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@shopify/react-shortcuts

v5.2.0

Published

Declaratively and efficiently match shortcut combinations in your React application

Downloads

44,427

Readme

@shopify/react-shortcuts

Build Status Build Status License: MIT npm version bundle size badge

Declarative and performant library for matching shortcut combinations in React applications.

Installation

yarn add @shopify/react-shortcuts

Usage

The library exposes three main parts, <ShortcutProvider />, <Shortcut /> and ShortcutManager.

ShortcutProvider

Wrapping your application in a <ShortcutProvider /> allows you to use <Shortcut /> components anywhere in your application, internally sharing a single ShortcutManager instance to minimize listeners and collisions.

// App.ts

import React from 'react';
import {ShortcutProvider} from '@shopify/react-shortcuts';

export default function App() {
  <ShortcutProvider>{/* the rest of your app */}</ShortcutProvider>;
}

Shortcut

Shortcut is used to register a new keyboard shortcut to ShortcutManager. It can be triggered globally or only when a node is focused.

Note: a <Shortcut /> must have a <ShortcutProvider /> somewhere above it in the tree.

API

export interface Props {
  /*
    keys that, when pressed sequentially, will trigger `onMatch`
  */
  ordered: Key[];
  /*
    modifier keys that need to be kept pressed along with `keys` to trigger `onMatch`
  */
  held?: HeldKey;
  /*
    a callback that will trigger when the key combination is pressed
  */
  onMatch(matched: {ordered: Key[]; held?: ModifierKey[]}): void;
  /*
    a node that, when supplied, will be used to only fire `onMatch` when it is focused
  */
  node?: HTMLElement | null;
  /*
    a boolean that lets you temporarily disable the shortcut
  */
  ignoreInput?: boolean;
  /*
    a boolean that lets you opt out of swallowing the key event and let it propagate
  */
  allowDefault?: boolean;
  /*
    an array of DefaultIgnoredTag allowing you to flag which default ignored tags you want to bypass (textarea, input, select)
  */
  acceptedDefaultIgnoredTags?: DefaultIgnoredTag[];
}

Basic example

// MyComponent.tsx

import React from 'react';
import {Shortcut} from '@shopify/react-shortcuts';

export default function MyComponent() {
  return (
    <div>
      {/* some app markup here */}
      <Shortcut ordered={['f', 'o', 'o']} onMatch={() => console.log('foo')} />
    </div>
  );
}

With modifier keys

// MyComponent.tsx

import React from 'react';
import {Shortcut} from '@shopify/react-shortcuts';

export default function MyComponent() {
  return (
    <div>
      {/* some app markup here */}
      <Shortcut
        held={['Control', 'Shift']}
        ordered={['B']}
        onMatch={() => console.log('bar!')}
      />
    </div>
  );
}

You may also want to provide alternate groupings of held modifier keys. For example, “undo/redo” key combos are slightly different on Windows vs Mac OS. The below example will register onMatch if either Control + z or Meta + z is pressed simultaneously.

// MyComponent.tsx

import React from 'react';
import {Shortcut} from '@shopify/react-shortcuts';

export default function MyComponent() {
  return (
    <div>
      {/* some app markup here */}
      <Shortcut
        held={[['Control'], ['Meta']]}
        ordered={['z']}
        onMatch={() => console.log('undo!')}
      />
    </div>
  );
}

Some Gotchas

  1. Meta refers to the “Command” key on Mac keyboards.
  2. Fn and FnLock keys are not supported because they don't produce events, as mentioned in the spec

On a focused node

Provide a node in the form of a ref. <Shortcut /> will automatically subscribe to the ShortcutManager once the node is available.

// MyComponent.tsx

import React from 'react';
import {Shortcut} from '@shopify/react-shortcuts';

class MyComponent extends React.Component {
  state = {};

  render() {
    const {fooNode} = this.state;
    return (
      <div>
        <button ref={(node) => this.setState({fooNode: node})} />
        <Shortcut
          node={fooNode}
          ordered={['f', 'o', 'o']}
          onMatch={() => console.log('foo')}
        />
      </div>
    );
  }
}

useShortcut

<Shortcut /> invokes a hook, useShortcut(), under the hood. This hook is also available for use from this package. It will also register a new keyboard shortcut to the ShortcutManager and the API is very similar.

API

function useShortcut(
  // All inputs are the same as the above definitions for the props to <Shortcut />
  ordered: Key[],
  onMatch: (matched: {ordered: Key[]; held?: HeldKey}) => void,
  options: {
    held?: HeldKey;
    node?: HTMLElement | null;
    ignoreInput?: boolean;
    allowDefault?: boolean;
  } = {},
);

Basic example

The below example illustrates the same basic functionality as the <Shortcut /> example above. However, it uses the useShortcut() hook and the component has been removed.

// MyComponent.tsx

import React from 'react';
import {useShortcut} from '@shopify/react-shortcuts';

export default function MyComponent() {
  useShortcut(['f', 'o', 'o'], () => console.log('foo'));

  return <div>{/* some app markup here */}</div>;
}

ShortcutManager

ShortcutManager is created by ShortcutProvider and handles the logic for calling the appropriate shortcut callbacks and avoiding conflicts. You should never need to use it directly in application code, though you may want access to it in tests.

Example jest test

Given a component implementing a <Shortcut />

// MyComponent.tsx

export default function MyComponent() {
  return (
    <div>
      {/* some app markup here */}
      <Shortcut ordered={['f', 'o', 'o']} onMatch={() => console.log('foo')} />
    </div>
  );
}

you might want to add a ShortcutManager to it's context in an @shopify/react-testing test to prevent errors

// MyComponent.test.tsx

import React from 'react';
import {mount} from '@shopify/react-testing';
import {ShortcutManager, Shortcut} from '@shopify/react-shortcuts';

import MyComponent from './MyComponent';

describe('my-component', () => {
  it('renders a shortcut for f,o,o', () => {
    const component = mount(<MyComponent />, {
      context: {shortcutManager: new ShortcutManager()},
    });

    const shortcut = component.find(Shortcut);

    expect(shortcut.prop('ordered')).toEqual(['f', 'o', 'o']);
  });
});