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react-swipeable
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The react-swipeable package is a React component that provides easy-to-use swipe event handlers for touch devices. It allows developers to add swipe functionality to their React components, making it ideal for creating touch-friendly user interfaces.
Basic Swipe Detection
This code demonstrates how to use the react-swipeable package to detect basic swipe events. The `useSwipeable` hook is used to create swipe handlers, which are then applied to a div element. When a swipe is detected, a message is logged to the console.
import React from 'react';
import { useSwipeable } from 'react-swipeable';
const SwipeComponent = () => {
const handlers = useSwipeable({
onSwiped: (eventData) => console.log('User Swiped!', eventData)
});
return (
<div {...handlers} style={{ width: '100%', height: '100px', background: 'lightgray' }}>
Swipe here
</div>
);
};
export default SwipeComponent;
Swipe Direction Detection
This code demonstrates how to detect the direction of a swipe using the react-swipeable package. The `useSwipeable` hook is configured with handlers for each swipe direction (left, right, up, down), and logs a message to the console when a swipe in that direction is detected.
import React from 'react';
import { useSwipeable } from 'react-swipeable';
const SwipeDirectionComponent = () => {
const handlers = useSwipeable({
onSwipedLeft: () => console.log('Swiped Left!'),
onSwipedRight: () => console.log('Swiped Right!'),
onSwipedUp: () => console.log('Swiped Up!'),
onSwipedDown: () => console.log('Swiped Down!')
});
return (
<div {...handlers} style={{ width: '100%', height: '100px', background: 'lightblue' }}>
Swipe in any direction
</div>
);
};
export default SwipeDirectionComponent;
Swipe Threshold Configuration
This code demonstrates how to configure a swipe threshold using the react-swipeable package. The `useSwipeable` hook is configured with a `delta` value, which sets the minimum distance (in pixels) that a swipe must cover to be detected.
import React from 'react';
import { useSwipeable } from 'react-swipeable';
const SwipeThresholdComponent = () => {
const handlers = useSwipeable({
onSwiped: (eventData) => console.log('User Swiped!', eventData),
delta: 50 // Minimum distance (in pixels) for a swipe to be detected
});
return (
<div {...handlers} style={{ width: '100%', height: '100px', background: 'lightgreen' }}>
Swipe with a minimum threshold
</div>
);
};
export default SwipeThresholdComponent;
The react-swipe package provides a React component for touch slide navigation. It is similar to react-swipeable in that it allows for swipe detection, but it is more focused on creating swipeable carousels and sliders. It offers a higher-level abstraction compared to react-swipeable.
The react-use-gesture package is a set of hooks for handling gestures in React. It supports a wide range of gestures, including swipes, pinches, and scrolls. Compared to react-swipeable, react-use-gesture offers more comprehensive gesture support and can be used for more complex interactions.
The react-swipeable-views package is a React component for creating swipeable views, such as tabs or carousels. It is similar to react-swipeable in that it provides swipe detection, but it is specifically designed for creating swipeable view containers. It offers built-in support for animations and transitions.
React swipe event handler hook
Use the hook and set your swipe(d) handlers.
const handlers = useSwipeable({
onSwiped: (eventData) => console.log("User Swiped!", eventData),
...config,
});
return <div {...handlers}> You can swipe here </div>;
Spread handlers
onto the element you wish to track swipes on.
{
onSwiped, // After any swipe (SwipeEventData) => void
onSwipedLeft, // After LEFT swipe (SwipeEventData) => void
onSwipedRight, // After RIGHT swipe (SwipeEventData) => void
onSwipedUp, // After UP swipe (SwipeEventData) => void
onSwipedDown, // After DOWN swipe (SwipeEventData) => void
onSwipeStart, // Start of swipe (SwipeEventData) => void *see details*
onSwiping, // During swiping (SwipeEventData) => void
onTap, // After a tap ({ event }) => void
}
onSwipeStart
- called only once per swipe at the start and before the first onSwiping
callback
first
property of the SwipeEventData
will be true
{
delta: 10, // min distance(px) before a swipe starts. *See Notes*
preventDefaultTouchmoveEvent: false, // call e.preventDefault *See Details*
trackTouch: true, // track touch input
trackMouse: false, // track mouse input
rotationAngle: 0, // set a rotation angle
}
delta
can be either a number
or an object
specifying different deltas for each direction, [left
, right
, up
, down
], direction values are optional and will default to 10
;
{
delta: { top: 20, bottom: 20 } // top and bottom when ">= 20", left and right default to ">= 10"
}
All Event Handlers are called with the below event data, SwipeEventData
.
{
event, // source event
initial, // initial swipe [x,y]
first, // true for first event
deltaX, // x offset (current.x - initial.x)
deltaY, // y offset (current.y - initial.y)
absX, // absolute deltaX
absY, // absolute deltaY
velocity, // √(absX^2 + absY^2) / time - "absolute velocity" (speed)
vxvy, // [ deltaX/time, deltaY/time] - velocity per axis
dir, // direction of swipe (Left|Right|Up|Down)
}
None of the props/config options are required.
handlers
are currently ref
and onMouseDown
handlers
as the props contained in it could change as react improves event listening capabilitiespreventDefaultTouchmoveEvent
detailsThis prop allows you to prevent the browser's touchmove event default action, mostly "scrolling".
Use this to stop scrolling in the browser while a user swipes.
touch-action
css property, see belowe.preventDefault()
is only called when:
preventDefaultTouchmoveEvent: true
trackTouch: true
onSwiping
or onSwiped
handler/propExample scenario:
If a user is swiping right with props
{ onSwipedRight: userSwipedRight, preventDefaultTouchmoveEvent: true }
thene.preventDefault()
will be called, but if the user was swiping left thene.preventDefault()
would not be called.
Please experiment with the example app to test preventDefaultTouchmoveEvent
.
With v6 we've added the passive event listener option, by default, to internal uses of addEventListener
. We set the passive
option to false
only when preventDefaultTouchmoveEvent
is true
.
When preventDefaultTouchmoveEvent
is:
true
=> el.addEventListener(event, cb, { passive: false })
false
=> el.addEventListener(event, cb, { passive: true })
React's long running passive event issue.
We previously had issues with chrome lighthouse performance deducting points for not having passive option set.
The release of v6 react-swipeable
we only support browsers that support options object for addEventListener
, Browser compatibility. Which mainly means react-swipeable
does not support ie11 by default, you need to polyfill options. For example using event-listener-with-options.
If upgrading from v5 or later please refer to the release notes and the v6 migration doc
v6 now only exports a hook, useSwipeable
.
If you would like something similar to the old <Swipeable>
component you can recreate it from the hook. There are examples in the migration doc.
document
?Example by @merrywhether #180
https://codesandbox.io/s/react-swipeable-document-swipe-example-1yvr2v
const { ref } = useSwipeable({
...
}) as { ref: RefCallback<Document> };
useEffect(() => {
ref(document);
});
ref
from useSwipeable
?Example ref passthrough, more details #189:
const MyComponent = () => {
const handlers = useSwipeable({ onSwiped: () => console.log('swiped') })
// setup ref for your usage
const myRef = React.useRef();
const refPassthrough = (el) => {
// call useSwipeable ref prop with el
handlers.ref(el);
// set myRef el so you can access it yourself
myRef.current = el;
}
return (<div {...handlers} ref={refPassthrough} />
}
touch-action
to prevent scrolling?Sometimes you don't want the body
of your page to scroll along with the user manipulating or swiping an item.
You might try to prevent the event default action via preventDefaultTouchmoveEvent, which calls event.preventDefault()
. But there may be a simpler, more effective solution, which has to do with a simple CSS property.
touch-action
is a CSS property that sets how an element's region can be manipulated by a touchscreen user.
const handlers = useSwipeable({
onSwiped: (eventData) => console.log("User Swiped!", evenData),
...config,
});
return <div {...handlers} style={{ touchAction: 'pan-y' }}> Swipe here </div>;
This explanation and example borrowed from use-gesture
's wonderful docs.
Please see our contributions guide.
Active: Formidable is actively working on this project, and we expect to continue for work for the foreseeable future. Bug reports, feature requests and pull requests are welcome.
FAQs
React Swipe event handler hook
The npm package react-swipeable receives a total of 388,423 weekly downloads. As such, react-swipeable popularity was classified as popular.
We found that react-swipeable demonstrated a healthy version release cadence and project activity because the last version was released less than a year ago. It has 16 open source maintainers collaborating on the project.
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