
Security News
GitHub Actions Pricing Whiplash: Self-Hosted Actions Billing Change Postponed
GitHub postponed a new billing model for self-hosted Actions after developer pushback, but moved forward with hosted runner price cuts on January 1.
react-filtered-multiselect
Advanced tools
A <FilteredMultiSelect/> React component, for making and adding to selections using a filtered multi-select.
Live example with Bootstrap styles applied

This component manages an <input>, a <select multiple> and a <button>.
You provide a list of objects to be used to populate the select and an onChange callback function.
Typing in the the input will filter the select to items with matching option text.
When some of the select's options are selected, the button will become enabled. Clicking it will select the objects backing the currently selected options.
If only one option is displayed after filtering against the input, pressing Enter in the input will select the object backing it.
When backing objects are selected, the onChange callback is executed, passing a list of all backing objects selected so far.
To hide already-selected items, pass them back to FilteredMultiSelect as its selectedOptions prop. This can be more convenient than manually removing the selected items from the list passed as options.
To deselect items, remove them from the list passed back via the onChange callback and re-render the FilteredMultiSelect with the new list passed as its selectedOptions prop.
Double-clicking will add the selected option to the selection.
Node
npm install react-filtered-multiselect
import FilteredMultiSelect from 'react-filtered-multiselect'
// or
const FilteredMultiSelect = require('react-filtered-multiselect')
Browser
Browser bundles export a global FilteredMultiSelect variable and expect to find a global React variable to work with.
Minimal usage:
let options = [
{value: 1, text: 'Item One'},
{value: 2, text: 'Item Two'}
]
<FilteredMultiSelect
onChange={this.handleChange}
options={options}
/>
options - list of objects providing <option> data for the multi-select. By default, these should have text and value properties, but this is configurable via props.
The component will update its display if its options list changes length or is replaced with a different list, but it will not be able to detect changes which don't affect length or object equality, such as replacement of one option with another. Consider using immutability-helper or other immutability libraries if you need to do this.
onChange(selectedOptions) - callback which will be called with selected option objects each time the selection is added to.
buttonText - text to be displayed in the <button> for adding selected <option>s.
className - class name for the component's <div> container.
classNames - class names for each of the component's child elements. See the default props below for properties. Defaults will be used for any properties not specified via this prop.
defaultFilter - default filter text to be applied to the <select>
disabled - disables each child element if true.
placeholder - placeholder text to be displayed in the filter <input>.
selectedOptions - list of option objects which are selected, so should no
longer be displayed in the <select>.
showFilter - pass false to disable showing the filter input if you just use this component for selection.
size - size attribute for the <select>
textProp - name of the property in each object in options which provides
the displayed text for its <option>.
valueProp - name of the property in each object in options which provides
the value for its <option>.
{
buttonText: 'Select',
className: 'FilteredMultiSelect',
classNames: {
button: 'FilteredMultiSelect__button',
// Used when at least one <option> is selected
buttonActive: 'FilteredMultiSelect__button--active',
filter: 'FilteredMultiSelect__filter',
select: 'FilteredMultiSelect__select'
}
defaultFilter: '',
disabled: false,
placeholder: 'type to filter',
selectedOptions: [],
showFilter: true,
size: 6,
textProp: 'text',
valueProp: 'value'
}
Example which implements display of selected items and de-selection.
const CULTURE_SHIPS = [
{id: 1, name: '5*Gelish-Oplule'},
{id: 2, name: '7*Uagren'},
// ...
{id: 249, name: 'Zero Gravitas'},
{id: 250, name: 'Zoologist'}
]
class Example extends React.Component {
state = {selectedShips: []}
handleDeselect(index) {
var selectedShips = this.state.selectedShips.slice()
selectedShips.splice(index, 1)
this.setState({selectedShips})
}
handleSelectionChange = (selectedShips) => {
this.setState({selectedShips})
}
render() {
var {selectedShips} = this.state
return <div>
<FilteredMultiSelect
onChange={this.handleSelectionChange}
options={CULTURE_SHIPS}
selectedOptions={selectedShips}
textProp="name"
valueProp="id"
/>
{selectedShips.length === 0 && <p>(nothing selected yet)</p>}
{selectedShips.length > 0 && <ul>
{selectedShips.map((ship, i) => <li key={ship.id}>
{`${ship.name} `}
<button type="button" onClick={() => this.handleDeselect(i)}>
×
</button>
</li>)}
</ul>}
</div>
}
}
FAQs
Filtered multi-select React component
The npm package react-filtered-multiselect receives a total of 267 weekly downloads. As such, react-filtered-multiselect popularity was classified as not popular.
We found that react-filtered-multiselect 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
GitHub postponed a new billing model for self-hosted Actions after developer pushback, but moved forward with hosted runner price cuts on January 1.

Research
Destructive malware is rising across open source registries, using delays and kill switches to wipe code, break builds, and disrupt CI/CD.

Security News
Socket CTO Ahmad Nassri shares practical AI coding techniques, tools, and team workflows, plus what still feels noisy and why shipping remains human-led.