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react-likert-scale
Advanced tools
A React component that makes a Likert Scale for surveys or data collection.
A React component that makes a Likert Scale for collecting data or to make a survey. It has the following features:
npm i react-likert-scale
import React from 'react';
import Likert from 'react-likert-scale';
export default () => {
const likertOptions = {
question: "What is your opinion of the President’s performance?",
responses: [
{ value: 1, text: "Abysmal" },
{ value: 2, text: "Poor" },
{ value: 3, text: "Average", checked: true },
{ value: 4, text: "Good" },
{ value: 5, text: "Excellent" }
],
onChange: val => {
console.log(val);
}
};
return (
<Likert {...likertOptions} />
)
}
props
responses
— (array of objects) These are the radio button options. The value
key is what is
returned to the calling application in the onChange
callback. text
is what’s shown on-screen.
The optional checked
key will pre-check a radio button when set to true
.props
Technically, these are all optional, however you need to pass in an onChange
prop if you want to be notified about which option a user chose.
onChange
— (callback function) Optionally, you can provide a callback function that returns the
value of the option that was clicked.For accessibility reasons, each likert scale on your page needs a unique identifier. If you are
passing in a question
prop and each question is unique, then that text will be used to generate a
unique identifier. On the other hand, if you are not using question
or the question text is
duplicated across multiple likert scales, you will need to pass in an id
prop.
question
— (string) This is the prompt that displays above the options. The easiest way to
create these likert scales is by passing in your question text in this prop, however if you want a
more custom layout then you can omit this prop. You can see a grid layout example on
Codepen that uses this technique.id
- (string) It is your responsibility to pass in a unique ID. If you are using the question
prop it is safe to omit this id
prop.props
layout
(string) This controls the position of the Question text. Valid values are auto
(the
default) and stacked
. Auto-layout will position the question text and likert scale on the same
line when there is enought horizontal space. If the screen is too narrow the question will appear
above the likert scale. Set layout='stacked'
if you always want the question to appear above the
likert scale.flexible
(boolean|integer) This controls the type of layout. When flexible
is set to true
,
which is the default setting, the radio buttons will stretch to fill available space. The question
text will get positioned to the left of the radio buttons when there is plenty of space, otherwise
it will appear above the radio buttons. Set flexible
to false
if you want the radio buttons to
use a minimum amount of space at all times. Passing in an integer is an advanced use-case and frankly isn’t of much value. See the source code for more info. The integer is used as a flex-grow
value.className
(string) You can use this to apply custom CSS. You class name will be put on a
<fieldset>
element, which is the top-level element of this component.ref
(React ref) For advanced use-cases, you may need a reference to the DOM element itself. Pass
in a React ref.id
, disabled
, data-*
, onClick
, etc. These will get applied to a <fieldset>
element.The top-level DOM element that gets created by this component is <fieldset class="likertScale">
.
You can override any styles by prefixing your rule with fieldset.likertScale
. For example, let’s
say you want the radio button “dots” to have a light gray background with a dark green ring.
fieldset.likertScale .likertIndicator {
border: thin solid darkGreen;
background-color: lightGray;
}
You can pass in a className
prop to the Likert component that can also be used for styling. Refer to the custom styling example on Codepen.
This isn’t very common, but you may want to set focus on a Likert Scale after the page renders. This
is done with React via refs
. Either create your ref with React.createRef()
or the useRef()
hook. You can then pass your ref
to the Likert component.
import React, { useRef } from 'react';
import Likert from 'react-likert-scale';
export default () => {
const likertOptions = {
question: "What is your opinion of the President’s performance?",
responses: [
{ value: 1, text: "Abysmal" },
{ value: 2, text: "Poor" },
{ value: 3, text: "Average" },
{ value: 4, text: "Good" },
{ value: 5, text: "Excellent" }
]
};
const likertRef = useRef();
return (
<Likert {...likertOptions} ref={likertRef} />
)
}
id
, class
, disabled
, data-*
, onClick
, etc.?Sure. They will be applied to the likert component’s top-level DOM element, <fieldset>
.
<Likert {...likertOptions}
id='Q1'
className='myClass'
onClick={() => {
doThis();
andThis();
}}
/>
Let me know. Create an issue on GitHub.
FAQs
A React component that makes a Likert Scale for surveys or data collection.
The npm package react-likert-scale receives a total of 439 weekly downloads. As such, react-likert-scale popularity was classified as not popular.
We found that react-likert-scale 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.
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