ColorField

A color field allows users to edit a hex color or individual color channel value.

installyarn add react-aria-components
version1.4.1
usageimport {ColorField} from 'react-aria-components'

Example#


import {ColorField, Label, Input} from 'react-aria-components';

<ColorField defaultValue="#ff0">
  <Label>Primary Color</Label>
  <Input />
</ColorField>
import {
  ColorField,
  Input,
  Label
} from 'react-aria-components';

<ColorField defaultValue="#ff0">
  <Label>Primary Color</Label>
  <Input />
</ColorField>
import {
  ColorField,
  Input,
  Label
} from 'react-aria-components';

<ColorField defaultValue="#ff0">
  <Label>
    Primary Color
  </Label>
  <Input />
</ColorField>
Show CSS
@import "@react-aria/example-theme";

.react-aria-ColorField {
  display: flex;
  flex-direction: column;
  color: var(--text-color);

  .react-aria-Input {
    padding: 0.286rem;
    margin: 0;
    border: 1px solid var(--border-color);
    border-radius: 6px;
    background: var(--field-background);
    font-size: 1.143rem;
    color: var(--field-text-color);
    width: 100%;
    max-width: 12ch;
    box-sizing: border-box;

    &[data-focused] {
      outline: 2px solid var(--focus-ring-color);
      outline-offset: -1px;
    }
  }
}
@import "@react-aria/example-theme";

.react-aria-ColorField {
  display: flex;
  flex-direction: column;
  color: var(--text-color);

  .react-aria-Input {
    padding: 0.286rem;
    margin: 0;
    border: 1px solid var(--border-color);
    border-radius: 6px;
    background: var(--field-background);
    font-size: 1.143rem;
    color: var(--field-text-color);
    width: 100%;
    max-width: 12ch;
    box-sizing: border-box;

    &[data-focused] {
      outline: 2px solid var(--focus-ring-color);
      outline-offset: -1px;
    }
  }
}
@import "@react-aria/example-theme";

.react-aria-ColorField {
  display: flex;
  flex-direction: column;
  color: var(--text-color);

  .react-aria-Input {
    padding: 0.286rem;
    margin: 0;
    border: 1px solid var(--border-color);
    border-radius: 6px;
    background: var(--field-background);
    font-size: 1.143rem;
    color: var(--field-text-color);
    width: 100%;
    max-width: 12ch;
    box-sizing: border-box;

    &[data-focused] {
      outline: 2px solid var(--focus-ring-color);
      outline-offset: -1px;
    }
  }
}

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 field for editing a hex value or individual color channel. ColorField helps achieve accessible color fields that can be styled as needed.

  • Interactions – Supports entering a value using a keyboard, incrementing and decrementing with the arrow keys, and adjusting the value with the scroll wheel.
  • Validation – Keyboard input is validated as the user types so that only valid characters are accepted. Custom client and server-side validation is also supported.
  • Accessible – Follows the spinbutton ARIA pattern. Extensively tested across many devices and assistive technologies to ensure announcements and behaviors are consistent.

Anatomy#


Shows a color field component with labels pointing to its parts, including the input, and label elements.#ABCDEFBackground colorInputLabel

A color field consists of an input element and a label. It also supports optional description and error message elements, which can be used to provide more context about the field, and any validation messages.

import {ColorField, FieldError, Input, Label, Text} from 'react-aria-components';

<ColorField>
  <Label />
  <Input />
  <Text slot="description" />
  <FieldError />
</ColorField>
import {
  ColorField,
  FieldError,
  Input,
  Label,
  Text
} from 'react-aria-components';

<ColorField>
  <Label />
  <Input />
  <Text slot="description" />
  <FieldError />
</ColorField>
import {
  ColorField,
  FieldError,
  Input,
  Label,
  Text
} from 'react-aria-components';

<ColorField>
  <Label />
  <Input />
  <Text slot="description" />
  <FieldError />
</ColorField>

If there is no visual label, an aria-label or aria-labelledby prop must be passed instead to identify the element to screen readers.

Concepts#

ColorField makes use of the following concepts:

Forms
Validating and submitting form data, and integrating with form libraries.

Composed components#

A ColorField uses the following components, which may also be used standalone or reused in other components.

Label
A label provides context for an input element.
Input
An input allows a user to enter a plain text value with a keyboard.

Starter kits#


To help kick-start your project, we offer starter kits that include example implementations of all React Aria components with various styling solutions. All components are fully styled, including support for dark mode, high contrast mode, and all UI states. Each starter comes with a pre-configured Storybook that you can experiment with, or use as a starting point for your own component library.

Vanilla CSS
Download ZIP
Preview
Tailwind CSS
Download ZIP
Preview

Reusable wrappers#


If you will use a ColorField 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 ColorField and all of its children together into a single component which accepts a label prop, which is passed to the right place. It also shows how to use the description slot to render help text, and FieldError component to render validation errors.

import type {ColorFieldProps, ValidationResult} from 'react-aria-components';
import {FieldError, Text} from 'react-aria-components';

interface MyColorFieldProps extends ColorFieldProps {
  label?: string;
  description?: string;
  errorMessage?: string | ((validation: ValidationResult) => string);
}

export function MyColorField(
  { label, description, errorMessage, ...props }: MyColorFieldProps
) {
  return (
    <ColorField {...props}>
      {label && <Label>{label}</Label>}
      <Input />
      {description && <Text slot="description">{description}</Text>}
      <FieldError>{errorMessage}</FieldError>
    </ColorField>
  );
}

<MyColorField label="Color" />
import type {
  ColorFieldProps,
  ValidationResult
} from 'react-aria-components';
import {FieldError, Text} from 'react-aria-components';

interface MyColorFieldProps extends ColorFieldProps {
  label?: string;
  description?: string;
  errorMessage?:
    | string
    | ((validation: ValidationResult) => string);
}

export function MyColorField(
  { label, description, errorMessage, ...props }:
    MyColorFieldProps
) {
  return (
    <ColorField {...props}>
      {label && <Label>{label}</Label>}
      <Input />
      {description && (
        <Text slot="description">{description}</Text>
      )}
      <FieldError>{errorMessage}</FieldError>
    </ColorField>
  );
}

<MyColorField label="Color" />
import type {
  ColorFieldProps,
  ValidationResult
} from 'react-aria-components';
import {
  FieldError,
  Text
} from 'react-aria-components';

interface MyColorFieldProps
  extends
    ColorFieldProps {
  label?: string;
  description?: string;
  errorMessage?:
    | string
    | ((
      validation:
        ValidationResult
    ) => string);
}

export function MyColorField(
  {
    label,
    description,
    errorMessage,
    ...props
  }: MyColorFieldProps
) {
  return (
    <ColorField
      {...props}
    >
      {label && (
        <Label>
          {label}
        </Label>
      )}
      <Input />
      {description && (
        <Text slot="description">
          {description}
        </Text>
      )}
      <FieldError>
        {errorMessage}
      </FieldError>
    </ColorField>
  );
}

<MyColorField label="Color" />

Value#


A ColorField accepts either a color string or Color object as a value.

Uncontrolled#

By default, ColorField is uncontrolled. You can set a default value using the defaultValue prop.

<MyColorField label="Color" defaultValue="#7f007f" />
<MyColorField label="Color" defaultValue="#7f007f" />
<MyColorField
  label="Color"
  defaultValue="#7f007f"
/>

Controlled#

A ColorField can be made controlled. The parseColor function is used to parse the initial color from a hex string, stored in state. The value and onChange props are used to update the value in state when the edits the value.

import {parseColor} from 'react-aria-components';

function Example() {
  let [color, setColor] = React.useState(parseColor('#7f007f'));
  return (
    <>
      <MyColorField label="Color" value={color} onChange={setColor} />
      <p>Current color value: {color?.toString('hex')}</p>
    </>
  );
}
import {parseColor} from 'react-aria-components';

function Example() {
  let [color, setColor] = React.useState(
    parseColor('#7f007f')
  );
  return (
    <>
      <MyColorField
        label="Color"
        value={color}
        onChange={setColor}
      />
      <p>Current color value: {color?.toString('hex')}</p>
    </>
  );
}
import {parseColor} from 'react-aria-components';

function Example() {
  let [color, setColor] =
    React.useState(
      parseColor(
        '#7f007f'
      )
    );
  return (
    <>
      <MyColorField
        label="Color"
        value={color}
        onChange={setColor}
      />
      <p>
        Current color
        value:{' '}
        {color?.toString(
          'hex'
        )}
      </p>
    </>
  );
}

HTML forms#

ColorField supports the name prop for integration with HTML forms. The value will be submitted to the server as a hex color string. When a channel prop is provided, the value will be submitted as a number instead.

<MyColorField label="Color" name="color" />
<MyColorField label="Color" name="color" />
<MyColorField
  label="Color"
  name="color"
/>

Color channel#


By default, ColorField allows the user to edit the color as a hex value. When the colorSpace and channel props are provided, ColorField displays the value for that channel formatted as a number instead. Rendering multiple ColorFields together can allow a user to edit a color.

function Example() {
  let [color, setColor] = React.useState(parseColor('#7f007f'));
  return (
    <>
      <div style={{ display: 'flex', gap: 8 }}>
        <MyColorField
          label="Hue"
          value={color}
          onChange={setColor}
          colorSpace="hsl"
          channel="hue"
        />
        <MyColorField
          label="Saturation"
          value={color}
          onChange={setColor}
          colorSpace="hsl"
          channel="saturation"
        />
        <MyColorField
          label="Lightness"
          value={color}
          onChange={setColor}
          colorSpace="hsl"
          channel="lightness"
        />
      </div>
      <p>Current color value: {color?.toString('hex')}</p>
    </>
  );
}
function Example() {
  let [color, setColor] = React.useState(
    parseColor('#7f007f')
  );
  return (
    <>
      <div style={{ display: 'flex', gap: 8 }}>
        <MyColorField
          label="Hue"
          value={color}
          onChange={setColor}
          colorSpace="hsl"
          channel="hue"
        />
        <MyColorField
          label="Saturation"
          value={color}
          onChange={setColor}
          colorSpace="hsl"
          channel="saturation"
        />
        <MyColorField
          label="Lightness"
          value={color}
          onChange={setColor}
          colorSpace="hsl"
          channel="lightness"
        />
      </div>
      <p>Current color value: {color?.toString('hex')}</p>
    </>
  );
}
function Example() {
  let [color, setColor] =
    React.useState(
      parseColor(
        '#7f007f'
      )
    );
  return (
    <>
      <div
        style={{
          display:
            'flex',
          gap: 8
        }}
      >
        <MyColorField
          label="Hue"
          value={color}
          onChange={setColor}
          colorSpace="hsl"
          channel="hue"
        />
        <MyColorField
          label="Saturation"
          value={color}
          onChange={setColor}
          colorSpace="hsl"
          channel="saturation"
        />
        <MyColorField
          label="Lightness"
          value={color}
          onChange={setColor}
          colorSpace="hsl"
          channel="lightness"
        />
      </div>
      <p>
        Current color
        value:{' '}
        {color?.toString(
          'hex'
        )}
      </p>
    </>
  );
}

Validation#


ColorField supports the isRequired prop to ensure the user enters a value, as well as custom validation functions, realtime validation, and server-side validation. It can also be integrated with other form libraries. See the Forms guide to learn more.

To display validation errors, add a <FieldError> element as a child of the ColorField. This allows you to render error messages from all of the above sources with consistent custom styles.

import {Form, FieldError, Button} from 'react-aria-components';

<Form>
  <ColorField name="color" isRequired>    <Label>Color</Label>
    <Input />
    <FieldError />  </ColorField>
  <Button type="submit">Submit</Button>
</Form>
import {
  Button,
  FieldError,
  Form
} from 'react-aria-components';

<Form>
  <ColorField name="color" isRequired>    <Label>Color</Label>
    <Input />
    <FieldError />  </ColorField>
  <Button type="submit">Submit</Button>
</Form>
import {
  Button,
  FieldError,
  Form
} from 'react-aria-components';

<Form>
  <ColorField
    name="color"
    isRequired
  >    <Label>
      Color
    </Label>
    <Input />
    <FieldError />  </ColorField>
  <Button type="submit">
    Submit
  </Button>
</Form>
Show CSS
.react-aria-ColorField {
  &[data-invalid] {
    .react-aria-Input {
      border-color: var(--invalid-color);
    }
  }

  .react-aria-FieldError {
    font-size: 12px;
    color: var(--invalid-color);
  }
}
.react-aria-ColorField {
  &[data-invalid] {
    .react-aria-Input {
      border-color: var(--invalid-color);
    }
  }

  .react-aria-FieldError {
    font-size: 12px;
    color: var(--invalid-color);
  }
}
.react-aria-ColorField {
  &[data-invalid] {
    .react-aria-Input {
      border-color: var(--invalid-color);
    }
  }

  .react-aria-FieldError {
    font-size: 12px;
    color: var(--invalid-color);
  }
}

By default, FieldError displays default validation messages provided by the browser. See Customizing error messages in the Forms guide to learn how to provide your own custom errors.

Description#


The description slot can be used to associate additional help text with a color field.

<ColorField>
  <Label>Color</Label>
  <Input />
  <Text slot="description">Enter a background color.</Text></ColorField>
<ColorField>
  <Label>Color</Label>
  <Input />
  <Text slot="description">Enter a background color.</Text></ColorField>
<ColorField>
  <Label>Color</Label>
  <Input />
  <Text slot="description">
    Enter a background
    color.
  </Text></ColorField>
Show CSS
.react-aria-ColorField {
  [slot=description] {
    font-size: 12px;
  }
}
.react-aria-ColorField {
  [slot=description] {
    font-size: 12px;
  }
}
.react-aria-ColorField {
  [slot=description] {
    font-size: 12px;
  }
}

Disabled#


The isDisabled prop can be used prevent the user from editing the value of the color field.

<MyColorField label="Disabled" defaultValue="#7f007f" isDisabled />
<MyColorField
  label="Disabled"
  defaultValue="#7f007f"
  isDisabled
/>
<MyColorField
  label="Disabled"
  defaultValue="#7f007f"
  isDisabled
/>
Show CSS
.react-aria-ColorField {
  .react-aria-Input {
    &[data-disabled] {
      border-color: var(--border-color-disabled);
      color: var(--text-color-disabled);
    }
  }
}
.react-aria-ColorField {
  .react-aria-Input {
    &[data-disabled] {
      border-color: var(--border-color-disabled);
      color: var(--text-color-disabled);
    }
  }
}
.react-aria-ColorField {
  .react-aria-Input {
    &[data-disabled] {
      border-color: var(--border-color-disabled);
      color: var(--text-color-disabled);
    }
  }
}

Read only#

The isReadOnly prop makes the ColorField's value immutable. Unlike isDisabled, the ColorField remains focusable and the contents can still be copied. See the MDN docs for more information.

<MyColorField label="Read only" isReadOnly value="#7f007f" />
<MyColorField
  label="Read only"
  isReadOnly
  value="#7f007f"
/>
<MyColorField
  label="Read only"
  isReadOnly
  value="#7f007f"
/>

Props#


ColorField#

NameTypeDefaultDescription
channelColorChannel

The color channel that this field edits. If not provided, the color is edited as a hex value.

colorSpaceColorSpace

The color space that the color field operates in if a channel prop is provided. If no channel is provided, the color field always displays the color as an RGB hex value.

isWheelDisabledbooleanEnables or disables changing the value with scroll.
valueTThe current value (controlled).
defaultValueTThe default value (uncontrolled).
isDisabledbooleanWhether the input is disabled.
isReadOnlybooleanWhether the input can be selected but not changed by the user.
isRequiredbooleanWhether user input is required on the input before form submission.
isInvalidbooleanWhether the input value is invalid.
validate( (value: Colornull )) => ValidationErrortruenullundefined

A function that returns an error message if a given value is invalid. Validation errors are displayed to the user when the form is submitted if validationBehavior="native". For realtime validation, use the isInvalid prop instead.

autoFocusbooleanWhether the element should receive focus on render.
namestringThe name of the input element, used when submitting an HTML form. See MDN.
validationBehavior'native''aria''native'

Whether to use native HTML form validation to prevent form submission when the value is missing or invalid, or mark the field as required or invalid via ARIA.

childrenReactNode( (values: ColorFieldRenderProps{
defaultChildren: ReactNodeundefined
} )) => ReactNode
The children of the component. A function may be provided to alter the children based on component state.
classNamestring( (values: ColorFieldRenderProps{
defaultClassName: stringundefined
} )) => string
The CSS className for the element. A function may be provided to compute the class based on component state.
styleCSSProperties( (values: ColorFieldRenderProps{
defaultStyle: CSSProperties
} )) => CSSPropertiesundefined
The inline style for the element. A function may be provided to compute the style based on component state.
Events
NameTypeDescription
onChange( (color: Colornull )) => voidHandler that is called when the value changes.
onFocus( (e: FocusEvent<Target> )) => voidHandler that is called when the element receives focus.
onBlur( (e: FocusEvent<Target> )) => voidHandler that is called when the element loses focus.
onFocusChange( (isFocused: boolean )) => voidHandler that is called when the element's focus status changes.
onKeyDown( (e: KeyboardEvent )) => voidHandler that is called when a key is pressed.
onKeyUp( (e: KeyboardEvent )) => voidHandler that is called when a key is released.
onCopyClipboardEventHandler<HTMLInputElement>Handler that is called when the user copies text. See MDN.
onCutClipboardEventHandler<HTMLInputElement>Handler that is called when the user cuts text. See MDN.
onPasteClipboardEventHandler<HTMLInputElement>Handler that is called when the user pastes text. See MDN.
onCompositionStartCompositionEventHandler<HTMLInputElement>Handler that is called when a text composition system starts a new text composition session. See MDN.
onCompositionEndCompositionEventHandler<HTMLInputElement>Handler that is called when a text composition system completes or cancels the current text composition session. See MDN.
onCompositionUpdateCompositionEventHandler<HTMLInputElement>Handler that is called when a new character is received in the current text composition session. See MDN.
onSelectReactEventHandler<HTMLInputElement>Handler that is called when text in the input is selected. See MDN.
onBeforeInputFormEventHandler<HTMLInputElement>Handler that is called when the input value is about to be modified. See MDN.
onInputFormEventHandler<HTMLInputElement>Handler that is called when the input value is modified. See MDN.
Layout
NameTypeDescription
slotstringnull

A slot name for the component. Slots allow the component to receive props from a parent component. An explicit null value indicates that the local props completely override all props received from a parent.

Accessibility
NameTypeDescription
idstringThe element's unique identifier. See MDN.
excludeFromTabOrderboolean

Whether to exclude the element from the sequential tab order. If true, the element will not be focusable via the keyboard by tabbing. This should be avoided except in rare scenarios where an alternative means of accessing the element or its functionality via the keyboard is available.

aria-labelstringDefines a string value that labels the current element.
aria-labelledbystringIdentifies the element (or elements) that labels the current element.
aria-describedbystringIdentifies the element (or elements) that describes the object.
aria-detailsstringIdentifies the element (or elements) that provide a detailed, extended description for the object.
aria-errormessagestringIdentifies the element that provides an error message for the object.

Label#

A <Label> accepts all HTML attributes.

Input#

An <Input> accepts all props supported by the <input> HTML element.

FieldError#

A <FieldError> displays validation errors.

Show props
NameTypeDescription
childrenReactNode( (values: FieldErrorRenderProps{
defaultChildren: ReactNodeundefined
} )) => ReactNode
The children of the component. A function may be provided to alter the children based on component state.
classNamestring( (values: FieldErrorRenderProps{
defaultClassName: stringundefined
} )) => string
The CSS className for the element. A function may be provided to compute the class based on component state.
styleCSSProperties( (values: FieldErrorRenderProps{
defaultStyle: CSSProperties
} )) => CSSPropertiesundefined
The inline style for the element. A function may be provided to compute the style based on component state.
Accessibility
NameTypeDescription
idstringThe element's unique identifier. See MDN.

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-ColorField {
  /* ... */
}
.react-aria-ColorField {
  /* ... */
}
.react-aria-ColorField {
  /* ... */
}

A custom className can also be specified on any component. This overrides the default className provided by React Aria with your own.

<ColorField className="my-color-field">
  {/* ... */}
</ColorField>
<ColorField className="my-color-field">
  {/* ... */}
</ColorField>
<ColorField className="my-color-field">
  {/* ... */}
</ColorField>

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-Input[data-focus-visible] {
  /* ... */
}
.react-aria-Input[data-focus-visible] {
  /* ... */
}
.react-aria-Input[data-focus-visible] {
  /* ... */
}

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.

<Input
  className={({ isFocused }) =>
    isFocused ? 'border-blue-500' : 'border-gray-600'}
/>
<Input
  className={({ isFocused }) =>
    isFocused ? 'border-blue-500' : 'border-gray-600'}
/>
<Input
  className={(
    { isFocused }
  ) =>
    isFocused
      ? 'border-blue-500'
      : 'border-gray-600'}
/>

The states, selectors, and render props for each component used in a ColorField are documented below.

ColorField#

A ColorField can be targeted with the .react-aria-ColorField CSS selector, or by overriding with a custom className. It supports the following states:

NameCSS SelectorDescription
isDisabled[data-disabled]Whether the color field is disabled.
isInvalid[data-invalid]Whether the color field is invalid.
channel[data-channel="hex | hue | saturation | ..."]The color channel that this field edits, or "hex" if no channel prop is set.
stateState of the color field.

Label#

A Label can be targeted with the .react-aria-Label CSS selector, or by overriding with a custom className.

Input#

An Input can be targeted with the .react-aria-Input CSS selector, or by overriding with a custom className. It supports the following states:

NameCSS SelectorDescription
isHovered[data-hovered]Whether the input is currently hovered with a mouse.
isFocused[data-focused]Whether the input is focused, either via a mouse or keyboard.
isFocusVisible[data-focus-visible]Whether the input is keyboard focused.
isDisabled[data-disabled]Whether the input is disabled.
isInvalid[data-invalid]Whether the input is invalid.

Text#

The help text elements within a ColorField can be targeted with the [slot=description] and [slot=errorMessage] CSS selectors, or by adding a custom className.

FieldError#

A FieldError can be targeted with the .react-aria-FieldError CSS selector, or by overriding with a custom className. It supports the following render props:

NameDescription
isInvalidWhether the input value is invalid.
validationErrorsThe current error messages for the input if it is invalid, otherwise an empty array.
validationDetailsThe native validation details for the input.

Advanced customization#


Composition#

If you need to customize one of the components within a ColorField, such as Label or Input, in many cases you can create a wrapper component. This lets you customize the props passed to the component.

function MyInput(props) {
  return <Input {...props} className="my-input" />
}
function MyInput(props) {
  return <Input {...props} className="my-input" />
}
function MyInput(props) {
  return (
    <Input
      {...props}
      className="my-input"
    />
  );
}

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).

ComponentContextPropsRef
ColorFieldColorFieldContextColorFieldPropsHTMLDivElement

This example shows a FieldGroup component that renders a group of color fields with a title. The entire group can be marked as read only via the isReadOnly prop, which is passed to all child color fields via the ColorFieldContext provider.

import {ColorFieldContext} from 'react-aria-components';

interface FieldGroupProps {
  title?: string,
  children?: React.ReactNode,
  isReadOnly?: boolean
}

function FieldGroup({title, children, isReadOnly}: FieldGroupProps) {
  return (
    <fieldset>
      <legend>{title}</legend>
      <ColorFieldContext.Provider value={{isReadOnly}}>        {children}
      </ColorFieldContext.Provider>
    </fieldset>
  );
}

<FieldGroup title="Colors" isReadOnly>
  <MyColorField label="Background" defaultValue="#fff" />
  <MyColorField label="Foreground" defaultValue="#000" />
</FieldGroup>
import {ColorFieldContext} from 'react-aria-components';

interface FieldGroupProps {
  title?: string;
  children?: React.ReactNode;
  isReadOnly?: boolean;
}

function FieldGroup(
  { title, children, isReadOnly }: FieldGroupProps
) {
  return (
    <fieldset>
      <legend>{title}</legend>
      <ColorFieldContext.Provider value={{ isReadOnly }}>        {children}
      </ColorFieldContext.Provider>
    </fieldset>
  );
}

<FieldGroup title="Colors" isReadOnly>
  <MyColorField label="Background" defaultValue="#fff" />
  <MyColorField label="Foreground" defaultValue="#000" />
</FieldGroup>
import {ColorFieldContext} from 'react-aria-components';

interface FieldGroupProps {
  title?: string;
  children?:
    React.ReactNode;
  isReadOnly?: boolean;
}

function FieldGroup(
  {
    title,
    children,
    isReadOnly
  }: FieldGroupProps
) {
  return (
    <fieldset>
      <legend>
        {title}
      </legend>
      <ColorFieldContext.Provider
        value={{
          isReadOnly
        }}
      >        {children}
      </ColorFieldContext.Provider>
    </fieldset>
  );
}

<FieldGroup
  title="Colors"
  isReadOnly
>
  <MyColorField
    label="Background"
    defaultValue="#fff"
  />
  <MyColorField
    label="Foreground"
    defaultValue="#000"
  />
</FieldGroup>
Show CSS
fieldset {
  padding: 1.5em;
  width: fit-content;
}
fieldset {
  padding: 1.5em;
  width: fit-content;
}
fieldset {
  padding: 1.5em;
  width: fit-content;
}

Custom children#

ColorField passes props to its child components, such as the label and input, 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.

ComponentContextPropsRef
LabelLabelContextLabelPropsHTMLLabelElement
InputInputContextInputPropsHTMLInputElement
TextTextContextTextPropsHTMLElement

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 ColorField.

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 ColorField, in place of the builtin React Aria Components Label.

<ColorField>
  <MyCustomLabel>Value</MyCustomLabel>  <Input />
</ColorField>
<ColorField>
  <MyCustomLabel>Value</MyCustomLabel>  <Input />
</ColorField>
<ColorField>
  <MyCustomLabel>
    Value
  </MyCustomLabel>  <Input />
</ColorField>

State#

ColorField provides a ColorFieldState object to its children via ColorFieldStateContext. This can be used to access and manipulate the ColorField's state.

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 useColorField for more details.