react-modal
Accessible modal dialog component for React.JS
Table of Contents
Installation
To install, you can use npm or yarn:
$ npm install react-modal
$ yarn add react-modal
Usage
The Modal object has one required prop:
isOpen
to render its children.
Example:
<Modal
isOpen={bool}
onAfterOpen={afterOpenFn}
onRequestClose={requestCloseFn}
closeTimeoutMS={n}
style={customStyle}
contentLabel="Modal"
>
<h1>Modal Content</h1>
<p>Etc.</p>
</Modal>
Use the prop contentLabel
which adds aria-label
to the modal if there is no label text visible on the screen, otherwise specify the element including the label text using aria-labelledby
App Element
The app element allows you to specify the portion
of your app that should be hidden (via aria-hidden)
to prevent assistive technologies such as screenreaders
from reading content outside of the content of
your modal.
It's optional and if not specified it will try to use
document.body
as your app element.
If you are doing server-side rendering, you should use
this property.
It can be specified in the following ways:
Modal.setAppElement(appElement);
- query selector - uses the first element found if you pass in a class.
Modal.setAppElement('#your-app-element');
Additional Aria Attributes
Use the property aria
to pass any additional aria attributes. It accepts
an object where the keys are the names of the attributes without the prefix
aria-
.
Example:
<Modal
isOpen={modalIsOpen}
aria={{
labelledby: "heading",
describedby: "full_description"
}}>
<h1 id="heading">H1</h1>
<div id="full_description">
<p>Description goes here.</p>
</div>
</Modal>
Styles
Styles are passed as an object with 2 keys, 'overlay' and 'content' like so
{
overlay : {
position : 'fixed',
top : 0,
left : 0,
right : 0,
bottom : 0,
backgroundColor : 'rgba(255, 255, 255, 0.75)'
},
content : {
position : 'absolute',
top : '40px',
left : '40px',
right : '40px',
bottom : '40px',
border : '1px solid #ccc',
background : '#fff',
overflow : 'auto',
WebkitOverflowScrolling : 'touch',
borderRadius : '4px',
outline : 'none',
padding : '20px'
}
}
Styles passed to the modal are merged in with the above defaults and applied to their respective elements.
At this time, media queries will need to be handled by the consumer.
Using CSS Classes
If you prefer not to use inline styles or are unable to do so in your project,
you can pass className
and overlayClassName
props to the Modal. If you do
this then none of the default styles will apply and you will have full control
over styling via CSS.
If you want to override default content and overlay classes you can pass object
with three required properties: base
, afterOpen
, beforeClose
.
<Modal
...
className={{
base: 'myClass',
afterOpen: 'myClass_after-open',
beforeClose: 'myClass_before-close'
}}
overlayClassName={{
base: 'myOverlayClass',
afterOpen: 'myOverlayClass_after-open',
beforeClose: 'myOverlayClass_before-close'
}}
...
>
You can also pass a portalClassName
to change the wrapper's class (ReactModalPortal).
This doesn't affect styling as no styles are applied to this element by default.
Overriding styles globally
The default styles above are available on Modal.defaultStyles
. Changes to this
object will apply to all instances of the modal.
Appended to custom node
You can choose an element for the modal to be appended to, rather than using
body tag. To do this, provide a function to parentSelector
prop that return
the element to be used.
function getParent() {
return document.querySelector('#root');
}
<Modal
...
parentSelector={getParent}
...
>
<p>Modal Content.</p>
</Modal>
Body class
When the modal is opened a ReactModal__Body--open
class is added to the body
tag.
You can use this to remove scrolling on the the body while the modal is open.
.ReactModal__Body--open {
overflow: hidden;
}
Examples
Inside an app:
import React from 'react';
import ReactDOM from 'react-dom';
import Modal from 'react-modal';
const customStyles = {
content : {
top : '50%',
left : '50%',
right : 'auto',
bottom : 'auto',
marginRight : '-50%',
transform : 'translate(-50%, -50%)'
}
};
class App extends React.Component {
constructor() {
super();
this.state = {
modalIsOpen: false
};
this.openModal = this.openModal.bind(this);
this.afterOpenModal = this.afterOpenModal.bind(this);
this.closeModal = this.closeModal.bind(this);
}
openModal() {
this.setState({modalIsOpen: true});
}
afterOpenModal() {
this.subtitle.style.color = '#f00';
}
closeModal() {
this.setState({modalIsOpen: false});
}
render() {
return (
<div>
<button onClick={this.openModal}>Open Modal</button>
<Modal
isOpen={this.state.modalIsOpen}
onAfterOpen={this.afterOpenModal}
onRequestClose={this.closeModal}
style={customStyles}
contentLabel="Example Modal"
>
<h2 ref={subtitle => this.subtitle = subtitle}>Hello</h2>
<button onClick={this.closeModal}>close</button>
<div>I am a modal</div>
<form>
<input />
<button>tab navigation</button>
<button>stays</button>
<button>inside</button>
<button>the modal</button>
</form>
</Modal>
</div>
);
}
}
ReactDOM.render(<App />, appElement);
Testing
When using React Test Utils with this library, here are some things to keep in mind:
- You need to set
isOpen={true}
on the modal component for it to render its children. - You need to use the
.portal
property, as in ReactDOM.findDOMNode(renderedModal.portal)
or TestUtils.scryRenderedDOMComponentsWithClass(Modal.portal, 'my-modal-class')
to acquire a handle to the inner contents of your modal.
By default the modal is closed when clicking outside of it (the overlay area). If you want to prevent this behavior you can
pass the 'shouldCloseOnOverlayClick' prop with 'false' value.
<Modal
isOpen={bool}
onAfterOpen={afterOpenFn}
onRequestClose={requestCloseFn}
closeTimeoutMS={n}
shouldCloseOnOverlayClick={false}
style={customStyle}
contentLabel="No Overlay Click Modal"
>
<h1>Force Modal</h1>
<p>Modal cannot be closed when clicking the overlay area</p>
<button onClick={handleCloseFunc}>Close Modal...</button>
</Modal>
Demos