Material-UI + Redux Dialogs and Snackbars.
According to Material-UI documentation, Snackbar and Dialog components are presented and used exactly as every other component. Although that's the 'react way' to use them, I personaly feel that due to their volatile nature, they should'nt be used as fixed components with display being set by a parent component. If you also use redux, there is another way.
This library alows you to open and close Snackbars and Dialogs by dispatching actions.
Install with:
$ npm i -S mui-redux-alerts
This library has three peer dependencies that need to be in your project for it to work: Material-UI, Redux and the Redux Thunk middleware, so remember to install them too:
$ npm i -S material-ui redux redux-thunk
Material-UI and Redux are required for obvious reasons. Redux-thunk is needed to dispatch close actions asynchronously when snackbar's autoHideDuration ends or when onRequestClose gets triggered, which makes this library easier to use.
The first step is to add the reducer to your rootReducer when creating Redux's store.
import { combineReducers, createStore, applyMiddleware } from 'redux';
import thunk from 'redux-thunk';
import { reducer } from 'mui-redux-alerts';
const rootReducer = combineReducers({
// Add other reducers here
alerts: reducer,
});
// Don't forget redux-thunk
const store = createStore(rootReducer, applyMiddleware(thunk));
The second step is to add the Alerts
component somewhere in your app. Make sure this component is always visible because your snackbars and dialogs will be inside it in the dom tree. This component needs to have your alerts
. There are several ways to do this, these are two of them:
import { connect } from 'react-redux';
import { Alerts } from 'mui-redux-alerts';
// Example 1 - Unconnected parent
const mapStateToProps = (state) => ({ alerts: state.alerts });
const ConnectedAlerts = connect(mapStateToProps)(Alerts)
const App = () => (
<div>
// The rest of your app
<ConnectedAlerts />
</div>
);
export default App;
// Example 2 - Connected parent
const Layout = ({ alerts }) => (
<div>
// The rest of your app
<Alerts alerts={alerts} />
</div>
);
const mapStateToProps = (state) => ({ alerts: state.alerts });
export default connect(mapStateToProps)(Layout);
Now that you are all setup, lets dispatch snackbars and dialogs. All use cases assume the dispatch
function from Redux store and these:
import { openDialog, openSnackbar, closeDialog, closeSnackbar } from 'mui-redux-alerts';
All you need is an object that will be used as props for your Dialogs/Snackbars. You can see which props you can use on Material-UI documentation for Snackbars and Dialogs.
Caveat: It is not necessary to mess with
open
andonRequestClose
properties. They are filled automatically.
dispatch(openSnackbar({ message: 'Simple Snackbar' })); // Click outside to dismiss
dispatch(openSnackbar({ message: 'Gone in 6 seconds', autoHideDuration: 6000 }));
dispatch(openDialog({
title: 'Simple Dialog',
children: 'Click outside or press ESC to close'
}));
If you need to close dialogs programatically, you can pass an ID (string) as the optional first argument and dispatch the closeSnackbar
or closeDialog
action.
dispatch(openSnackbar('mySnackbar', { message: 'Simple Snackbar' }));
dispatch(openDialog('myDialog', {
moda: true,
title: 'Simple Dialog',
children: "Can't close this."
}));
// And later
dispatch(closeSnackbar('mySnackbar'));
dispatch(closeDialog('myDialog'));
If instead of an object you send a function for props, it will be calld with a close
function as the first argument.
const getProps = close => ({
modal: true,
title: 'Custom Dialog',
children: 'Click OK to close.'
actions: [<RaisedButton label="OK" onTouchTap={close} />]
});
dispatch(openDialog(getProps));
dispatch(openDialog('myCustomDialog', getProps)); // Also works
// Later
dispatch(closeDialog('myCustomDialog'));
Since the elements are shown and hidden by being mounted/unmounted, no animation is shown. I'll fix this on the next version.
This project is licensed under the MIT License - see the LICENSE.md file for details