radial-progressbar
v0.0.1
Published
A circular progress indicator component
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React Circular Progressbar
A circular progressbar component, built with SVG and extensively customizable. Try it out on CodeSandbox.
Version 2.0.0 is out! 👋
New features:
- Use
import { CircularProgressbarWithChildren }
in order to put arbitrary JSX inside the component. - Use
import { buildStyles }
to make it easier to customize styles. - Use
props.minValue
andprops.maxValue
to specify a range other than 0-100.
Breaking changes: if you're upgrading from an older version, take a look at UPGRADING.md for instructions on how to migrate.
Documentation for v1.x.x will still be available at README_v1.md.
Installation
Install with yarn:
yarn add react-circular-progressbar
or npm:
npm install --save react-circular-progressbar
Usage
Import the component and default styles:
import { CircularProgressbar } from 'react-circular-progressbar';
import 'react-circular-progressbar/dist/styles.css';
Note: Importing CSS requires a CSS loader (if you're using create-react-app, this is already set up for you). If you don't have a CSS loader, you can copy styles.css into your project instead.
Now you can use the component:
const percentage = 66;
<CircularProgressbar value={percentage} text={`${percentage}%`} />;
If your values are not in percentages, you can adjust minValue
and maxValue
to select the scale you want:
const value = 0.66;
<CircularProgressbar value={value} maxValue={1} text={`${value * 100}%`} />;
Props
Take a look at the CodeSandbox for interactive examples on how to use these props.
ℹ️ Version 1.0.0 removed the classForPercentage
and textForPercentage
props in favor of className
and text
props. Version 2.0.0 replaces percentage
with value
and removes the initialAnimation
prop. Take a look at UPGRADING.md for instructions on how to migrate.
| Name | Description |
| ------------------- | -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- |
| value
| Completion value of the progressbar, from minValue
to maxValue
. Required. |
| minValue
| Minimum value of the progressbar. Default: 0
. |
| maxValue
| Maximum value of the progressbar. Default: 100
. |
| className
| Classes to apply to the svg element. Default: ''
. |
| text
| Text to display inside progressbar. Default: ''
. |
| strokeWidth
| Width of circular line relative to total width of component, a value from 0-100. Default: 8
. |
| background
| Whether to display background color. Default: false
. |
| backgroundPadding
| Padding between background circle and path/trail relative to total width of component. Only used if background
is true
. Default: 0
. |
| counterClockwise
| Whether to rotate progressbar in counterclockwise direction. Default: false
. |
| circleRatio
| Number from 0-1 representing ratio of the full circle diameter the progressbar should use. Default: 1
. |
| classes
| Object allowing overrides of classNames of each svg subcomponent (root, trail, path, text, background). Enables styling with react-jss. See this PR for more detail. |
| styles
| Object allowing customization of styles of each svg subcomponent (root, trail, path, text, background). |
Theming (customizing styles)
Use CSS or inline styles to customize the styling - the default CSS is a good starting point, but you can override it as needed.
Using the styles
prop
You can use the styles
prop to customize each part of the progressbar (the root svg, path, trail, text, and background). This uses the native style
prop for each subcomponent, so you can use any CSS properties here, not just the ones mentioned below.
As a convenience, you can use buildStyles
to configure the most common style changes:
import { CircularProgressbar, buildStyles } from 'react-circular-progressbar';
const percentage = 66;
<CircularProgressbar
value={percentage}
text={`${percentage}%`}
styles={buildStyles({
// Rotation of path and trail, in number of turns (0-1)
rotation: 0.25,
// Whether to use rounded or flat corners on the ends - can use 'butt' or 'round'
strokeLinecap: 'butt',
// Text size
textSize: '16px',
// How long animation takes to go from one percentage to another, in seconds
pathTransitionDuration: 0.5,
// Can specify path transition in more detail, or remove it entirely
// pathTransition: 'none',
// Colors
pathColor: `rgba(62, 152, 199, ${percentage / 100})`,
textColor: '#f88',
trailColor: '#d6d6d6',
backgroundColor: '#3e98c7',
})}
/>;
buildStyles
is a shorthand, but you can also build the styles
object yourself. It's an object with root
, path
, trail
, text
, and background
properties, which are each a set of inline styles to apply to the relevant SVG subcomponent. Here's the equivalent set of styles as above, without using buildStyles
:
<CircularProgressbar
value={percentage}
text={`${percentage}%`}
styles={{
// Customize the root svg element
root: {},
// Customize the path, i.e. the "completed progress"
path: {
// Path color
stroke: `rgba(62, 152, 199, ${percentage / 100})`,
// Whether to use rounded or flat corners on the ends - can use 'butt' or 'round'
strokeLinecap: 'butt',
// Customize transition animation
transition: 'stroke-dashoffset 0.5s ease 0s',
// Rotate the path
transform: 'rotate(0.25turn)',
transformOrigin: 'center center',
},
// Customize the circle behind the path, i.e. the "total progress"
trail: {
// Trail color
stroke: '#d6d6d6',
// Whether to use rounded or flat corners on the ends - can use 'butt' or 'round'
strokeLinecap: 'butt',
// Rotate the trail
transform: 'rotate(0.25turn)',
transformOrigin: 'center center',
},
// Customize the text
text: {
// Text color
fill: '#f88',
// Text size
fontSize: '16px',
},
// Customize background - only used when the `background` prop is true
background: {
fill: '#3e98c7',
},
}}
/>
However, you're not limited to the CSS properties shown above—you have the full set of SVG CSS properties available to you when you use prop.styles
.
See the CodeSandbox examples for a live example on how to customize styles.
Using CSS
You can also customize styles with CSS. There are equivalent CSS hooks for the root, path, trail, text, and background of the progressbar.
If you're importing the default styles, you can override the defaults like this:
import 'react-circular-progressbar/dist/styles.css';
import './custom.css';
// custom.css
.CircularProgressbar-path {
stroke: red;
}
.CircularProgressbar-trail {
stroke: gray;
}
.CircularProgressbar-text {
fill: yellow;
}
.CircularProgressbar-background {
fill: green;
}
Adding arbitrary text or content inside the progressbar
If you want to add multiple lines of text or images within the progressbar, you can overlay it on top of a regular <CircularProgressbar />
using absolute positioning. react-circular-progressbar
ships with a CircularProgressbarWithChildren
component which makes it easy to do that by using JSX children:
import { CircularProgressbarWithChildren } from 'react-circular-progressbar';
<CircularProgressbarWithChildren value={66}>
{/* Put any JSX content in here that you'd like. It'll be vertically and horizonally centered. */}
<img style={{ width: 40, marginTop: -5 }} src="https://i.imgur.com/b9NyUGm.png" alt="doge" />
<div style={{ fontSize: 12, marginTop: -5 }}>
<strong>66%</strong> mate
</div>
</CircularProgressbarWithChildren>;
CircularProgressbarWithChildren
has all the same props as CircularProgressbar
- you can use it the exact same way otherwise.
Animating text
If you want to animate the text as well as the path, you'll need to transition the value
prop from one value to another using a third-party animation library like react-move
and an easing library like d3-ease
.
You can use a render prop wrapper like AnimatedProgressProvider.js inside this Codesandbox to help manage the transitioning value, and use it like this:
import { easeQuadInOut } from 'd3-ease';
<AnimatedProgressProvider
valueStart={0}
valueEnd={66}
duration={1.4}
easingFunction={easeQuadInOut}
>
{(value) => {
const roundedValue = Math.round(value);
return (
<CircularProgressbar
value={value}
text={`${roundedValue}%`}
/* This is important to include, because if you're fully managing the
animation yourself, you'll want to disable the CSS animation. */
styles={buildStyles({ pathTransition: 'none' })}
/>
);
}}
</AnimatedProgressProvider>;
Animating progressbar upon component mount or upon visible
Upon component mount
In order to trigger the default CSS animation on mount, you'll need to change props.value
from 0 to your desired value with a setTimeout
in componentDidMount
. You can use a wrapper component to help manage this like ProgressProvider.js in this Codesandbox. Then you can do:
<ProgressProvider valueStart={0} valueEnd={66}>
{(value) => <CircularProgressbar value={value} />}
</ProgressProvider>
Upon visible
To animate the progressbar only when it becomes visible (e.g. if it's below the fold), you can use something like react-visibility-sensor
which detects whether the component is visible or not. Here's a Codesandbox example.
Fixing text centering in Internet Explorer (IE)
Because the dominant-baseline
CSS property does not work in IE, the text may not be centered in IE.
The recommended way to fix this is to instead of using props.text
, use CircularProgressbarWithChildren
and put your text in props.children
, as described here.
However, you can also work around this by setting the text
prop to be a <tspan>
element and then adjusting the dy
vertical offset, like so:
// Use feature or browser detection to determine if IE
const needDominantBaselineFix = ...
<CircularProgressbar
value={percentage}
text={<tspan dy={needDominantBaselineFix ? -10 : 0}>{percentage}</tspan>}
/>
See this Codesandbox example to see this in action.
Advanced usage
Supported platforms
react-circular-progressbar does not work with React Native, because React Native does not support <svg>
out of the box.
Contributing
Take a look at CONTRIBUTING.md to see how to help contribute to react-circular-progressbar.