Switches accept children, which are rendered as the label.
Switches are best used for communicating activation (e.g., on/off states), while checkboxes are best used for communicating selection (e.g. multiple table rows).
Switches, unlike checkboxes, can't have an error state.
In certain cases a visible label isn't needed. For example, a Switch located at the top of a panel which toggles the panels options on or off.
If a visible label isn't specified, an aria-label must be provided to the Switch for accessibility.
If the field is labeled by a separate element, an aria-labelledby prop must be provided using the id of the labeling element instead.
To internationalize a Switch, a localized label should be passed to the children or aria-label prop.
For languages that are read right to left (e.g. Hebrew and Arabic), the layout of the switch is flipped.
Switches are not selected by default. The defaultSelected prop can be used to set the default state (uncontrolled).
Alternatively, the isSelected prop can be used to make the selected state controlled.
Switches accept a user defined onChange prop, triggered whenever the Switch is pressed.
The example below uses onChange to alert the user to changes in state.
functionExample(){let[selected, setSelection]=React.useState('false');let toggle =(value)=>{
value ?setSelection('true'):setSelection('false');}return(<div><div> The Switch is on: {selected}</div><SwitchonChange={toggle}>
Switch Label
</Switch></div>);}
Whether user input is required on the input before form submission.
Often paired with the necessityIndicator prop to add a visual indicator to the input.
Identifies an element (or elements) in order to define a visual, functional, or contextual parent/child relationship
between DOM elements where the DOM hierarchy cannot be used to represent the relationship.