minutes earlier and absent from the project’s GitHub releases.

Research
Malicious versions of the Telnyx Python SDK on PyPI delivered credential-stealing malware via a multi-stage supply chain attack.