React component to wrap content in Collapsible element with trigger to open and close.
It's like an accordion, but where any number of sections can be open at the same time.
Supported by Browserstack.
- Added the ability to add non-triggering elemnts to the trigger using
triggerSibling
.
- You can now disable triggers programatically using the
triggerDisabled
prop. - More granular control over CSS classes allowing easier integration to your chosen CSS framework.
overflowWhenOpen
props added to allow setting of the CSS overflow property when Collapsible is open.
lazyRender
props added to allow lazy-loading of Collapsible content.
- Trigger can now be a React Element as well as a string.
Installation can be achieved via NPM.
npm install react-collapsible
Alternatively just download the Collapsible.js
file form the src
folder and include it in your project in your chosen way.
Collapsible can receive any HTML elements or React component as it's children. Collapsible will wrap the contents, as well as generate a trigger element which will control showing and hiding.
import React from 'react';
import Collapsible from 'react-collapsible';
var App = React.createClass({
render: function() {
return(
<Collapsible trigger="Start here">
<p>This is the collapsible content. It can be any element or React component you like.</p>
<p>It can even be another Collapsible component. Check out the next section!</p>
</Collapsible>
);
}
});
export default App;
With a little CSS becomes
The text or element to appear in the trigger link.
Optional trigger text or element to change to when the Collapsible is open.
Disables the trigger handler if true
. Note: this has no effect other than applying the .is-disabled
CSS class if you've provided a handleTriggerClick
prop.
The number of milliseconds for the open/close transition to take.
The CSS easing method you wish to apply to the open/close transition. This string can be any valid value of CSS transition-timing-function
. For reference view the MDN documentation.
Set to true if you want the Collapsible to begin in the open state. You can also use this prop to manage the state from a parent component.
Use this to overwrite the parent CSS class for the Collapsible component parts. Read more in the CSS section below.
.Collapsible
element (root) when closed
.Collapsible
element (root) when open
.Collapsible__trigger
element (root) when closed
.Collapsible__trigger
element (root) when open
.Collapsible__contentOuter
element
.Collapsible__contentInner
element
Unique key used to identify the Collapse
instance when used in an accordion.
Define this to override the click handler for the trigger link. Takes one parameter, which is props.accordionPosition
.
Set this to true to postpone rendering of all of the content of the Collapsible until before it's opened for the first time
overflowWhenOpen
| enum | default: 'hidden'
The CSS overflow property once the Collapsible is open. This can be any one of the valid CSS values of 'hidden'
, 'visible'
, 'auto'
, 'scroll'
, 'inherit'
, 'initial'
, or 'unset'
Escape hatch to add arbitrary content on the trigger without triggering expand/collapse. It's up to you to style it as needed. This is inserted in component tree and DOM directly
after .Collapsible__trigger
In theory you don't need any CSS to get this to work, but let's face it, it'd be pretty rubbish without it.
By default the parent CSS class name is .Collapsible
but this can be changed by setting the classParentString
property on the component.
The CSS class names follow a type of BEM pattern of CSS naming. Below is a list of the CSS classes available on the component.
The parent element for the components.
The trigger link that controls the opening and closing of the component. The state of the component is also reflected on this element with the modifier classes;
is-closed
| Closed stateis-open
| Open setStateis-disabled
| Trigger is disabled
The outer container that hides the content. This is set to overflow: hidden
within the javascript but everything else about it is for you to change.
This is a container for the content passed into the compoenent. This keeps everything nice and neat and allows the component to do all it's whizzy calculations.
If you're using a CSS framework such as Foundation or Bootstrap, you probably want to use their classes instead of styling .Collapsible
. See Properties above.
An example of the component in action is available in the example folder. To see it in action you can run npm install
and then run gulp
. This will compile all the JSX into JS and open the example page using BrowserSync.
React Responsive Collapsible Section Component is MIT licensed