downshift 🏎
Primitives to build simple, flexible, WAI-ARIA compliant React
autocomplete/dropdown/select/combobox components
The problem
You need an autocomplete/dropdown/select experience in your application and you
want it to be accessible. You also want it to be simple and flexible to account
for your use cases.
This solution
This is a component that controls user interactions and state for you so you can
create autocomplete/dropdown/select/etc. components. It uses a
render function as children which gives you maximum flexibility with a
minimal API because you are responsible for the rendering of everything and you
simply apply props to what you're rendering.
This differs from other solutions which render things for their use case and
then expose many options to allow for extensibility resulting in a bigger API
that is less flexible as well as making the implementation more complicated and
harder to contribute to.
NOTE: The original use case of this component is autocomplete, however the API
is powerful and flexible enough to build things like dropdowns as well.
Installation
This component is currently released as a Release Candidate. It is quite stable, but not officially released yet.
This module is distributed via npm which is bundled with node and
should be installed as one of your project's dependencies
:
npm install --save downshift@rc
This package also depends on react
and prop-types
. Please make sure you
have those installed as well.
Note also this library supports preact
out of the box. If you are using
preact
then look in the dist/
folder and use the module you want with the
preact
suffix.
Usage
import Downshift from 'downshift'
function BasicAutocomplete({items, onChange}) {
return (
<Downshift onChange={onChange}>
{({
getInputProps,
getItemProps,
isOpen,
inputValue,
selectedItem,
highlightedIndex
}) => (
<div>
<input {...getInputProps({placeholder: 'Favorite color ?'})} />
{isOpen ? (
<div style={{border: '1px solid #ccc'}}>
{items
.filter(
i =>
!inputValue ||
i.toLowerCase().includes(inputValue.toLowerCase()),
)
.map((item, index) => (
<div
{...getItemProps({item, index})}
key={item}
style={{
backgroundColor:
highlightedIndex === index ? 'gray' : 'white',
fontWeight: selectedItem === item ? 'bold' : 'normal',
}}
>
{item}
</div>
))}
</div>
) : null}
</div>
)}
</Downshift>
)
}
function App() {
return (
<BasicAutocomplete
items={['apple', 'orange', 'carrot']}
onChange={selectedItem => console.log(selectedItem)}
/>
)
}
downshift
is the only component. It doesn't render anything itself, it just
calls the child function and renders that. Wrap everything in
<Downshift>{/* your function here! */}</Downshift>
.
Props:
defaultSelectedItem
any
| defaults to null
Pass an item or an array of items that should be selected by default.
defaultHighlightedIndex
number
/null
| defaults to null
This is the initial index to highlight when the menu first opens.
defaultInputValue
string
| defaults to ''
This is the initial input value.
defaultIsOpen
boolean
| defaults to false
This is the initial isOpen
value.
itemToString
function(item: any)
| defaults to: i => (i == null ? '' : String(i))
Used to determine the string value for the selected item (which is used to
compute the inputValue
.
getA11yStatusMessage
function({/* see below */})
| default messages provided in English
This function is passed as props to a Status
component nested within and
allows you to create your own assertive ARIA statuses.
A default getA11yStatusMessage
function is provided that will check
resultCount
and return "No results." or if there are results but no item is
highlighted, "resultCount
results are available, use up and down arrow keys
to navigate." If an item is highlighted it will run
itemToString(highlightedItem)
and display the value of the highlightedItem
.
The object you are passed to generate your status message has the following
properties:
property | type | description |
---|
highlightedIndex | number /null | The currently highlighted index |
highlightedValue | any | The value of the highlighted item |
inputValue | string | The current input value |
isOpen | boolean | The isOpen state |
itemToString | function(any) | The itemToString function (see props) for getting the string value from one of the options |
previousResultCount | number | The total items showing in the dropdown the last time the status was updated |
resultCount | number | The total items showing in the dropdown |
selectedItem | any | The value of the currently selected item |
onChange
function(selectedItem: any, allState: object)
| optional, no useful default
Called when the user selects an item. Called with the item that was selected
and the new state of downshift
. (see onStateChange
for more info on
allState
).
onStateChange
function(changes: object, allState: object)
| optional, no useful default
This function is called anytime the internal state changes. This can be useful
if you're using downshift as a "controlled" component, where you manage some or
all of the state (e.g. isOpen, selectedItem, highlightedIndex, etc) and then
pass it as props, rather than letting downshift control all its state itself.
The parameters both take the shape of internal state
({highlightedIndex: number, inputValue: string, isOpen: boolean, selectedItem: any}
)
but differ slightly.
changes
: These are the properties that actually have changed since the last
state changeallState
: This is the full state object of all the state in your downshift
component.
itemCount
number
| optional, defaults the number of times you call getItemProps
This is useful if you're using some kind of virtual listing component for
"windowing" (like react-virtualized
).
highlightedIndex
number
| control prop (read more about this in the "Control Props" section below)
The index that should be highlighted
inputValue
string
| control prop (read more about this in the "Control Props" section below)
The value the input should have
isOpen
boolean
| control prop (read more about this in the "Control Props" section below)
Whether the menu should be considered open or closed. Some aspects of the
downshift component respond differently based on this value (for example, if
isOpen
is true when the user hits "Enter" on the input field, then the
item at the highlightedIndex
item is selected).
selectedItem
any
/Array(any)
| control prop (read more about this in the "Control Props" section below)
The currently selected item.
children
function({})
| required
This is called with an object. Read more about the properties of this object
in the section "Child Callback Function"
Control Props
downshift manages its own state internally and calls your onChange
and
onStateChange
handlers with any relevant changes. The state that downshift
manages includes: isOpen
, selectedItem
, inputValue
, and
highlightedIndex
. Your child callback function (read more below) can be used
to manipulate this state from within the render function and can likely support
many of your use cases.
However, if more control is needed, you can pass any of these pieces of state as
a prop (as indicated above) and that state becomes controlled. As soon as
this.props[statePropKey] !== undefined
, internally, downshift
will determine
its state based on your prop's value rather than its own internal state. You
will be required to keep the state up to date (this is where onStateChange
comes in really handy), but you can also control the state from anywhere, be
that state from other components, redux
(example wanted!), react-router
(example wanted!), or anywhere else.
Note: This is very similar to how normal controlled components work elsewhere
in react (like <input />
). If you want to learn more about this concept, you
can learn about that from this the
"Controlled Components" lecture and
exercises from React Training's
Advanced React course.
Child Callback Function
This is where you render whatever you want to based on the state of downshift
.
The function is passed as the child prop:
<Downshift>{/* right here*/}</Downshift>
The properties of this object can be split into three categories as indicated
below:
prop getters
These functions are used to apply props to the elements that you render.
This gives you maximum flexibility to render what, when, and wherever you like.
You call these on the element in question (for example:
<input {...getInputProps()}
)). It's advisable to pass all your props to that
function rather than applying them on the element yourself to avoid your props
being overridden (or overriding the props returned). For example:
getInputProps({onKeyUp(event) {console.log(event)}})
.
property | type | description |
---|
getButtonProps | function({}) | returns the props you should apply to any menu toggle button element you render. |
getInputProps | function({}) | returns the props you should apply to the input element that you render. |
getItemProps | function({}) | returns the props you should apply to any menu item elements you render. |
getLabelProps | function({}) | returns the props you should apply to the label element that you render. |
getRootProps | function({}) | returns the props you should apply to the root element that you render. It can be optional. |
getRootProps
Most of the time, you can just render a div
yourself and Downshift
will
apply the props it needs to do its job (and you don't need to call this
function). However, if you're rendering a composite component (custom component)
as the root element, then you'll need to call getRootProps
and apply that to
your root element.
Required properties:
refKey
: if you're rendering a composite component, that component will need
to accept a prop which it forwards to the root DOM element. Commonly, folks
call this innerRef
. So you'd call: getRootProps({refKey: 'innerRef'})
and your composite component would forward like:
<div ref={props.innerRef} />
getInputProps
This method should be applied to the input
you render. It is recommended that
you pass all props as an object to this method which will compose together any
of the event handlers you need to apply to the input
while preserving the
ones that downshift
needs to apply to make the input
behave.
There are no required properties for this method.
getLabelProps
This method should be applied to the label
you render. It is useful for
ensuring that the for
attribute on the <label>
(htmlFor
as a react prop)
is the same as the id
that appears on the input
. If no htmlFor
is provided
then an ID will be generated and used for the input
and the label
for
attribute.
There are no required properties for this method.
Note: You can definitely get by without using this (just provide an id
to
your input and the same htmlFor
to your label
and you'll be good with
accessibility). However, we include this so you don't forget and it makes
things a little nicer for you. You're welcome 😀
getItemProps
This method should be applied to any menu items you render. You pass it an
object and that object must contain index
(number) and item
(anything)
properties.
Required properties:
index
: this is how downshift
keeps track of your item when
updating the highlightedIndex
as the user keys around.item
: this is the item data that will be selected when the user selects a
particular item.
getButtonProps
Call this and apply the returned props to a button
. It allows you to toggle
the Menu
component. You can definitely build something like this yourself
(all of the available APIs are exposed to you), but this is nice because it
will also apply all of the proper ARIA attributes. The aria-label
prop is in
English. You should probably override this yourself so you can provide
translations:
<button {...getButtonProps({
'aria-label': translateWithId(isOpen ? 'close.menu' : 'open.menu'),
})} />
actions
These are functions you can call to change the state of the downshift component.
property | type | description |
---|
clearSelection | function(cb: Function) | clears the selection |
closeMenu | function(cb: Function) | closes the menu |
openMenu | function(cb: Function) | opens the menu |
selectHighlightedItem | function(otherStateToSet: object, cb: Function) | selects the item that is currently highlighted |
selectItem | function(item: any, otherStateToSet: object, cb: Function) | selects the given item |
selectItemAtIndex | function(index: number, otherStateToSet: object, cb: Function) | selects the item at the given index |
setHighlightedIndex | function(index: number, otherStateToSet: object, cb: Function) | call to set a new highlighted index |
toggleMenu | function(otherStateToSet: object, cb: Function) | toggle the menu open state |
reset | function(otherStateToSet: object, cb: Function) | this resets downshift's state to a reasonable default |
itemToString | function(item: any) | this is the same as the itemToString prop and is provided just as a helper |
otherStateToSet
refers to an object to set other internal state. It is
recommended to avoid abusing this, but is available if you need it.
state
These are values that represent the current state of the downshift component.
property | type | description |
---|
highlightedIndex | number / null | the currently highlighted item |
inputValue | string / null | the current value of the getInputProps input |
isOpen | boolean | the menu open state |
selectedItem | any | the currently selected item input |
Examples
Examples exist on codesandbox.io:
If you would like to add an example, follow these steps:
- Fork this codesandbox
- Make sure your version (under dependencies) is the latest available version.
- Update the title and description
- Update the code for your example (add some form of documentation to explain what it is)
- Add the tag:
downshift:example
Inspiration
I was heavily inspired by Ryan Florence. Watch his (free) lesson about
"Compound Components". Initially downshift was
a group of compound components using context to communicate. But then
Jared Forsyth suggested I expose functions (the prop getters) to get
props to apply to the elements rendered. That bit of inspiration made a big
impact on the flexibility and simplicity of this API.
I also took a few ideas from the code in
react-autocomplete
and
jQuery UI's Autocomplete.
You can watch me build the first iteration of downshift
on YouTube:
You'll find more recordings of me working on downshift
on
my livestream YouTube playlist.
Other Solutions
You can implement these other solutions using downshift
, but if
you'd prefer to use these out of the box solutions, then that's fine too:
Contributors
Thanks goes to these people (emoji key):
This project follows the all-contributors specification.
Contributions of any kind welcome!
LICENSE
MIT