npm install react-tooltip
Using NPM
1 . Require react-tooltip after installation
import ReactTooltip from 'react-tooltip'
2 . Add data-tip = "your placeholder" to your element
<p data-tip="hello world">Tooltip</p>
3 . Include react-tooltip component
<ReactTooltip />
Standalone
You can import node_modules/react-tooltip/standalone/react-tooltip.min.js
into your page. Please make sure that you have already imported react
and react-dom
into your page.
Notes:
- The tooltip sets
type: dark
place: top
effect: float
as default attributes. You don't have to add these options if you don't want to change the defaults - The option you set on
<ReactTooltip />
component will be implemented on every tooltip in a same page:<ReactTooltip effect="solid" />
- The option you set on a specific element, for example:
<a data-type="warning"></a>
will only affect this specific tooltip
Check example: React-tooltip Test
Global | Specific | Type | Values | Description |
---|---|---|---|---|
place | data-place | String | top, right, bottom, left | placement |
type | data-type | String | success, warning, error, info, light | theme |
effect | data-effect | String | float, solid | behaviour of tooltip |
event | data-event | String | e.g. click | custom event to trigger tooltip |
eventOff | data-event-off | String | e.g. click | custom event to hide tooltip (only makes effect after setting event attribute) |
globalEventOff | String | e.g. click | global event to hide tooltip (global only) | |
isCapture | data-iscapture | Bool | true, false | when set to true, custom event's propagation mode will be capture |
offset | data-offset | Object | top, right, bottom, left | data-offset="{'top': 10, 'left': 10}" for specific and offset={{top: 10, left: 10}} for global |
multiline | data-multiline | Bool | true, false | support <br> , <br /> to make multiline |
className | data-class | String | extra custom class, can use !important to overwrite react-tooltip's default class | |
html | data-html | Bool | true, false | <p data-tip="<p>HTML tooltip</p>" data-html={true}></p> or <ReactTooltip html={true} /> |
delayHide | data-delay-hide | Number | <p data-tip="tooltip" data-delay-hide='1000'></p> or <ReactTooltip delayHide={1000} /> |
|
delayShow | data-delay-show | Number | <p data-tip="tooltip" data-delay-show='1000'></p> or <ReactTooltip delayShow={1000} /> |
|
delayUpdate | data-delay-update | Number | <p data-tip="tooltip" data-delay-update='1000'></p> or <ReactTooltip delayUpdate={1000} /> Sets a delay in calling getContent if the tooltip is already shown and you mouse over another target |
|
insecure | null | Bool | true, false | Whether to inject the style header into the page dynamically (violates CSP style-src but is a convenient default) |
border | data-border | Bool | true, false | Add one pixel white border |
getContent | null | Func or Array | (dataTip) => {}, [(dataTip) => {}, Interval] | Generate the tip content dynamically |
afterShow | null | Func | () => {} | Function that will be called after tooltip show |
afterHide | null | Func | () => {} | Function that will be called after tooltip hide |
disable | data-tip-disable | Bool | true, false | Disable the tooltip behaviour, default is false |
scrollHide | data-scroll-hide | Bool | true, false | Hide the tooltip when scrolling, default is true |
resizeHide | null | Bool | true, false | Hide the tooltip when resizing the window, default is true |
wrapper | null | String | div, span | Selecting the wrapper element of the react tooltip, default is div |
Check the example React-tooltip Test
- data-tip is necessary, because
<ReactTooltip />
finds the tooltip via this attribute - data-for corresponds to the id of
<ReactTooltip />
- When using react component as tooltip, you can have many
<ReactTooltip />
in a page but they should have different ids
Hide the tooltip manually, the target is optional, if no target passed in, all existing tooltips will be hidden
import {findDOMNode} from 'react-dom'
import ReactTooltip from 'react-tooltip'
<p ref='foo' data-tip='tooltip'></p>
<button onClick={() => { ReactTooltip.hide(findDOMNode(this.refs.foo)) }}></button>
<ReactTooltip />
Rebinding all tooltips
Show specific tooltip manually, for example:
import {findDOMNode} from 'react-dom'
import ReactTooltip from 'react-tooltip'
<p ref='foo' data-tip='tooltip'></p>
<button onClick={() => { ReactTooltip.show(findDOMNode(this.refs.foo)) }}></button>
<ReactTooltip />
1. Using tooltip within the modal (e.g. react-modal)
The component was designed to set <ReactTooltip />
once and then use tooltip everywhere, but a lot of people get stuck when using this component in a modal. You can read the discussion here. To solve this problem:
- Place
<ReactTooltip />
outside of the<Modal>
- Use
ReactTooltip.rebuild()
when opening the modal - If your modal's z-index happens to be higher than the tooltip's, use the attribute
className
to custom your tooltip's z-index
I suggest always putting
<ReactTooltip />
in the Highest level or smart component of Redux, so you might need these static method to control tooltip's behaviour in some situations
When you set getContent={() => { return }}
you will find the tooltip will display true
. That's because React will set the value of data-* to be 'true' automatically if there is no value to be set. So you have to set data-tip=''
in this situation.
<p data-tip='' data-for='test'></p>
<ReactTooltip id='test' getContent={() => { return null }}/>
Same for empty children, if you don't want show the tooltip when the children is empty
<p data-tip='' data-for='test'></p>
<ReactTooltip id='test'>{}</ReactTooltip>
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We welcome your contribution! Fork the repo, make some changes, submit a pull-request! Our contributing doc has some details.
MIT