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

react-places-autocomplete-notouch

v5.4.2

Published

A React component for Google Maps Places Autocomplete

Downloads

5

Readme

react-places-autocomplete

A React component to build a customized UI for Google Maps Places Autocomplete (Demo)

travis build MIT-License Gitter

Features

  1. Enable you to easily build a customized autocomplete dropdown powered by Google Maps Places Library
  2. Utility functions to geocode and get latitude and longitude using Google Maps Geocoder API
  3. Pass through arbitrary props to the input element to integrate well with other libraries (e.g. Redux-Form)

Installation

To install the stable version

yarn add react-places-autocomplete

or

npm install react-places-autocomplete --save

The React component is exported as a default export

import PlacesAutocomplete from 'react-places-autocomplete'

geocodeByAddress and geocodeByPlaceId utility functions are named exports

import { geocodeByAddress, geocodeByPlaceId } from 'react-places-autocomplete'

Demo

See live demo: kenny-hibino.github.io/react-places-autocomplete/

To build the example locally, clone this repo and then run:

npm run demo

Getting Started

To use this component, you are going to need to load Google Maps JavaScript API

Load the library in your project

<script type="text/javascript" src="https://maps.googleapis.com/maps/api/js?key=YOUR_API_KEY&libraries=places"></script>

Declare your PlacesAutocomplete component using React component

import React from 'react'
import PlacesAutocomplete, { geocodeByAddress, getLatLng } from 'react-places-autocomplete'

class SimpleForm extends React.Component {
  constructor(props) {
    super(props)
    this.state = { address: 'San Francisco, CA' }
    this.onChange = (address) => this.setState({ address })
  }

  handleFormSubmit = (event) => {
    event.preventDefault()

    geocodeByAddress(this.state.address)
      .then(results => getLatLng(results[0]))
      .then(latLng => console.log('Success', latLng))
      .catch(error => console.error('Error', error))
  }

  render() {
    const inputProps = {
      value: this.state.address,
      onChange: this.onChange,
    }

    return (
      <form onSubmit={this.handleFormSubmit}>
        <PlacesAutocomplete inputProps={inputProps} />
        <button type="submit">Submit</button>
      </form>
    )
  }
}

export default SimpleForm

Props for PlacesAutocomplete

Required Props:

Optional Props:

inputProps

Type: Object, Required: true

PlacesAutocomplete is a controlled component. Therefore, you MUST pass at least value and onChange callback to the input element.

You can pass arbitrary props to the input element thorough inputProps object (NOTE: className and style props for the input element should be passed through classNames.input and styles.input respectively).

  const inputProps = {
    value, // `value` is required
    onChange, // `onChange` is required
    onBlur: () => {
      console.log('blur!')
    },
    type: 'search',
    placeholder: 'Search Places...',
    autoFocus: true,
  }

autocompleteItem

Type: Functional React Component, Required: false

The function takes props with suggestion, formattedSuggestion keys (see the example below). We highly recommend that you create your own custom AutocompleteItem and pass it as a prop.

/***********************************************
 Example #1
 autocompleteItem example with `suggestion`
************************************************/
render() {
  const AutocompleteItem = ({ suggestion }) => (<div><i className="fa fa-map-marker"/>{suggestion}</div>)

  return (
    <PlacesAutocomplete
      inputProps={inputProps}
      autocompleteItem={AutocompleteItem}
    />
  )
}

/***************************************************
 Example #2
 autocompleteItem example with `formattedSuggestion`
****************************************************/
render() {
  const AutocompleteItem = ({ formattedSuggestion }) => (
    <div>
      <strong>{ formattedSuggestion.mainText }</strong>{' '}
      <small>{ formattedSuggestion.secondaryText }</small>
    </div>
  )

  return (
    <PlacesAutocomplete
      inputProps={inputProps}
      autocompleteItem={AutocompleteItem}
    />
  )
}

classNames

Type: Object, Required: false

You can give a custom css classes to elements. Accepted keys are root, input, autocompleteContainer, autocompleteItem, autocompleteItemActive, googleLogoContainer, googleLogoImage. If you pass classNames props, none of the default inline styles nor inline styles from styles prop will be applied to the element, and you will have full control over styling via CSS.

// classNames example
render() {
  const cssClasses = {
    root: 'form-group',
    input: 'form-control',
    autocompleteContainer: 'my-autocomplete-container'
  }

  return (
    <PlacesAutocomplete
      inputProps={inputProps}
      classNames={cssClasses}
    />
  )
}

Now you can easily apply custom CSS styles using the classNames!

styles

Type Object, Required: false

You can provide custom inline styles to elements. Accepted keys are root, input, autocompleteContainer, autocompleteItem, autocompleteItemActive, googleLogoContainer, googleLogoImage.

const defaultStyles = {
  root: {
    position: 'relative',
    paddingBottom: '0px',
  },
  input: {
    display: 'inline-block',
    width: '100%',
    padding: '10px',
  },
  autocompleteContainer: {
    position: 'absolute',
    top: '100%',
    backgroundColor: 'white',
    border: '1px solid #555555',
    width: '100%',
  },
  autocompleteItem: {
    backgroundColor: '#ffffff',
    padding: '10px',
    color: '#555555',
    cursor: 'pointer',
  },
  autocompleteItemActive: {
    backgroundColor: '#fafafa'
  },
  googleLogoContainer: {
    textAlign: 'right',
    padding: '1px',
    backgroundColor: '#fafafa'
  },
  googleLogoImage: {
    width: 150
  }
}

Object passed via styles prop will be merged in with the above defaults and applied to their respective elements. NOTE: Passing classNames will disable any inline styling for respective elements.

// custom style examples
render() {
  const myStyles = {
    root: { position: 'absolute' },
    input: { width: '100%' },
    autocompleteContainer: { backgroundColor: 'green' },
    autocompleteItem: { color: 'black' },
    autocompleteItemActive: { color: 'blue' }
  }

  return (
    <PlacesAutocomplete
      inputProps={inputProps}
      styles={myStyles}
    />
  )
}

onError

Type: Function Required: false

You can pass onError prop to customize the behavior when google.maps.places.PlacesServiceStatus is not OK (e.g., no predictions are found)

Function takes status as a parameter

clearItemsOnError

Type: Boolean Required: false Default: false

You can pass clearItemsOnError prop to indicate whether the autocomplete predictions should be cleared when google.maps.places.PlacesServiceStatus is not OK

onSelect

Type: Function Required: false, Default: null

You can pass a function that gets called instead of onChange function when user hits the Enter key or clicks on an autocomplete item.

The function takes two positional arguments. First argument is address, second is placeId.

const handleSelect = (address, placeId) => {
  this.setState({ address, placeId })

  // You can do other things with address string or placeId. For example, geocode :)
}

// Pass this function via onSelect prop.
<PlacesAutocomplete
  inputProps={inputProps}
  onSelect={this.handleSelect}
/>

onEnterKeyDown

Type: Function Required: false Deafult: noop

You can pass a callback function that gets called when pressing down Enter key when no item in the dropdown is selected.
The function takes one argument, the value in the input field.

const handleEnter = (address) => {
  geocodeByAddress(address)
    .then(results => {
      console.log('results', results)
    })
}

// Pass this function via onEnterKeyDown prop.
<PlacesAutocomplete
  inputProps={inputProps}
  onEnterKeyDown={this.handleEnter}
/>

options

Type: Object Required: false Default: {}

You can fine-tune the settings passed to the AutocompleteService class with options prop. This prop accepts an object following the same format as google.maps.places.AutocompletionRequest (except for input, which comes from the value of the input field).

// these options will bias the autocomplete predictions toward Sydney, Australia with a radius of 2000 meters,
// and limit the results to addresses only
const options = {
  location: new google.maps.LatLng(-34, 151),
  radius: 2000,
  types: ['address']
}

<PlacesAutocomplete
  inputProps={inputProps}
  options={options}
/>

debounce

Type: Number Required: false Default: 200

The number of milliseconds to delay before making a call to Google API.

highlightFirstSuggestion

Type: Boolean Required: false Default: false

If set to true, first suggestion in the dropdown will be automatically highlighted.

googleLogo

Type: Boolean Required: false Default: true

Allows you to toggle the "powered by Google" logo. For more information on Google's logo requirements, refer to this link: https://developers.google.com/places/web-service/policies

googleLogoType

Type: String ("default" or "inverse") Required: false Default: "default"

Allows you to pick right color theme for "powered by Google" logo. Please see Google's API page for more information: https://developers.google.com/places/web-service/policies

Utility Functions

geocodeByAddress API

/**
 * Returns a promise
 * @param {String} address
 * @return {Promise}
*/
geocodeByAddress(address)

address

Type: String, Required: true

String that gets passed to Google Maps Geocoder

import { geocodeByAddress } from 'react-places-autocomplete'

// `results` is an entire payload from Google API.
geocodeByAddress('Los Angeles, CA')
  .then(results => console.log(results))
  .catch(error => console.error(error))

geocodeByPlaceId API

/**
 * Returns a promise
 * @param {String} placeId
 * @return {Promise}
*/
geocodeByPlaceId(placeId)

placeId

Type: String, Required: true

String that gets passed to Google Maps Geocoder

import { geocodeByPlaceId } from 'react-places-autocomplete'

// `results` is an entire payload from Google API.
geocodeByPlaceId('ChIJE9on3F3HwoAR9AhGJW_fL-I')
  .then(results => console.log(results))
  .catch(error => console.error(error))

getLatLng API

/**
 * Returns a promise
 * @param {Object} result
 * @return {Promise}
*/
getLatLng(result)

result

Type: Object Required: true

One of the element from results (returned from Google Maps Geocoder)

import { geocodeByAddress, getLatLng } from 'react-places-autocomplete'

geocodeByAddress('Tokyo, Japan')
  .then(results => getLatLng(results[0]))
  .then(({ lat, lng }) => console.log('Successfully got latitude and longitude', { lat, lng }))

Discussion

Join us on Gitter if you are interested in contributing!

License

MIT