npm package discovery and stats viewer.

Discover Tips

  • General search

    [free text search, go nuts!]

  • Package details

    pkg:[package-name]

  • User packages

    @[username]

Sponsor

Optimize Toolset

I’ve always been into building performant and accessible sites, but lately I’ve been taking it extremely seriously. So much so that I’ve been building a tool to help me optimize and monitor the sites that I build to make sure that I’m making an attempt to offer the best experience to those who visit them. If you’re into performant, accessible and SEO friendly sites, you might like it too! You can check it out at Optimize Toolset.

About

Hi, 👋, I’m Ryan Hefner  and I built this site for me, and you! The goal of this site was to provide an easy way for me to check the stats on my npm packages, both for prioritizing issues and updates, and to give me a little kick in the pants to keep up on stuff.

As I was building it, I realized that I was actually using the tool to build the tool, and figured I might as well put this out there and hopefully others will find it to be a fast and useful way to search and browse npm packages as I have.

If you’re interested in other things I’m working on, follow me on Twitter or check out the open source projects I’ve been publishing on GitHub.

I am also working on a Twitter bot for this site to tweet the most popular, newest, random packages from npm. Please follow that account now and it will start sending out packages soon–ish.

Open Software & Tools

This site wouldn’t be possible without the immense generosity and tireless efforts from the people who make contributions to the world and share their work via open source initiatives. Thank you 🙏

© 2024 – Pkg Stats / Ryan Hefner

@oyvinmar-forks/react-collapse

v5.1.2

Published

Component-wrapper for collapse animation for elements with variable (and dynamic) height

Downloads

13

Readme

react-collapse npm

Gitter

CircleCI Dependencies Dev Dependencies

Component-wrapper for collapse animation for elements with variable (and dynamic) height

React Collapse

Demo

http://nkbt.github.io/react-collapse

Codepen demo

http://codepen.io/nkbt/pen/MarzEg

Installation

NPM

npm install --save react-collapse

yarn

yarn add react-collapse

1998 Script Tag:

<script src="https://unpkg.com/react/umd/react.production.min.js"></script>
<script src="https://unpkg.com/react-collapse/build/react-collapse.min.js"></script>
(Module exposed as `ReactCollapse`)

Usage

1. Content is always mounted (default)

import {Collapse} from 'react-collapse';

// ...
<Collapse isOpened={true || false}>
  <div>Random content</div>
</Collapse>

2. Content unmounts when collapsed

Use Unmount component provided as:

import {UnmountClosed} from 'react-collapse';

// ...
<UnmountClosed isOpened={true || false}>
  <div>Random content</div>
</UnmountClosed>

Example example/App/AutoUnmount.js


3. Controlled and accessible

If you want a controlled and accessible implementation, check out this example

Options

isOpened: PropTypes.boolean.isRequired

Expands or collapses content.

children: PropTypes.node.isRequired

One or multiple children with static, variable or dynamic height.

<Collapse isOpened={true}>
  <p>Paragraph of text</p>
  <p>Another paragraph is also OK</p>
  <p>Images and any other content are ok too</p>
  <img src="nyancat.gif" />
</Collapse>

theme: PropTypes.objectOf(PropTypes.string)

It is possible to set className for extra div elements that ReactCollapse creates.

Example:

<Collapse theme={{collapse: 'foo', content: 'bar'}}>
  <div>Customly animated container</div>
</Collapse>

Default values:

const theme = {
  collapse: 'ReactCollapse--collapse',
  content: 'ReactCollapse--content'
}

Which ends up in the following markup:

<div class="ReactCollapse--collapse">
  <div class="ReactCollapse--content">
    {children}
  </div>
</div>

IMPORTANT: these are not style objects, but class names!

onRest, onWork: PropTypes.func

Callback functions, triggered when animation has completed (onRest) or has just started (onWork)

Both functions are called with argument:

const arg = {
  isFullyOpened: true || false, // `true` only when Collapse reached final height
  isFullyClosed: true || false, // `true` only when Collapse is fully closed and height is zero
  isOpened: true || false, // `true` if Collapse has any non-zero height
  containerHeight: 123, // current pixel height of Collapse container (changes until reaches `contentHeight`)
  contentHeight: 123 // determined height of supplied Content
}
<Collapse onRest={console.log} onWork={console.log}>
  <div>Container text</div>
</Collapse>

Example example/App/Hooks.js

initialStyle: PropTypes.shape

initialStyle: PropTypes.shape({
  height: PropTypes.oneOfType([PropTypes.string, PropTypes.number]),
  overflow: PropTypes.string
})

You may control initial element style, for example to force initial animation from 0 to height by using initialStyle={{height: '0px', overflow: 'hidden'}}

IMPORTANT Any updates to this prop will be ignored after first render. Default value is determined based on initial isOpened value:

  initialStyle = props.isOpened
    ? {height: 'auto', overflow: 'initial'}
    : {height: '0px', overflow: 'hidden'};

Example: example/App/ForceInitialAnimation.js

checkTimeout: PropTypes.number

Number in ms.

Collapse will check height after thins timeout to determine if animation is completed, the shorter the number - the faster onRest will be triggered and the quicker hight: auto will be applied. The downside - more calculations. Default value is: 50.

Pass-through props

IMPORTANT Collapse does not support any pass-through props, so any non-supported props will be ignored

Because we need to have control over when Collapse component is updated and it is not possible or very hard to achieve when any random props can be passed to the component.

Behaviour notes

  • initially opened Collapse elements will be statically rendered with no animation. You can override this behaviour by using initialStyle prop

  • due to the complexity of margins and their potentially collapsible nature, ReactCollapse does not support (vertical) margins on their children. It might lead to the animation "jumping" to its correct height at the end of expanding. To avoid this, use padding instead of margin. See #101 for more details

Migrating from v4 to v5

v5 was another complete rewrite that happened quite a while ago, it was published as @nkbt/react-collapse and tested in real projects for a long time and now fully ready to be used.

In the most common scenario upgrade is trivial (add CSS transition to collapse element), but if you were using a few deprecated props - there might be some extra work required.

Luckily almost every deprecated callback or prop has fully working analogue in v5. Unfortunately not all of them could maintain full backward compatibility, so please check this migration guide below.

1. Change in behaviour

New Collapse does not implement animations anymore, it only determines Content height and updates Collapse wrapper height to match it. Only after Collapse height reaches Content height (animation finished), Collapse's style is updated to have height: auto; overflow: initial.

The implications is that you will need to update your CSS with transition:

.ReactCollapse--collapse {
  transition: height 500ms;
}

IMPORTANT: without adding css transition there will be no animation and component will open/close instantly.

2. New props or updated props

  • onRest/onWork callbacks (see above for full description). Though onRest did exist previously, now it is called with arguments containing few operational params and flags.

  • initialStyle you may control initial element style, for example to force initial animation from 0 to height by using initialStyle={{height: '0px', overflow: 'hidden'}} IMPORTANT Any updates to this prop will be ignored after first render. Default value is:

      initialStyle = props.isOpened
        ? {height: 'auto', overflow: 'initial'}
        : {height: '0px', overflow: 'hidden'};
  • checkTimeout number in ms. Collapse will check height after thins timeout to determine if animation is completed, the shorter the number - the faster onRest will be triggered and the quicker hight: auto will be applied. The downside - more calculations. Default value is: 50.

3. Deprecated props (not available in v5)

  • ~~Pass-through props~~ - any unknown props passed to Collapse component will be ignored

  • ~~hasNestedCollapse~~ - no longer necessary, as v5 does not care if there are nested Collapse elements, see example/App/Nested.js

  • ~~fixedHeight~~ - no longer necessary, just set whatever height you need for content element and Collapse will work as expected, see example/App/VariableHeight.js

  • ~~springConfig~~ - as new Collapse relies on simple CSS transitions (or your own implementation of animation) and does not use react-collapse, springConfig is no longer necessary. You can control control animation with css like

    .ReactCollapse--collapse {
      transition: height 500ms;
    }
  • ~~forceInitialAnimation~~ - you can use new prop initialStyle={{height: '0px', overflow: 'hidden'}} instead, so when new height will be set after component is rendered - it should naturally animate.

  • ~~onMeasure~~ - please use onRest and onWork instead and pick contentHeight from argument

    <Collapse
      onRest={({contentHeight}) => console.log(contentHeight)}
      onWork={({contentHeight}) => console.log(contentHeight)}>
      <div>content</div>
    </Collapse>
  • ~~onRender~~ - since animations are fully controlled by external app (e.g. with CSS) we no draw each frame and do not actually re-render component anymore, so it is impossible to have onRender callback

Development and testing

Currently is being developed and tested with the latest stable Node on OSX.

To run example covering all ReactCollapse features, use yarn start, which will compile example/Example.js

git clone [email protected]:nkbt/react-collapse.git
cd react-collapse
yarn install
yarn start

# then
open http://localhost:8080

Tests

# to run ESLint check
yarn lint

# to run tests
yarn test

License

MIT