ColorSlider
A color slider allows users to adjust an individual channel of a color value.
install | yarn add react-aria-components |
---|---|
version | 1.3.3 |
usage | import {ColorSlider} from 'react-aria-components' |
Example#
import {ColorSlider, ColorThumb, Label, SliderOutput, SliderTrack} from 'react-aria-components';
<ColorSlider channel="hue" defaultValue="hsl(0, 100%, 50%)">
<Label />
<SliderOutput />
<SliderTrack>
<ColorThumb />
</SliderTrack>
</ColorSlider>
import {
ColorSlider,
ColorThumb,
Label,
SliderOutput,
SliderTrack
} from 'react-aria-components';
<ColorSlider
channel="hue"
defaultValue="hsl(0, 100%, 50%)"
>
<Label />
<SliderOutput />
<SliderTrack>
<ColorThumb />
</SliderTrack>
</ColorSlider>
import {
ColorSlider,
ColorThumb,
Label,
SliderOutput,
SliderTrack
} from 'react-aria-components';
<ColorSlider
channel="hue"
defaultValue="hsl(0, 100%, 50%)"
>
<Label />
<SliderOutput />
<SliderTrack>
<ColorThumb />
</SliderTrack>
</ColorSlider>
Show CSS
.react-aria-ColorSlider {
display: grid;
grid-template-areas: "label output"
"track track";
grid-template-columns: 1fr auto;
gap: 4px;
max-width: 300px;
.react-aria-Label {
grid-area: label;
}
.react-aria-SliderOutput {
grid-area: output;
}
.react-aria-SliderTrack {
grid-area: track;
border-radius: 4px;
}
&[data-orientation=horizontal] {
.react-aria-SliderTrack {
height: 28px;
}
.react-aria-ColorThumb {
top: 50%;
}
}
}
.react-aria-ColorThumb {
border: 2px solid white;
box-shadow: 0 0 0 1px black, inset 0 0 0 1px black;
width: 20px;
height: 20px;
border-radius: 50%;
box-sizing: border-box;
&[data-focus-visible] {
width: 24px;
height: 24px;
}
}
.react-aria-ColorSlider {
display: grid;
grid-template-areas: "label output"
"track track";
grid-template-columns: 1fr auto;
gap: 4px;
max-width: 300px;
.react-aria-Label {
grid-area: label;
}
.react-aria-SliderOutput {
grid-area: output;
}
.react-aria-SliderTrack {
grid-area: track;
border-radius: 4px;
}
&[data-orientation=horizontal] {
.react-aria-SliderTrack {
height: 28px;
}
.react-aria-ColorThumb {
top: 50%;
}
}
}
.react-aria-ColorThumb {
border: 2px solid white;
box-shadow: 0 0 0 1px black, inset 0 0 0 1px black;
width: 20px;
height: 20px;
border-radius: 50%;
box-sizing: border-box;
&[data-focus-visible] {
width: 24px;
height: 24px;
}
}
.react-aria-ColorSlider {
display: grid;
grid-template-areas: "label output"
"track track";
grid-template-columns: 1fr auto;
gap: 4px;
max-width: 300px;
.react-aria-Label {
grid-area: label;
}
.react-aria-SliderOutput {
grid-area: output;
}
.react-aria-SliderTrack {
grid-area: track;
border-radius: 4px;
}
&[data-orientation=horizontal] {
.react-aria-SliderTrack {
height: 28px;
}
.react-aria-ColorThumb {
top: 50%;
}
}
}
.react-aria-ColorThumb {
border: 2px solid white;
box-shadow: 0 0 0 1px black, inset 0 0 0 1px black;
width: 20px;
height: 20px;
border-radius: 50%;
box-sizing: border-box;
&[data-focus-visible] {
width: 24px;
height: 24px;
}
}
Features#
The <input type="color"> HTML element
can be used to build a color picker, however it is very inconsistent across browsers and operating systems and consists
of a complete color picker rather than a single color channel slider. ColorSlider
helps achieve accessible and
touch-friendly color sliders that can be styled as needed.
- Customizable – Support for adjusting a single channel of RGBA, HSLA, and HSBA colors, in both horizontal and vertical orientations.
- High quality interactions – Mouse, touch, and keyboard input is supported via the useMove hook. Pressing the track moves the thumb to that position. Text selection and touch scrolling are prevented while dragging.
- Accessible – Announces localized color descriptions for screen reader users (e.g. "dark vibrant blue"). Uses a visually hidden
<input>
element for mobile screen reader support and HTML form integration. - International – Channel value is formatted according to the user's locale. The color slider automatically mirrors all interactions in right-to-left languages.
Anatomy#
A color slider consists of a track element and a thumb that the user can drag to change a single channel of a color value.
It may also include optional label and <output>
elements to display the color channel name and current numeric value, respectively.
A visually hidden <input>
element is used to represent the value to assistive technologies.
import {ColorSlider, ColorThumb, Label, SliderOutput, SliderTrack} from 'react-aria-components';
<ColorSlider>
<Label />
<SliderOutput />
<SliderTrack>
<ColorThumb />
</SliderTrack>
</ColorSlider>
import {
ColorSlider,
ColorThumb,
Label,
SliderOutput,
SliderTrack
} from 'react-aria-components';
<ColorSlider>
<Label />
<SliderOutput />
<SliderTrack>
<ColorThumb />
</SliderTrack>
</ColorSlider>
import {
ColorSlider,
ColorThumb,
Label,
SliderOutput,
SliderTrack
} from 'react-aria-components';
<ColorSlider>
<Label />
<SliderOutput />
<SliderTrack>
<ColorThumb />
</SliderTrack>
</ColorSlider>
Composed components#
A ColorSlider
uses the following components, which may also be used standalone or reused in other components.
Reusable wrappers#
If you will use a ColorSlider in multiple places in your app, you can wrap all of the pieces into a reusable component. This way, the DOM structure, styling code, and other logic are defined in a single place and reused everywhere to ensure consistency.
This example wraps ColorSlider
and all of its children together into a single component which accepts an optional label
prop, which is passed to the right place. It also shows how to use the defaultStyle
render prop to add a checkerboard pattern behind partially transparent gradients.
import type {ColorSliderProps} from 'react-aria-components';
interface MyColorSliderProps extends ColorSliderProps {
label?: string;
}
export function MyColorSlider({ label, ...props }: MyColorSliderProps) {
return (
<ColorSlider {...props}>
<Label>{label}</Label>
<SliderOutput />
<SliderTrack
style={({ defaultStyle }) => ({
background: `
,
repeating-conic-gradient(#CCC 0% 25%, white 0% 50%) 50% / 16px 16px`})}
>
<ColorThumb />
</SliderTrack>
</ColorSlider>
);
}
<MyColorSlider label="Red Opacity" defaultValue="#f00" channel="alpha" />
import type {ColorSliderProps} from 'react-aria-components';
interface MyColorSliderProps extends ColorSliderProps {
label?: string;
}
export function MyColorSlider(
{ label, ...props }: MyColorSliderProps
) {
return (
<ColorSlider {...props}>
<Label>{label}</Label>
<SliderOutput />
<SliderTrack
style={({ defaultStyle }) => ({
background: `
,
repeating-conic-gradient(#CCC 0% 25%, white 0% 50%) 50% / 16px 16px`})}
>
<ColorThumb />
</SliderTrack>
</ColorSlider>
);
}
<MyColorSlider
label="Red Opacity"
defaultValue="#f00"
channel="alpha"
/>
import type {ColorSliderProps} from 'react-aria-components';
interface MyColorSliderProps
extends
ColorSliderProps {
label?: string;
}
export function MyColorSlider(
{ label, ...props }:
MyColorSliderProps
) {
return (
<ColorSlider
{...props}
>
<Label>
{label}
</Label>
<SliderOutput />
<SliderTrack
style={(
{
defaultStyle
}
) => ({
background:
`
,
repeating-conic-gradient(#CCC 0% 25%, white 0% 50%) 50% / 16px 16px`})}
>
<ColorThumb />
</SliderTrack>
</ColorSlider>
);
}
<MyColorSlider
label="Red Opacity"
defaultValue="#f00"
channel="alpha"
/>
Value#
A ColorSlider requires either an uncontrolled default value or a controlled value, provided using the defaultValue
or value
props respectively.
The value provided to either of these props should be a color string or Color
object. The channel
prop must also be provided to specify which color channel the slider should display. This must be one of the channels included in the color value, for example, for RGB colors, the "red", "green", and "blue" channels are available. For a full list of supported channels, see the Props table below.
Controlled#
In the example below, the parseColor
function is used to parse the initial color from an HSL string. This is passed to the value
prop to make the ColorSlider
controlled, and updated in the onChange
event.
import {parseColor} from 'react-aria-components';
function Example() {
let [value, setValue] = React.useState(parseColor('hsl(0, 100%, 50%)'));
return (
<>
<MyColorSlider
label="Hue (controlled)"
value={value}
onChange={setValue}
channel="hue" />
<p>Value: {value.toString('hex')}</p>
</>
);
}
import {parseColor} from 'react-aria-components';
function Example() {
let [value, setValue] = React.useState(
parseColor('hsl(0, 100%, 50%)')
);
return (
<>
<MyColorSlider
label="Hue (controlled)"
value={value}
onChange={setValue}
channel="hue"
/>
<p>Value: {value.toString('hex')}</p>
</>
);
}
import {parseColor} from 'react-aria-components';
function Example() {
let [value, setValue] =
React.useState(
parseColor(
'hsl(0, 100%, 50%)'
)
);
return (
<>
<MyColorSlider
label="Hue (controlled)"
value={value}
onChange={setValue}
channel="hue"
/>
<p>
Value:{' '}
{value.toString(
'hex'
)}
</p>
</>
);
}
HTML forms#
ColorSlider supports the name
prop for integration with HTML forms. The value will be submitted as a number between the minimum and maximum value for the displayed channel.
<MyColorSlider
defaultValue="#7f0000"
channel="red"
name="red" />
<MyColorSlider
defaultValue="#7f0000"
channel="red"
name="red" />
<MyColorSlider
defaultValue="#7f0000"
channel="red"
name="red" />
Events#
ColorSlider supports two events: onChange
and onChangeEnd
. onChange
is triggered whenever the ColorSlider's handle is dragged, and onChangeEnd
is triggered when the user stops dragging the handle. Both events receive a Color
object
as a parameter.
The example below uses onChange
and onChangeEnd
to update two separate elements with the ColorSlider's value.
function Example() {
let [currentValue, setCurrentValue] = React.useState(
parseColor('hsl(50, 100%, 50%)')
);
let [finalValue, setFinalValue] = React.useState(currentValue);
return (
<div>
<MyColorSlider
value={currentValue}
channel="hue"
onChange={setCurrentValue}
onChangeEnd={setFinalValue}
/>
<p>Current value: {currentValue.toString('hsl')}</p>
<p>Final value: {finalValue.toString('hsl')}</p>
</div>
);
}
function Example() {
let [currentValue, setCurrentValue] = React.useState(
parseColor('hsl(50, 100%, 50%)')
);
let [finalValue, setFinalValue] = React.useState(
currentValue
);
return (
<div>
<MyColorSlider
value={currentValue}
channel="hue"
onChange={setCurrentValue}
onChangeEnd={setFinalValue}
/>
<p>Current value: {currentValue.toString('hsl')}</p>
<p>Final value: {finalValue.toString('hsl')}</p>
</div>
);
}
function Example() {
let [
currentValue,
setCurrentValue
] = React.useState(
parseColor(
'hsl(50, 100%, 50%)'
)
);
let [
finalValue,
setFinalValue
] = React.useState(
currentValue
);
return (
<div>
<MyColorSlider
value={currentValue}
channel="hue"
onChange={setCurrentValue}
onChangeEnd={setFinalValue}
/>
<p>
Current value:
{' '}
{currentValue
.toString(
'hsl'
)}
</p>
<p>
Final value:{' '}
{finalValue
.toString(
'hsl'
)}
</p>
</div>
);
}
Creating a color picker#
RGBA#
This example shows how you could build an RGBA color picker using four color sliders bound to the same
color value in state. The parseColor
function is used to parse the initial color from a hex value, stored in state. The value
and onChange
props
of ColorSlider are used to make the sliders controlled, so that they all update when the color is modified.
function Example() {
let [color, setColor] = React.useState(parseColor('#ff00ff'));
return (
<>
<MyColorSlider channel="red" value={color} onChange={setColor} />
<MyColorSlider channel="green" value={color} onChange={setColor} />
<MyColorSlider channel="blue" value={color} onChange={setColor} />
<MyColorSlider channel="alpha" value={color} onChange={setColor} />
</>
);
}
function Example() {
let [color, setColor] = React.useState(
parseColor('#ff00ff')
);
return (
<>
<MyColorSlider
channel="red"
value={color}
onChange={setColor}
/>
<MyColorSlider
channel="green"
value={color}
onChange={setColor}
/>
<MyColorSlider
channel="blue"
value={color}
onChange={setColor}
/>
<MyColorSlider
channel="alpha"
value={color}
onChange={setColor}
/>
</>
);
}
function Example() {
let [color, setColor] =
React.useState(
parseColor(
'#ff00ff'
)
);
return (
<>
<MyColorSlider
channel="red"
value={color}
onChange={setColor}
/>
<MyColorSlider
channel="green"
value={color}
onChange={setColor}
/>
<MyColorSlider
channel="blue"
value={color}
onChange={setColor}
/>
<MyColorSlider
channel="alpha"
value={color}
onChange={setColor}
/>
</>
);
}
HSLA#
This example shows how to build a similar color picker to the one above, using HSLA colors instead.
function Example() {
let [color, setColor] = React.useState(parseColor('hsla(0, 100%, 50%, 0.5)'));
return (
<>
<MyColorSlider channel="hue" value={color} onChange={setColor} />
<MyColorSlider channel="saturation" value={color} onChange={setColor} />
<MyColorSlider channel="lightness" value={color} onChange={setColor} />
<MyColorSlider channel="alpha" value={color} onChange={setColor} />
</>
);
}
function Example() {
let [color, setColor] = React.useState(
parseColor('hsla(0, 100%, 50%, 0.5)')
);
return (
<>
<MyColorSlider
channel="hue"
value={color}
onChange={setColor}
/>
<MyColorSlider
channel="saturation"
value={color}
onChange={setColor}
/>
<MyColorSlider
channel="lightness"
value={color}
onChange={setColor}
/>
<MyColorSlider
channel="alpha"
value={color}
onChange={setColor}
/>
</>
);
}
function Example() {
let [color, setColor] =
React.useState(
parseColor(
'hsla(0, 100%, 50%, 0.5)'
)
);
return (
<>
<MyColorSlider
channel="hue"
value={color}
onChange={setColor}
/>
<MyColorSlider
channel="saturation"
value={color}
onChange={setColor}
/>
<MyColorSlider
channel="lightness"
value={color}
onChange={setColor}
/>
<MyColorSlider
channel="alpha"
value={color}
onChange={setColor}
/>
</>
);
}
HSBA#
This example shows how to build an HSBA color picker.
function Example() {
let [color, setColor] = React.useState(parseColor('hsba(0, 100%, 50%, 0.5)'));
return (
<>
<MyColorSlider channel="hue" value={color} onChange={setColor} />
<MyColorSlider channel="saturation" value={color} onChange={setColor} />
<MyColorSlider channel="brightness" value={color} onChange={setColor} />
<MyColorSlider channel="alpha" value={color} onChange={setColor} />
</>
);
}
function Example() {
let [color, setColor] = React.useState(
parseColor('hsba(0, 100%, 50%, 0.5)')
);
return (
<>
<MyColorSlider
channel="hue"
value={color}
onChange={setColor}
/>
<MyColorSlider
channel="saturation"
value={color}
onChange={setColor}
/>
<MyColorSlider
channel="brightness"
value={color}
onChange={setColor}
/>
<MyColorSlider
channel="alpha"
value={color}
onChange={setColor}
/>
</>
);
}
function Example() {
let [color, setColor] =
React.useState(
parseColor(
'hsba(0, 100%, 50%, 0.5)'
)
);
return (
<>
<MyColorSlider
channel="hue"
value={color}
onChange={setColor}
/>
<MyColorSlider
channel="saturation"
value={color}
onChange={setColor}
/>
<MyColorSlider
channel="brightness"
value={color}
onChange={setColor}
/>
<MyColorSlider
channel="alpha"
value={color}
onChange={setColor}
/>
</>
);
}
Visual options#
Vertical orientation#
Sliders are horizontally oriented by default. The orientation
prop can be set to "vertical"
to create a vertical slider. This example also hides the visual label. By default, an aria-label
is provided using the localized channel name (e.g. Hue).
<MyColorSlider
orientation="vertical"
defaultValue="hsb(0, 100%, 100%)"
channel="hue" />
<MyColorSlider
orientation="vertical"
defaultValue="hsb(0, 100%, 100%)"
channel="hue" />
<MyColorSlider
orientation="vertical"
defaultValue="hsb(0, 100%, 100%)"
channel="hue"
/>
Show CSS
.react-aria-ColorSlider {
&[data-orientation=vertical] {
height: 150px;
display: block;
.react-aria-Label,
.react-aria-SliderOutput {
display: none;
}
.react-aria-SliderTrack {
width: 28px;
height: 100%;
}
.react-aria-ColorThumb {
left: 50%;
}
}
}
.react-aria-ColorSlider {
&[data-orientation=vertical] {
height: 150px;
display: block;
.react-aria-Label,
.react-aria-SliderOutput {
display: none;
}
.react-aria-SliderTrack {
width: 28px;
height: 100%;
}
.react-aria-ColorThumb {
left: 50%;
}
}
}
.react-aria-ColorSlider {
&[data-orientation=vertical] {
height: 150px;
display: block;
.react-aria-Label,
.react-aria-SliderOutput {
display: none;
}
.react-aria-SliderTrack {
width: 28px;
height: 100%;
}
.react-aria-ColorThumb {
left: 50%;
}
}
}
Disabled#
A ColorSlider
can be disabled using the isDisabled
prop. This prevents the thumb from being focused or dragged.
It's up to you to style your color slider to appear disabled accordingly.
<MyColorSlider channel="red" defaultValue="#7f007f" isDisabled />
<MyColorSlider
channel="red"
defaultValue="#7f007f"
isDisabled
/>
<MyColorSlider
channel="red"
defaultValue="#7f007f"
isDisabled
/>
Show CSS
.react-aria-ColorSlider {
&[data-disabled] {
.react-aria-SliderTrack {
background: gray !important;
}
.react-aria-ColorThumb {
background: gray !important;
opacity: 0.5;
}
}
}
.react-aria-ColorSlider {
&[data-disabled] {
.react-aria-SliderTrack {
background: gray !important;
}
.react-aria-ColorThumb {
background: gray !important;
opacity: 0.5;
}
}
}
.react-aria-ColorSlider {
&[data-disabled] {
.react-aria-SliderTrack {
background: gray !important;
}
.react-aria-ColorThumb {
background: gray !important;
opacity: 0.5;
}
}
}
Labeling#
By default, ColorSlider
provides an aria-label
for the localized color channel name. If a <Label>
element is rendered, its children default to the channel name. If you wish to override this with a more specific label, custom children can be provided to the <Label>
, or an aria-label
or aria-labelledby
prop may be passed instead.
<ColorSlider channel="hue" defaultValue="hsl(0, 100%, 50%)">
<Label>Background Hue</Label> <SliderOutput />
<SliderTrack>
<ColorThumb />
</SliderTrack>
</ColorSlider>
<ColorSlider
aria-label="Background Saturation" channel="saturation"
defaultValue="hsl(0, 100%, 50%)">
<SliderTrack>
<ColorThumb />
</SliderTrack>
</ColorSlider>
<ColorSlider channel="hue" defaultValue="hsl(0, 100%, 50%)">
<Label>Background Hue</Label> <SliderOutput />
<SliderTrack>
<ColorThumb />
</SliderTrack>
</ColorSlider>
<ColorSlider
aria-label="Background Saturation" channel="saturation"
defaultValue="hsl(0, 100%, 50%)">
<SliderTrack>
<ColorThumb />
</SliderTrack>
</ColorSlider>
<ColorSlider
channel="hue"
defaultValue="hsl(0, 100%, 50%)"
>
<Label>
Background Hue
</Label> <SliderOutput />
<SliderTrack>
<ColorThumb />
</SliderTrack>
</ColorSlider>
<ColorSlider
aria-label="Background Saturation" channel="saturation"
defaultValue="hsl(0, 100%, 50%)"
>
<SliderTrack>
<ColorThumb />
</SliderTrack>
</ColorSlider>
Accessibility#
The aria-valuetext
of the <input>
element is formatted according to the user's locale automatically. It also includes a localized description of the selected color (e.g. "dark vibrant blue").
Internationalization#
In right-to-left languages, color sliders should be mirrored. The label should be right aligned, and the value should be left aligned. Orientation of the gradient background, positioning of the thumb, and dragging behavior is automatically mirrored by ColorSlider
.
Props#
ColorSlider#
Name | Type | Default | Description |
channel | ColorChannel | — | The color channel that the slider manipulates. |
colorSpace | ColorSpace | — | The color space that the slider operates in. The |
orientation | Orientation | 'horizontal' | The orientation of the Slider. |
isDisabled | boolean | — | Whether the whole Slider is disabled. |
value | T | — | The current value (controlled). |
defaultValue | T | — | The default value (uncontrolled). |
name | string | — | The name of the input element, used when submitting an HTML form. See MDN. |
children | ReactNode | (
(values: ColorSliderRenderProps
& & {}
)) => ReactNode | — | The children of the component. A function may be provided to alter the children based on component state. |
className | string | (
(values: ColorSliderRenderProps
& & {}
)) => string | — | The CSS className for the element. A function may be provided to compute the class based on component state. |
style | CSSProperties | (
(values: ColorSliderRenderProps
& & {}
)) => CSSProperties | — | The inline style for the element. A function may be provided to compute the style based on component state. |
Events
Name | Type | Description |
onChange | (
(value: Color
)) => void | Handler that is called when the value changes, as the user drags. |
onChangeEnd | (
(value: Color
)) => void | Handler that is called when the user stops dragging. |
Layout
Name | Type | Description |
slot | string | null | A slot name for the component. Slots allow the component to receive props from a parent component.
An explicit |
Accessibility
Name | Type | Description |
id | string | The element's unique identifier. See MDN. |
aria-label | string | Defines a string value that labels the current element. |
aria-labelledby | string | Identifies the element (or elements) that labels the current element. |
aria-describedby | string | Identifies the element (or elements) that describes the object. |
aria-details | string | Identifies the element (or elements) that provide a detailed, extended description for the object. |
Label#
A <Label>
accepts all HTML attributes.
SliderOutput#
A <SliderOutput>
renders the current value of the color slider as text.
Show props
Name | Type | Description |
children | ReactNode | (
(values: SliderRenderProps
& & {}
)) => ReactNode | The children of the component. A function may be provided to alter the children based on component state. |
className | string | (
(values: SliderRenderProps
& & {}
)) => string | The CSS className for the element. A function may be provided to compute the class based on component state. |
style | CSSProperties | (
(values: SliderRenderProps
& & {}
)) => CSSProperties | The inline style for the element. A function may be provided to compute the style based on component state. |
SliderTrack#
The <SliderTrack>
component renders a gradient repreresenting the colors that can be selected for the color channel, and contains a <ColorThumb>
element.
Show props
Name | Type | Description |
children | ReactNode | (
(values: SliderTrackRenderProps
& & {}
)) => ReactNode | The children of the component. A function may be provided to alter the children based on component state. |
className | string | (
(values: SliderTrackRenderProps
& & {}
)) => string | The CSS className for the element. A function may be provided to compute the class based on component state. |
style | CSSProperties | (
(values: SliderTrackRenderProps
& & {}
)) => CSSProperties | The inline style for the element. A function may be provided to compute the style based on component state. |
Events
Name | Type | Description |
onHoverStart | (
(e: HoverEvent
)) => void | Handler that is called when a hover interaction starts. |
onHoverEnd | (
(e: HoverEvent
)) => void | Handler that is called when a hover interaction ends. |
onHoverChange | (
(isHovering: boolean
)) => void | Handler that is called when the hover state changes. |
ColorThumb#
The <ColorThumb>
component renders a draggable thumb with a preview of the selected color.
Show props
Name | Type | Description |
children | ReactNode | (
(values: ColorThumbRenderProps
& & {}
)) => ReactNode | The children of the component. A function may be provided to alter the children based on component state. |
className | string | (
(values: ColorThumbRenderProps
& & {}
)) => string | The CSS className for the element. A function may be provided to compute the class based on component state. |
style | CSSProperties | (
(values: ColorThumbRenderProps
& & {}
)) => CSSProperties | The inline style for the element. A function may be provided to compute the style based on component state. |
Events
Name | Type | Description |
onHoverStart | (
(e: HoverEvent
)) => void | Handler that is called when a hover interaction starts. |
onHoverEnd | (
(e: HoverEvent
)) => void | Handler that is called when a hover interaction ends. |
onHoverChange | (
(isHovering: boolean
)) => void | Handler that is called when the hover state changes. |
Styling#
React Aria components can be styled in many ways, including using CSS classes, inline styles, utility classes (e.g. Tailwind), CSS-in-JS (e.g. Styled Components), etc. By default, all components include a builtin className
attribute which can be targeted using CSS selectors. These follow the react-aria-ComponentName
naming convention.
.react-aria-ColorSlider {
/* ... */
}
.react-aria-ColorSlider {
/* ... */
}
.react-aria-ColorSlider {
/* ... */
}
A custom className
can also be specified on any component. This overrides the default className
provided by React Aria with your own.
<ColorSlider className="my-color-slider">
{/* ... */}
</ColorSlider>
<ColorSlider className="my-color-slider">
{/* ... */}
</ColorSlider>
<ColorSlider className="my-color-slider">
{/* ... */}
</ColorSlider>
In addition, some components support multiple UI states (e.g. focused, placeholder, readonly, etc.). React Aria components expose states using data attributes, which you can target in CSS selectors. For example:
.react-aria-ColorThumb[data-dragging] {
/* ... */
}
.react-aria-ColorThumb[data-focused] {
/* ... */
}
.react-aria-ColorThumb[data-dragging] {
/* ... */
}
.react-aria-ColorThumb[data-focused] {
/* ... */
}
.react-aria-ColorThumb[data-dragging] {
/* ... */
}
.react-aria-ColorThumb[data-focused] {
/* ... */
}
The className
and style
props also accept functions which receive states for styling. This lets you dynamically determine the classes or styles to apply, which is useful when using utility CSS libraries like Tailwind.
<ColorThumb
className={({ isDragging }) => isDragging ? 'scale-150' : 'scale-100'}
/>
<ColorThumb
className={({ isDragging }) =>
isDragging ? 'scale-150' : 'scale-100'}
/>
<ColorThumb
className={(
{ isDragging }
) =>
isDragging
? 'scale-150'
: 'scale-100'}
/>
Render props may also be used as children to alter what elements are rendered based on the current state. For example, you could implement custom formatting for the slider's current value.
<SliderOutput>
{state => `Value: `}
</SliderOutput>
<SliderOutput>
{state => `Value: `}
</SliderOutput>
<SliderOutput>
{(state) =>
`Value: `}
</SliderOutput>
The states, selectors, and render props for each component used in a ColorSlider
are documented below.
ColorSlider#
The ColorSlider
component can be targeted with the .react-aria-ColorSlider
CSS selector, or by overriding with a custom className
. It supports the following states:
Name | CSS Selector | Description |
orientation | [data-orientation="horizontal | vertical"] | The orientation of the color slider. |
isDisabled | [data-disabled] | Whether the color slider is disabled. |
state | — | State of the color slider. |
Label#
A Label
can be targeted with the .react-aria-Label
CSS selector, or by overriding with a custom className
.
SliderOutput#
The SliderOutput
component can be targeted with the .react-aria-SliderOutput
CSS selector, or by overriding with a custom className
. It supports the following states:
Name | CSS Selector | Description |
orientation | [data-orientation="horizontal | vertical"] | The orientation of the slider. |
isDisabled | [data-disabled] | Whether the slider is disabled. |
state | — | State of the slider. |
SliderTrack#
The SliderTrack
component can be targeted with the .react-aria-SliderTrack
CSS selector, or by overriding with a custom className
. It supports the following states:
Name | CSS Selector | Description |
isHovered | [data-hovered] | Whether the slider track is currently hovered with a mouse. |
orientation | [data-orientation="horizontal | vertical"] | The orientation of the slider. |
isDisabled | [data-disabled] | Whether the slider is disabled. |
state | — | State of the slider. |
ColorThumb#
The ColorThumb
component can be targeted with the .react-aria-ColorThumb
CSS selector, or by overriding with a custom className
. It supports the following states:
Name | CSS Selector | Description |
color | — | The selected color, excluding the alpha channel. |
isDragging | [data-dragging] | Whether this thumb is currently being dragged. |
isHovered | [data-hovered] | Whether the thumb is currently hovered with a mouse. |
isFocused | [data-focused] | Whether the thumb is currently focused. |
isFocusVisible | [data-focus-visible] | Whether the thumb is keyboard focused. |
isDisabled | [data-disabled] | Whether the thumb is disabled. |
Advanced customization#
Composition#
If you need to customize one of the components within a ColorSlider
, such as Label
or SliderOutput
, in many cases you can create a wrapper component. This lets you customize the props passed to the component.
function MySliderOutput(props) {
return <SliderOutput {...props} className="my-slider-output" />
}
function MySliderOutput(props) {
return (
<SliderOutput {...props} className="my-slider-output" />
);
}
function MySliderOutput(
props
) {
return (
<SliderOutput
{...props}
className="my-slider-output"
/>
);
}
Contexts#
All React Aria Components export a corresponding context that can be used to send props to them from a parent element. This enables you to build your own compositional APIs similar to those found in React Aria Components itself. You can send any prop or ref via context that you could pass to the corresponding component. The local props and ref on the component are merged with the ones passed via context, with the local props taking precedence (following the rules documented in mergeProps).
Component | Context | Props | Ref |
ColorSlider | ColorSliderContext | ColorSliderProps | HTMLDivElement |
This example shows a ColorSliderDescription
component that accepts a color slider in its children and renders a description element below it. It uses the useId hook to generate a unique id for the description, and associates it with the color slider via the aria-describedby
attribute passed to the ColorSliderContext
provider.
import {ColorSliderContext} from 'react-aria-components';
import {useId} from 'react-aria';
interface ColorSliderDescriptionProps {
children?: React.ReactNode;
description?: string;
}
function ColorSliderDescription(
{ children, description }: ColorSliderDescriptionProps
) {
let descriptionId = useId();
return (
<div>
<ColorSliderContext.Provider
value={{ 'aria-describedby': descriptionId }}
> {children}
</ColorSliderContext.Provider>
<small id={descriptionId}>{description}</small>
</div>
);
}
<ColorSliderDescription description="It's not easy being green.">
<MyColorSlider channel="green" defaultValue="#006" />
</ColorSliderDescription>
import {ColorSliderContext} from 'react-aria-components';
import {useId} from 'react-aria';
interface ColorSliderDescriptionProps {
children?: React.ReactNode;
description?: string;
}
function ColorSliderDescription(
{ children, description }: ColorSliderDescriptionProps
) {
let descriptionId = useId();
return (
<div>
<ColorSliderContext.Provider
value={{ 'aria-describedby': descriptionId }}
> {children}
</ColorSliderContext.Provider>
<small id={descriptionId}>{description}</small>
</div>
);
}
<ColorSliderDescription description="It's not easy being green.">
<MyColorSlider channel="green" defaultValue="#006" />
</ColorSliderDescription>
import {ColorSliderContext} from 'react-aria-components';
import {useId} from 'react-aria';
interface ColorSliderDescriptionProps {
children?:
React.ReactNode;
description?: string;
}
function ColorSliderDescription(
{
children,
description
}: ColorSliderDescriptionProps
) {
let descriptionId =
useId();
return (
<div>
<ColorSliderContext.Provider
value={{
'aria-describedby':
descriptionId
}}
> {children}
</ColorSliderContext.Provider>
<small
id={descriptionId}
>
{description}
</small>
</div>
);
}
<ColorSliderDescription description="It's not easy being green.">
<MyColorSlider
channel="green"
defaultValue="#006"
/>
</ColorSliderDescription>
Custom children#
ColorSlider passes props to its child components, such as the label, via their associated contexts. These contexts are exported so you can also consume them in your own custom components. This enables you to reuse existing components from your app or component library together with React Aria Components.
Component | Context | Props | Ref |
Label | LabelContext | LabelProps | HTMLLabelElement |
This example consumes from LabelContext
in an existing styled label component to make it compatible with React Aria Components. The useContextProps
hook merges the local props and ref with the ones provided via context by ColorSlider.
import type {LabelProps} from 'react-aria-components';
import {LabelContext, useContextProps} from 'react-aria-components';
const MyCustomLabel = React.forwardRef(
(props: LabelProps, ref: React.ForwardedRef<HTMLLabelElement>) => {
// Merge the local props and ref with the ones provided via context.
[props, ref] = useContextProps(props, ref, LabelContext);
// ... your existing Label component
return <label {...props} ref={ref} />;
}
);
import type {LabelProps} from 'react-aria-components';
import {
LabelContext,
useContextProps
} from 'react-aria-components';
const MyCustomLabel = React.forwardRef(
(
props: LabelProps,
ref: React.ForwardedRef<HTMLLabelElement>
) => {
// Merge the local props and ref with the ones provided via context.
[props, ref] = useContextProps(
props,
ref,
LabelContext
);
// ... your existing Label component
return <label {...props} ref={ref} />;
}
);
import type {LabelProps} from 'react-aria-components';
import {
LabelContext,
useContextProps
} from 'react-aria-components';
const MyCustomLabel =
React.forwardRef(
(
props: LabelProps,
ref:
React.ForwardedRef<
HTMLLabelElement
>
) => {
// Merge the local props and ref with the ones provided via context.
[props, ref] =
useContextProps(
props,
ref,
LabelContext
);
// ... your existing Label component
return (
<label
{...props}
ref={ref}
/>
);
}
);
Now you can use MyCustomLabel
within a ColorSlider
, in place of the builtin React Aria Components Label
.
<ColorSlider>
<MyCustomLabel>Opacity</MyCustomLabel> <SliderTrack>
<ColorThumb />
</SliderTrack>
</ColorSlider>
<ColorSlider>
<MyCustomLabel>Opacity</MyCustomLabel> <SliderTrack>
<ColorThumb />
</SliderTrack>
</ColorSlider>
<ColorSlider>
<MyCustomLabel>
Opacity
</MyCustomLabel> <SliderTrack>
<ColorThumb />
</SliderTrack>
</ColorSlider>
State#
ColorSlider provides a ColorSliderState
object to its children via ColorSliderStateContext
. This can be used to access and manipulate the slider's state.
This example shows a ColorNumberField
component that can be placed within a ColorSlider
to allow the user to enter a number and update the channel value.
import {ColorSliderStateContext, Input, LabelContext, NumberField, useSlottedContext} from 'react-aria-components';
function ColorNumberField({ channel }) {
let state = React.useContext(ColorSliderStateContext)!; let labelProps = useSlottedContext(LabelContext)!;
return (
<NumberField
aria-labelledby={labelProps.id}
value={state.value.getChannelValue(channel)}
minValue={state.value.getChannelRange(channel).minValue}
maxValue={state.value.getChannelRange(channel).maxValue}
onChange={(v) => state.setValue(state.value.withChannelValue(channel, v))}
formatOptions={state.value.getChannelFormatOptions(channel)}
>
<Input />
</NumberField>
);
}
<ColorSlider channel="hue" defaultValue="hsl(0, 100%, 50%)">
<Label />
<ColorNumberField channel="hue" /> <SliderTrack>
<ColorThumb />
</SliderTrack>
</ColorSlider>
import {
ColorSliderStateContext,
Input,
LabelContext,
NumberField,
useSlottedContext
} from 'react-aria-components';
function ColorNumberField({ channel }) {
let state = React.useContext(ColorSliderStateContext)!; let labelProps = useSlottedContext(LabelContext)!;
return (
<NumberField
aria-labelledby={labelProps.id}
value={state.value.getChannelValue(channel)}
minValue={state.value.getChannelRange(channel)
.minValue}
maxValue={state.value.getChannelRange(channel)
.maxValue}
onChange={(v) =>
state.setValue(
state.value.withChannelValue(channel, v)
)}
formatOptions={state.value.getChannelFormatOptions(
channel
)}
>
<Input />
</NumberField>
);
}
<ColorSlider
channel="hue"
defaultValue="hsl(0, 100%, 50%)"
>
<Label />
<ColorNumberField channel="hue" /> <SliderTrack>
<ColorThumb />
</SliderTrack>
</ColorSlider>
import {
ColorSliderStateContext,
Input,
LabelContext,
NumberField,
useSlottedContext
} from 'react-aria-components';
function ColorNumberField(
{ channel }
) {
let state = React
.useContext(
ColorSliderStateContext
)!; let labelProps =
useSlottedContext(
LabelContext
)!;
return (
<NumberField
aria-labelledby={labelProps
.id}
value={state.value
.getChannelValue(
channel
)}
minValue={state
.value
.getChannelRange(
channel
).minValue}
maxValue={state
.value
.getChannelRange(
channel
).maxValue}
onChange={(v) =>
state.setValue(
state.value
.withChannelValue(
channel,
v
)
)}
formatOptions={state
.value
.getChannelFormatOptions(
channel
)}
>
<Input />
</NumberField>
);
}
<ColorSlider
channel="hue"
defaultValue="hsl(0, 100%, 50%)"
>
<Label />
<ColorNumberField channel="hue" /> <SliderTrack>
<ColorThumb />
</SliderTrack>
</ColorSlider>
Show CSS
.react-aria-Input {
width: 4ch;
}
.react-aria-Input {
width: 4ch;
}
.react-aria-Input {
width: 4ch;
}
Hooks#
If you need to customize things even further, such as accessing internal state or customizing DOM structure, you can drop down to the lower level Hook-based API. See useColorSlider for more details.