scf4-react-tooltip-lite
v1.11.0
Published
React tooltip, focused on simplicity and performance
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React tooltip-lite
A lightweight and responsive tooltip. Feel free to Post an issue if you're looking to support more use cases.
Getting started
1. Install with NPM
$ npm install react-tooltip-lite
2. Import into your react Component
import Tooltip from 'react-tooltip-lite';
3. Wrap any element with the Tooltip component to make it a target
<Tooltip content="Go to google">
<a href="http://google.com"> edge</a>
</Tooltip>
CodePen demo: http://codepen.io/bsidelinger912/pen/WOdPNK
styling
By default you need to style react-tooltip-lite with CSS, this allows for psuedo elements and some cool border tricks, as well as using css/sass/less variables and such to keep your colors consistent. (Note: as of version 1.2.0 you can also pass the "useDefaultStyles" prop which will allow you to use react-tooltip-lite without a stylesheet.)
Since the tooltip's arrow is created using the css border rule (https://css-tricks.com/snippets/css/css-triangle/), you'll want to specify the border-color for the arrow to set it's color.
Here's an example stylesheet:
.react-tooltip-lite {
background: #333;
color: white;
}
.react-tooltip-lite-arrow {
border-color: #333;
}
For more examples, see the CodePen demo: http://codepen.io/bsidelinger912/pen/WOdPNK.
Props
You can pass in props to define tip direction, styling, etc. Content is the only required prop.
Here's an example using more of the props:
<Tooltip
content={(
<div>
<h4 className="tip-heading">An unordered list to demo some html content</h4>
<ul className="tip-list">
<li>One</li>
<li>Two</li>
<li>Three</li>
<li>Four</li>
<li>Five</li>
</ul>
</div>
)}
direction="right"
tagName="span"
className="target"
>
Target content for big html tip
</Tooltip>
To see more usage examples, take look at the /example folder in the source.