@rluncasu/forked-react-to-print
v2.11.2
Published
Print React components in the browser
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ReactToPrint - Print React components in the browser
So you've created a React component and would love to give end users the ability to print out the contents of that component. This package aims to solve that by popping up a print window with CSS styles copied over as well.
Demo
Install
npm install --save react-to-print
API
<ReactToPrint />
The component accepts the following props:
| Name | Type | Description |
| :-------------------: | :------- | :---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- |
| bodyClass?
| string
| One or more class names to pass to the print window, separated by spaces |
| content
| function
| A function that returns a component reference value. The content of this reference value is then used for print |
| copyStyles?
| boolean
| Copy all <style>
and <link type="stylesheet" />
tags from <head>
inside the parent window into the print window. (default: true
) |
| documentTitle?
| string
| Set the title for printing when saving as a file |
| fonts?
| { family: string, source: string }[]
| You may optionally provide a list of fonts which will be loaded into the printing iframe. This is useful if you are using custom fonts |
| onAfterPrint?
| function
| Callback function that triggers after the print dialog is closed regardless of if the user selected to print or cancel |
| onBeforeGetContent?
| function
| Callback function that triggers before the library gathers the page's content. Either returns void or a Promise. This can be used to change the content on the page before printing |
| onBeforePrint?
| function
| Callback function that triggers before print. Either returns void or a Promise. Note: this function is run immediately prior to printing, but after the page's content has been gathered. To modify content before printing, use onBeforeGetContent
instead |
| onPrintError?
| function
| Callback function (signature: function(errorLocation: 'onBeforePrint' | 'onBeforeGetContent' | 'print', error: Error)
) that will be called if there is a printing error serious enough that printing cannot continue. Currently limited to Promise rejections in onBeforeGetContent
, onBeforePrint
, and print
. Use this to attempt to print again. errorLocation
will tell you in which callback the Promise was rejected |
| pageStyle?
| string
or function
| We set some basic styles to help improve page printing. Use this to override them and provide your own. If given as a function it must return a string
|
| print?
| function
| If passed, this function will be used instead of window.print
to print the content. This function is passed the HTMLIFrameElement
which is the iframe used internally to gather content for printing. When finished, this function must return a Promise. Use this to print in non-browser environments such as Electron |
| removeAfterPrint?
| boolean
| Remove the print iframe after action. Defaults to false
|
| suppressErrors?
| boolean
| When passed, prevents console
logging of errors |
| trigger?
| function
| A function that returns a React Component or Element. Note: under the hood, we inject a custom onClick
prop into the returned Component/Element. As such, do not provide an onClick
prop to the root node returned by trigger
, as it will be overwritten |
PrintContextConsumer
If you need extra control over printing and don't want to specify trigger
directly, PrintContextConsumer
allows you to gain direct access to the handlePrint
method which triggers the print action. Requires React ^16.3.0.
useReactToPrint
For functional components, use the useReactToPrint
hook, which accepts an object with the same configuration props as <ReactToPrint />
and returns a handlePrint
function which when called will trigger the print action. Requires React ^16.8.0.
Compatibility
react-to-print
should be compatible with most major browsers. We also do our best to support IE11.
Known Incompatible Browsers
- Firefox Android (does not support
window.print
)
Known Issues
onAfterPrint
may fire immediately (before the print dialog is closed) on newer versions of Safari wherewindow.print
does not block
Examples
export class ComponentToPrint extends React.PureComponent {
render() {
return (
<table>
<thead>
<th>column 1</th>
<th>column 2</th>
<th>column 3</th>
</thead>
<tbody>
<tr>
<td>data 1</td>
<td>data 2</td>
<td>data 3</td>
</tr>
</tbody>
</table>
);
}
}
Calling from class components
import React from 'react';
import ReactToPrint from 'react-to-print';
import { ComponentToPrint } from './ComponentToPrint';
class Example extends React.PureComponent {
render() {
return (
<div>
<ReactToPrint
trigger={() => {
// NOTE: could just as easily return <SomeComponent />. Do NOT pass an `onClick` prop
// to the root node of the returned component as it will be overwritten.
return <a href="#">Print this out!</a>;
}}
content={() => this.componentRef}
/>
<ComponentToPrint ref={el => (this.componentRef = el)} />
</div>
);
}
}
Calling from class components with PrintContextConsumer
import React from 'react';
import ReactToPrint, { PrintContextConsumer } from 'react-to-print';
import { ComponentToPrint } from './ComponentToPrint';
class Example extends React.PureComponent {
render() {
return (
<div>
<ReactToPrint content={() => this.componentRef}>
<PrintContextConsumer>
{({ handlePrint }) => (
<button onClick={handlePrint}>Print this out!</button>
)}
</PrintContextConsumer>
</ReactToPrint>
<ComponentToPrint ref={el => (this.componentRef = el)} />
</div>
);
}
}
Calling from functional components
import React, { useRef } from 'react';
import ReactToPrint from 'react-to-print';
import { ComponentToPrint } from './ComponentToPrint';
const Example = () => {
const componentRef = useRef();
return (
<div>
<ReactToPrint
trigger={() => <button>Print this out!</button>}
content={() => componentRef.current}
/>
<ComponentToPrint ref={componentRef} />
</div>
);
};
Calling from functional components with useReactToPrint
import React, { useRef } from 'react';
import { useReactToPrint } from 'react-to-print';
import { ComponentToPrint } from './ComponentToPrint';
const Example = () => {
const componentRef = useRef();
const handlePrint = useReactToPrint({
content: () => componentRef.current,
});
return (
<div>
<ComponentToPrint ref={componentRef} />
<button onClick={handlePrint}>Print this out!</button>
</div>
);
};
Running locally
NOTE: Node ^10 is required to build the library locally. We use Node ^10 for our CLI checks.
FAQ
Why does onAfterPrint
fire even if the user cancels printing
onAfterPrint
fires when the print dialog closes, regardless of why it closes. This is the behavior of the onafterprint
browser event.
Why does react-to-print
skip <link rel="stylesheet" href="">
tags
<link>
s with empty href
attributes are INVALID HTML. In addition, they can cause all sorts of undesirable behavior. For example, many browsers - including modern ones, when presented with <link href="">
will attempt to load the current page. Some even attempt to load the current page's parent directory.
Note: related to the above, img
tags with empty src
attributes are also invalid, and we may not attempt to load them.
How do you make ComponentToPrint
show only while printing
If you've created a component that is intended only for printing and should not render in the parent component, wrap that component in a div
with style set to { display: "none" }
, like so:
<div style={{ display: "none" }}><ComponentToPrint ref={componentRef} /></div>
This will hide ComponentToPrint
but keep it in the DOM so that it can be copied for printing.
Changing print settings in the print dialog
Unfortunately there is no standard browser API for interacting with the print dialog. All react-to-print
is able to do is open the dialog and give it the desired content to print. We cannot modify settings such as the default paper size, if the user has background graphics selected or not, etc.
Helpful Style Tips
Set landscape printing (240)
In the component that is passed in as the content ref, add the following:
@media print {
@page { size: landscape; }
}
Printing elements that are not displayed (159)
Instead of using { display: 'none' }
, try using { overflow: hidden; height: 0; }
Page Breaks
Pattern for Page-Breaking Dynamic React Content
Define a page-break class to apply to elements which could be sensibly split into a page.
<div className="print-container" style={{ margin: "0", padding: "0" }}>
{listOfContent.map(yourContent => (
<>
<div className="page-break" />
<div>{yourContent}</div>
</>
)}
</div>
In your styles, define your @media print
styles, which should include setting your preference for CSS page-break-
(see w3's reference for options) to auto
, and ensuring that your page-break
element does not affect non-print style.
@media all {
.page-break {
display: none;
}
}
@media print {
html, body {
height: initial !important;
overflow: initial !important;
-webkit-print-color-adjust: exact;
}
}
@media print {
.page-break {
margin-top: 1rem;
display: block;
page-break-before: auto;
}
}
@page {
size: auto;
margin: 20mm;
}
Troubleshooting Page Breaks
If your content rendered as print media does not automatically break multi-page content into multiple pages, the issue may be
1) style incompatibilities with print media rendering, or
2) a need to assign CSS page-break-
properties to define how your document should behave when printed
Common Page Break Pitfalls
- A style of
overflow: scroll
, when rendered to print, will result in cut off content instead of page breaks to include the content. - A style of
position: absolute
, when rendered to print, may result in reformatted, rotated, or re-scaled content, causing unintended affects to print page layout and page breaks.