react-easy-sort 1.3.4
Install from the command line:
Learn more about npm packages
$ npm install @dilatoapp/react-easy-sort@1.3.4
Install via package.json:
"@dilatoapp/react-easy-sort": "1.3.4"
About this version
A React component to sort items in lists or grids
The goal of this component is to allow sorting elements with drag and drop.
It is mobile friendly by default. It doesn't block scrolling the page when swiping inside it: the user needs to press an item during at least 200ms to start the drag gesture.
On non-touch device, the drag gesture only starts after moving an element by at least one pixel. This is done to avoid blocking clicks on clickable elements inside an item.
- Supports horizontal and vertical lists
- Supports grid layouts
- Mobile-friendly
- IE11 support 🙈
Check out the examples:
- Example with grid layout
- Example with vertical list layout
- Example with horizontal list layout
- Interactive avatars demo
- Example with custom knobs
yarn add react-easy-sort
or
npm install react-easy-sort --save
import SortableList, { SortableItem } from 'react-easy-sort'
import arrayMove from 'array-move'
const App = () => {
const [items, setItems] = React.useState(['A', 'B', 'C', 'D', 'E', 'F', 'G', 'H', 'I'])
const onSortEnd = (oldIndex: number, newIndex: number) => {
setItems((array) => arrayMove(array, oldIndex, newIndex))
}
return (
<SortableList onSortEnd={onSortEnd} className="list" draggedItemClassName="dragged">
{items.map((item) => (
<SortableItem key={item}>
<div className="item">{item}</div>
</SortableItem>
))}
</SortableList>
)
}
Name | Description | Type | Default |
---|---|---|---|
as | Determines html tag for container element | keyof JSX.IntrinsicElements |
div |
onSortEnd* | Called when the user finishes a sorting gesture. | (oldIndex: number, newIndex: number) => void |
- |
draggedItemClassName | Class applied to the item being dragged | string |
- |
allowDrag | Determines whether items can be dragged | boolean |
true |
This component doesn't take any other props than its child. This child should be a single React element that can receives a ref. If you pass a component as a child, it needs to be wrapped with React.forwardRef()
.
You can use this component if you doesn't want to whole item to be draggable but only a specific area of it.
import SortableList, { SortableItem, SortableKnob } from 'react-easy-sort'
import arrayMove from 'array-move'
const App = () => {
const [items, setItems] = React.useState(['A', 'B', 'C', 'D', 'E', 'F', 'G', 'H', 'I'])
const onSortEnd = (oldIndex: number, newIndex: number) => {
setItems((array) => arrayMove(array, oldIndex, newIndex))
}
return (
<SortableList onSortEnd={onSortEnd} className="list" draggedItemClassName="dragged">
{items.map((item) => (
<SortableItem key={item}>
<div className="item">
<SortableKnob>
<div>Drag me</div>
</SortableKnob>
{item}
</div>
</SortableItem>
))}
</SortableList>
)
}
This component doesn't take any other props than its child. This child should be a single React element that can receives a ref. If you pass a component as a child, it needs to be wrapped with React.forwardRef()
.
To disable browser default behaviors than can interfer with the dragging experience, we recommend adding the following declarations on the "items":
-
user-select: none;
: disable the selection of content inside the item (the blue box) -
pointer-events: none;
: required for some browsers if your items contain images (see the Interactive avatars demo)
yarn
yarn start
Now, open http://localhost:3001/index.html
and start hacking!
- https://github.com/clauderic/react-sortable-hoc : before creating this library, I was using it and it was also supporting grid layouts. However, we had a lot of errors reported to our Sentry and this project was not maintained anymore.
- https://github.com/atlassian/react-beautiful-dnd: another great library for sorting items. However, it doesn't support grid layouts (as of 2021-02-05).