📦 React Modal Global
Open React modals Anywhere (including non-React Context) 🚀
Features
- 🌍 Can be used in
useEffect
hook or any other global scope - 💧 Reactish - Open modals
Modal.open(ModalComponent, { id: "2" })
as you would render components <ModalComponent id="2" />
- 🪢 Context - you can access params passed to
open
method in the modal component via useModalWindow
hook - 🔃 Queueing - you can open several modals at once
- ✅ Data preservation - data will persist after closing last modal and if same modal will be request to open, it will be restored
- 📚 Layouts - you can create your own layouts for each modal type (Dialog, Popup, Drawer).
- 🎛️ Customization - you can extend
ModalController
class and create your behavior - 🦑 Forking - you can fork modals and create "layer depth"
Motivation
I was looking for a way to use modals in useEffect
hook without using useState
in each component and passing them to modal. I found a lot of packages with various features, but they all have some disadvantages:
- They are not global - you can't open them from anywhere (including non-react context)
- They are not context-aware - you can't access passed data from a component
- They are not queue-aware - you can't open several modals at once
- They are using "
title
, desc
/ header
, body
" pattern - which is not convenient
So I decided to create this package that would solve all these problems at once.
I was insipered a lot by packages like react-toastify and react-modal.
Playgrounds
Title | Playground |
---|
Example of layouts usage | |
Example of usage with ChakraUI (by @laurensnl) | |
Usage
Please follow steps below to use this package in your project.
Create Modal
To start you need to create Modal
. ModalController
controls behaviour of the modals and is used in ModalContainer
.
import { ModalController } from "react-modal-global"
export const Modal = new ModalController()
Add container
ModalContainer
is a display container for modal components (it should be placed in the root), modal components will appear here as you open them.
import React from "react"
import ReactDOM from "react-dom"
import { ModalContainer } from "react-modal-global"
import Modal from "./Modal"
function App() {
return (
<>
{/* ... Other components ... */}
{/* It's better if `ModalContainer` goes after all other components */}
<ModalContainer controller={Modal} />
</>
)
}
ReactDOM.render(<App />, document.getElementById("root"))
!!! STYLES !!!
Notice that you have to have styles to keep modal closed, otherwise modal will not work as expected.
You can write your own styles or use provided be the library by importing it
import "react-modal-global/styles/modal.scss"
import "react-modal-global/styles/layouts.scss"
Create new Modal component
Modal component is actually a React component. Note that this should be exactly component factory not an element.
React component
const ModalComponent = () => <>:3</>
function ModalComponent() {
return <>:3</>
}
import { Component } from "react"
class ModalComponent extends Component {
render() { return <>:3</> }
}
Using modal context
This allows a component to access modal window context inside it to see what props were passed in open
method.
This also can be used to close modal window from inside (e.g. close on button click). Or you can listen to close
event and run a cleanup function.
function ModalComponent() {
const modal = useModalWindow()
return (
<>
<h2>Title</h2>
<p>Content text</p>
<button type="button" onClick={modal.close}>close</button>
</>
)
}
Advanced usage
Modal components can be templates for other modal components.
See example here
Naming advice
Recommended naming is [Popup, Dialog or Modal] + [Name of a modal] => DialogPurchase.
Modal component usage
Open 'em
This is how you disaply your modal components
import "react-modal-global/styles/modal.scss"
import { Modal } from "react-modal-global"
import PopupLogin from "./PopupLogin"
function HomeView() {
function showLoginPopup() {
Modal.open(PopupLogin, { })
}
return (
<>
<h2>Title</h2>
<p>Content text</p>
<button type="button" onClick={showLoginPopup}>Show login popup</button>
</>
)
}
Open as it is
Although you can create your own layout (i.e. component) to pass title
, description
and other required/optional props, to what you are used to. This library encourages using only component and its props to open modals as just how you would use it in a tree.
So instead of
Modal.open(PopupGeneral, {
title: "Login",
description: "Please login to continue"
})
Include them in the component itself. Of course you will need to create more components, but this is the way to go.
Modal.open(PopupLogin)
Or you can create types of your modal components and pass them to `open` method.
```ts
Modal.open(PopupAuth, {
type: "login" // or "register"
})
Eventually, this is up to you to decide, it always depends on your case.
Modal layouts
To use various modal types (Dialog, Popup, Drawer), you create your own layout
for each one, advised naming is [Type][Name] => DrawerLayout
.
Take a look at this example
To create your first Popup
modal try this
import { FormEvent } from "react"
import { useModalWindow } from "react-modal-global"
import PopupLayout from "../modal/layouts/PopupLayout/PopupLayout"
function PopupMyFirst() {
const modal = useModalWindow()
function onSubmit(event: FormEvent<HTMLFormElement>) {
event.preventDefault()
const target = event.currentTarget
const ageInput = target.elements.namedItem("age")
alert(ageInput)
modal.close()
}
return (
<PopupLayout>
<form onSubmit={onSubmit}>
<h2>My first popup modal</h2>
<input name="age" placeholder="Enter your `first popup modal` age" />
<button type="submit">See my age</button>
</form>
</PopupLayout>
)
}
export default PopupMyFirst
If using several containers
Instead of wrapping your modal components manually you can pass template
attribute to ModalContainer
, for example, PopupLayout
<ModalContainer template={PopupLayout} />
Layout concept
Description
Layout is a component that wraps modal component and allows to customize modal look and controls (close button, header, footer, etc.).
Layouts are used to create various modal types (Dialog, Popup, Drawer) and to customize modal controls.
For example, you can create your own PopupLayout
to use it in your Popup
modals.
See example here
Aria
Layouts should not have aria-modal
attribute and role="dialog"
because they are already set in ModalContainer
component.
You should manually add aria-labelledby
and aria-describedby
attributes to your layout.
Modal controller
Open
Modal.open
is a method that opens a modal. See usage for example. See options for more details.
Modal.open(ModalComponent, { })
Close
There is no Modal.close
method because it's hard to know what exactly window to close, instead you can close a modal from inside of a modal component using useModalWindow
hook.
To close from outside you can use returned close
method from Modal.open
or Modal.closeBy
methods
CloseByComponent
Modal.closeByComponent
is a method that closes a modal by its component. It will close all modals that use this component.
Modal.closeByComponent(ModalComponent)
CloseById
Modal.closeById
is a method that closes a modal by its id. It will close all modals that have this id.
Modal.closeById("insane-id")
Modal options
You can use options when opening a modal with Modal.open()
.
Available options
Option | Description |
---|
id | Specifies id of a modal. In react it's used as a key . May be used to find and close specific modal or else. |
closable | Specifies if a modal closing is controllable internally. If false , it's supposed to mean that user should do a specific action to close. |
weak | By default, a last closed modal will not be removed if the same modal will be requested to open. It will restore previous modal but with weak: true it will not happen. |
Modal container
The ModalContainer
component is a container for all modals, but it's not required to use it.
So if you're not happy with the default container, you can create your own.
It depends on ModalController
and ModalContext
to work.
Other features
Queueing
If you open a modal while another modal is already opened, it will be queued and will be opened after the previous one is closed.
Data preservation
Data will be restored if you open a modal with the same component and props after it was closed.
It also works with Modal.replace
method, which can replace props with new ones while keeping the same component and data.
Layer depth
Sometimes you need to open a modal on top of another modal, for example, you have a modal with a login form, and you want to open another modal with a phone confirmation on top of it but keeping the login form visible and state preserved.
This is where layer
depth comes in handy.
Modal.open(ModalComponent, {
layer: 1
})
Note that layer
depth is not really a z-index, it's just a number that specifies the depth of a modal, it's used to determine which modal should be opened on top of another.
Please consider contributing to this feature, I will be happy to see your PRs or just a feedback.
Other modal ideas
There are more than one way to create modals in React.
Two the most popular are "React Tree Modal" and "Common Consumer Modal" (this is how I call it).
React Tree Modal
This is mostly known in React community, it's a modal that is rendered in a tree. There is a library called react-modal that implements this approach.
But this way has some problems, one of them is that you have to create a component, which will control your modal state (open, closed) every time for every modal, and it's not convenient.
Common Consumer Modal
This is an approach just consumes "title
and description
" or "header
and body
" props and renders them in a common container.
This approach lacks of flexibility, but it's easier to use.
There also may be problems
- styling, because you can't style a modal component itself, you can only style a container
- multiple languages, because you can't apply its own translation to each modal window separately, you will have to pass it to a method, which is not convenient
Contribute
Needs feedback, please contribute to GitHub Issues or leave your message to the discord server.