It does one thing, it does it well: listens to resize events on any HTML element.
react-resize-aware
is a zero dependency, ~600 bytes React Hook you can use to detect resize events without relying on intervals, loops, DOM manipulation detection or CSS redraws.
It takes advantage of the resize
event on the HTMLObjectElement
, works on any browser I know of, and it's super lightweight.
In addition, it doesn't directly alters the DOM, everything is handled by React.
Looking for the 2.0 docs? Click here
yarn add react-resize-aware
or with npm:
npm install --save react-resize-aware
The API is simple yet powerful, the useResizeAware
Hook
returns a React node you will place inside the measured element, and an object containing its sizes:
import React from 'react';
import useResizeAware from 'react-resize-aware';
const App = () => {
const [resizeListener, sizes] = useResizeAware();
return (
<div style={{ position: 'relative' }}>
{resizeListener}
Your content here. (div sizes are {sizes.width} x {sizes.height})
</div>
);
};
Heads up!: Make sure to assign a
position != initial
to the HTMLElement you want to target (relative
,absolute
, orfixed
will work).
The Hook returns an array with two elements inside:
This is an invisible React node that must be placed as direct-child of the HTMLElement you want to listen the resize events of.
The node is not going to interfer with your layouts, I promise.
This object contains the width
and height
properties, these properties are going to be null
before the component rendered, and will return a number
after the component rendered.
You can customize the properties of the sizes
object by passing a custom reporter
function as first argument of useResizeAware
.
const customReporter = target => ({
clientWidth: target != null ? target.clientWidth : null,
});
const [resizeListener, sizes] = useResizeAware(customReporter);
return (
<div style={{ position: 'relative' }}>
{resizeListener}
Your content here. (div clientWidth is {sizes.clientWidth})
</div>
);
The above example will report the clientWidth
rather than the default offsetWidth
and offsetHeight
.
For completeness, below you can find an example to show how to make your code react to size variations using React Hooks:
const App = () => {
const [resizeListener, sizes] = useResizeAware();
React.useEffect(() => {
console.log('Do something with the new size values');
}, [sizes.width, sizes.height]);
return (
<div style={{ position: 'relative' }}>
{resizeListener}
Your content here.
</div>
);
}