selectless
v1.1.0
Published
<h1 align="center"> Selectless <br> </h1> <p align="center" style="font-size: 1.2rem;">Custom Select without predefined UI for React using Context</p>
Downloads
3
Keywords
Readme
Install
yarn add selectless
npm install selectless
Introduction
There are three different ways to use selectless
:
- On a component level,
selectless
provides a basic component that you can customize with any css-in-js library or classname/style - On a custom component level, each component provided by
selectless
accepts a customrender
prop that allows you to override the default representation/binding of the component - On a low level controller,
selectless
provides an HOC that lets you pass down the context props ofselectless
as props to your component. This allow a full control on how you want to useselectless
.
I hope in a near future that me and/or the community can provide pre-styleds for the various css-in-js solutions existing out there.
Inspiration
This package was inspired by the great react-select
and the talk from Ryan Florence "Compound Components"
Why we created this package ?
So the purpose of this package is not to replace react-select
in a first place but to provide an alternative compatible with css-in-js libraries that let you have full control over the UI of your select without dealing with the logic behind a select.
In a near futur we hope we(our the community) can provide custom made select UI with selectless
as module packages for each css-in-js solutions and even SASS, LESS, etc. You can already find some examples in the storybook.
Basic Usage
// src/components/customSelect.js
import React from 'react'
import {Select, Item, Label, List} from 'selectless'
const simpleOptions = [
{value: 'paris', label: 'Paris'},
{value: 'newyork', label: 'New-York'},
{value: 'tokyo', label: 'Tokyo'},
]
const CustomSelect = (props) => (
<Select name="context" onChange={onChange} options={simpleOptions} {...props}>
<Label />
<List renderItem={Item} />
</Select>
)
export default CustomSelect
Documentation
Examples
Other Solutions
Downshift
There was no real solution for this problem when I started this project, then Kent C. Dodds released react-autocompletly (now downshift) that uses the same basic principles and try to solve the same problem. I started working on this a bit earlier but I got lazy and put the project aside. Anyway, right now his project has far more support so you should consider testing it too. :)
React-select
React-select is still really good.
LICENSE
MIT