react-spring-carousel

A new Carousel experience for the web

Usage no npm install needed!

<script type="module">
  import reactSpringCarousel from 'https://cdn.skypack.dev/react-spring-carousel';
</script>

README

react-spring-carousel-js

A performant React carousel component powered by react-spring and react-use-gesture.

NPM NPM

Official documentation

Visit here

Features

  • Extreemely performant: thanks to react-spring, you'll get a excelent performance with smooth and natural transitions out of the box.
  • Custom events: Use our custom events to intercept when things happen and take the experience to the next level!
  • Mobile first: You can swipe/drag with no config needed thanks to react-use-gesture.
  • Resizable: the carousel will automatically resize and adapt if the browser viewport change. Very useful when changing to landscape on mobile devices.
  • Fullscreen capable: we provide you the API to enter/exit from fullscreen mode! (thanks to screenful.js).
  • Headles UI: no more headaches trying to style the elements of the carousel. You decide every aspect of the elements of the carousel.
  • Totally composable: we give you the instruments (API) and you decide where to place all the elements of the carousel and how they will behave and interact.
  • Easy to configure: configure the carousel behavior is a piece of cake!

Install

npm install --save react-spring-carousel-js

or

yarn add --save react-spring-carousel-js

Usage

At it's most basic, to start using the carousel you can do:

import { useSpringCarousel } from 'react-spring-carousel-js'

const { carouselFragment } = useSpringCarousel({
  items: [
    {
      id: 'item-1',
      renderItem: <div>Item 1</div>,
    },
    {
      id: 'item-2',
      renderItem: <div>Item 2</div>,
    },
  ],
})

return <div>{carouselFragment}</div>

As you can see, you don't have to call the component in the traditional way but instead the main hook return the carousel fragment (which is the carousel) and eventually the thumbs fragment (which will render the list of tumbs). It's up to you to decide how and where render boths, and they're not tied in any way, so basically you can customize the UI pretty much in any way you want to!

Props

You can provide this options to better customize the behavior and the aspect of the Carousel:

Prop Type Default Description
items {id: string renderItem: React.ReactNode renderThumb?: React.ReactNode}[] [] Object type of the single carousel slide.
withLoop boolean false Set to true if you want to enable the infinite loop behavior.
withThumbs boolean true Set to false if you don't want to render the list of thumbs.
springConfig SpringConfig config.default Customize the spring animation props.
shouldResizeOnWindowResize boolean true Set to false if you want to disable the auto rezise
draggingSlideTreshold number 50 Set the minimum treshold that is required to slide after the item is dragged and then released.
enableThumbsWrapperScroll boolean true Set to false if you don't want to auto-scroll the list of thumbs when an item is selected.
carouselSlideAxis x / y x Specify the slide axis direction of the carousel
thumbsSlideAxis x / y x Specify the slide axis direction of the thumbs list
thumbsMaxHeight number 0 Set the max height of the thumb list wrapper; to be only used if you set thumbsSlideAxis to y
thumbsWrapperRef React.MutableRefObject<HTMLDivElement / null> undefined Pass a wrapper ref if you want to style in a particular way the thumbs wrapper list and still want to have the automatic scroll out of the box. If you set carouselSlideAxis='x' probably you wouldn't want to do it, as we automatically handle this case. In case you set carouselSlideAxis='y' you have to options: or you set the thumbsMaxHeight to a fixed height, or if you need to have a fluid height - 100% - then in this case you should pass the ref of the wrapper. This way, we will use your ref to handle the scroll (remember to also set overflow-y: auto).
initialActiveItem number 0 Set the initial active slide.
itemsPerSlide number 1 Define the quantity of items to show per slide. It can't be greater than the maximum quantity of items provided.
initialStartingPosition start / center / end start Note: only works if withLoop={true} Defines the starting position of the current active slide. Normally if you have 3 active items per slide, you'll see 1,2,3. If you set initialStartingPosition='center', for example, you'll get the following order: 3,1,2.
disableGestures boolean false Disable the drag gesture programmatically.

Options (API)

The following options and API can be both extracted from the main hook or from the own Carousel Context (that can be imported and used inside any component rendered inside the Carousel :smirk:)

Option Type Default Value Description
isFullscreen boolean false Indicates if the carousel entered in fullscreen mode.
getIsActiveItem (id: string): boolean false By providing the id of an item, you can check if that item the current active one.
getCurrentActiveItem () => ({id: string, index: number}) () => ({id: '', index: 0}) To retrieve the id and index of the current active item.
getIsPrevItem (id: string): boolean false By providing the id of an item, you can check if that item is the previous one in the list of items. Pretty useful if, for example, you render a list of items and want to preload on demand.
getIsNextItem (id: string): boolean false By providing the id of an item, you can check if that item is the next one in the list of items. Pretty useful if, for example, you render a list of items and want to preload on demand.
slideToItem (item: string / number): void () => {} You can use this method to programmatically slide to a specific item. You can pass the index of the item or the id.
getIsAnimating (): boolean () => false Use this method to check if the carousel is animating or not. Under the hood, react-carousel-spring-js uses a ref to keep track of this value. We don't use a state to avoid useless re-render that could impact in the animation smoothness.
getIsDragging (): boolean () => false Use this method to check if the carousel is dragging or not. Under the hood, react-carousel-spring-js uses a ref to keep track of this value. We don't use a state to avoid useless re-render that could impact in the animation smoothness.
enterFullscreen (elementRef?: HTMLElement): void () => {} Use this method to enter in the fullscreen mode. NOTE: By default, the main wrapper of the carousel will enter in fullscreen mode, but normally you will want to put in the fullscreen mode also other elements, that's why you can pass a custom element ref.
slideToPrevItem (): void () => {} Use this method slide to the previous item. This is useful to build your own navigation buttons. You just need to call it and that's it; the carousel itself will handle all the internal logic part (for example, if the withLoop property is set to false, when reaching the first item, if you call it it will do nothing.)
slideToNextItem (): void () => {} Use this method slide to the next item. This is useful to build your own navigation buttons. You just need to call it and that's it; the carousel itself will handle all the internal logic part (for example, if the withLoop property is set to false, when reaching the last item, if you call it it will do nothing.)
useListenToCustomEvent <T>(eventName: ReactSpringCustomEvents, eventHandler: (data?: T): void): void () => {} Use this hook to perform callback actions in your application when the carousel internal state change.

Events

Sometimes it can happend that we'll want to perform some actions when a user interact with the carousel (for example, maybe you'll want to do something every time a slide changes). Normally you'll use callbacks to perform actions but this pattern wasn't enough from our perspective.

The first reason was because we wanted to avoid, as much as possible, to leverage on the state update (AKA React rerender) to perform animations, so that wasn't an option. The second point was that if we wanted to use callbacks it would require us to pass them down from the highest level (you would need to pass them directly into the main hook), and this solution didn't give us the flexibility we wanted. For this reason it was decided to implement our custom events, so that you'll be able to listen pretty much from everywhere and respond accordingly in a simple and effective way.

How they works?

Every instance of the Carousel will expose a useListenToCustomEvent hook. useListenToCustomEvent accept two arguments:

  • The event name to listen.
  • A callback that will receive some data (dependind on the event that we listen) that will be triggered every time the event is emitted.

List of events

Event Description
onSlideStartChange The event is emitted every time a slide is about to slide.
onSlideChange The event is emitted after the animation slide is completed.
onDrag The event is emitted when a user drags the carousel items (only available when using useSpringCarousel).
onFullscreenChange The event is emitted when a user enter/exit from the fullscreen mode.
onLeftSwipe The event is emitted when a user swipe to the left (only available when using useTransitionCarousel).
onRightSwipe The event is emitted when a user swipe to the right (only available when using useTransitionCarousel).

To proper type the props that the event will receive, you can use the following types:

  • onSlideStartChange -> OnSlideStartChange
  • onSlideChange -> OnSlideChange
  • onDrag -> OnDrag
  • onFullscreenChange -> OnFullscreenChange

License

MIT © Emiliano-Bucci