A mobile, tablet, desktop, and accessible slider for the web.
npm install rheostat
As of v3.0.0, the rheostat
project relies on react-with-styles
. If you want to continue using CSS stylesheets and classes, there is a little bit of extra set-up required to get things going. As such, you need to use to use rheostat/initialize
to set up class names on your components.
import 'rheostat/initialize';
For example, the above import should go at the top of your application as you won't be able to import rheostat
with it.
The algorithm, by default linear
, the slider will use. Feel free to write
your own as long as it conforms to the shape.
algorithm: PropTypes.shape({
getValue: PropTypes.func,
getPosition: PropTypes.func,
})
Custom class name that will be applied to the root of Rheostat.
className: PropTypes.string
Custom React component overrides for the handles, background, and the "progress" bar.
background: PropTypes.oneOfType([PropTypes.func, PropTypes.string])
handle: PropTypes.oneOfType([PropTypes.func, PropTypes.string])
progressBar: PropTypes.oneOfType([PropTypes.func, PropTypes.string])
The maximum and minimum possible values, by default 0 - 100.
max: PropTypes.number
min: PropTypes.number
pitComponent
is a custom React component for rendering "pits" across the bar.
pitPoints
is the set of points at which it will render a pit. Points are an array
of values
on the slider.
pitComponent: PropTypes.oneOfType([PropTypes.func, PropTypes.string])
pitPoints: PropTypes.arrayOf(PropTypes.number)
NOTE: onChange
is called whenever the value is changed and committed. This happens at the end of
a drag, keypress, or click event. onChange
is recommended when you wish to persist the values.
onValuesUpdated
is a convenience event that is triggered while the value is being actively
changed. This includes dragging, click, or keypress. onValuesUpdated
is recommended if you need
to work with the values before they're committed.
If you need to perform custom logic to postprocess the handle position, getNextHandlePosition
accepts
a callback of the form (handleIdx: int, percentPosition: float) => float
. Return the updated
handle position. This is useful if you need to customize ranges within a single slider.
onChange: PropTypes.func
onClick: PropTypes.func
onKeyPress: PropTypes.func
onSliderDragEnd: PropTypes.func
onSliderDragMove: PropTypes.func
onSliderDragStart: PropTypes.func
onValuesUpdated: PropTypes.func
getNextHandlePosition: PropTypes.func
snap
is a boolean which controls the slider's snapping behavior.
snapPoints
is an array of values
on the slider where the slider should snap to.
If snap
is set to true and no snapPoints
are set then the slider is snapped into an absolute
position. For example, on a scale of 1-10 if the slider is let go at the 54% mark it'll pick the
value 5 and snap to 50%.
snap: PropTypes.bool
snapPoints: PropTypes.arrayOf(PropTypes.number)
The values, by default 0 and 100.
values: PropTypes.arrayOf(PropTypes.number)
You can disable the slider to prevent the user from moving it.
disabled: PropTypes.bool
Important: Make sure to include the css file or feel free to create your own.
- Simple.
import Rheostat from 'rheostat';
ReactDOM.render(<Rheostat />, document.getElementById('slider-root'));
- A slider with a multiple handles.
import Rheostat from 'rheostat';
ReactDOM.render((
<Rheostat
min={1}
max={100}
values={[1, 100]}
/>
), document.getElementById('slider-root'));
The rheostat/initialize
script actually relies on react-with-styles-interface-css under the hood. If you are interested in a different solution for styling in your project, you can do your own initialization of a another interface. At Airbnb, for instance, we rely on Aphrodite under the hood and therefore use the Aphrodite interface for react-with-styles
. If you want to do the same, you would use the following pattern:
import ThemedStyleSheet from 'react-with-styles/lib/ThemedStyleSheet';
import aphroditeInterface from 'react-with-styles-interface-aphrodite';
import DefaultTheme from 'rheostat/lib/themes/DefaultTheme';
ThemedStyleSheet.registerInterface(aphroditeInterface);
ThemedStyleSheet.registerTheme(DefaultTheme);
The above code has to be run before any rheostat
component is imported. Otherwise, you will get an error. Also note that if you register any custom interface manually, you must also manually register a theme.
rheostat
also now supports a different way to theme. You can see the default theme values in this file and you would override them in the following manner:
import ThemedStyleSheet from 'react-with-styles/lib/ThemedStyleSheet';
import aphroditeInterface from 'react-with-styles-interface-aphrodite';
import DefaultTheme from 'rheostat/lib/themes/DefaultTheme';
ThemedStyleSheet.registerInterface(aphroditeInterface);
ThemedStyleSheet.registerTheme({
rheostat: {
...DefaultTheme.rheostat,
color: {
...DefaultTheme.rheostat.color,
progressBar: 'red',
},
},
});
The above code would make the default progress bar red, instead of light blue. Note that you must register an interface if you manually register a theme. One will not work without the other.
The default interface that rheostat
ships with is the CSS interface. If you want to use this interface along with the theme registration method, you will need to rebuild the core rheostat.css
file. We do not currently expose a utility method to build this file, but you can follow along with the code in https://github.com/airbnb/rheostat/blob/master/scripts/buildCSS.js to build your own custom themed CSS file.
rheostat
now supports automatic RTL rendering through react-with-direction
.
For more examples you can check out the storybook.
- Clone this repo on your machine.
npm install
npm run storybook
- Visit
http://localhost:9001/
.