ayrton/react-key-handler

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React component to handle keyboard events (such as keyup, keydown & keypress).

“Happy to see that react-key-handler is SSR safe 👍”
[Veselin Todorov](https://.com/vesln), Chai.js core
  1. Installation
  2. Usage
    1. Higher-order Components
    2. Component
    3. Form key handling
  3. Key event names
  4. keyValue, code and keyCode
  5. Development
    1. Setup
    2. Getting started
    3. Tests
  6. Contributing
  7. License
$ npm install react-key-handler --save

You can use react-key-handler library in two flavours:

This library includes two similar higher-order components, but with a different puprose:

Higher-order ComponentPurpose
keyHandlerHandles key changes
keyToggleHandlerHandles key toggles

Both have the same API and will decorate the given component with a keyValue, code and keyCode property.

Internally the KeyHandler component is used, for a full understanding be sure to check out the implementation.

import React from 'react';
import { keyHandler, KEYPRESS } from 'react-key-handler';

function Demo({ keyValue }) {
  return (
    <div>
      {keyValue === 's' && (
        <ol>
          <li>hello</li>
          <li>world</li>
        </ol>
      )}
    </div>
  );
}

export default keyHandler({ keyEventName: KEYPRESS, keyValue: 's' })(Demo);

The prop types of the KeyHandler component are:

NameTypeRequiredDefault
keyEventNamestringno'keyup''keydown', 'keypress' or 'keyup'
keyValuestringyes *Any given KeyboardEvent.key
codestringyes *Any given KeyboardEvent.code
keyCode†numberyes *Any given KeyboardEvent.keyCode

* You should pass at least one of these props.

† Note that the keyCode is frequently browser specific and has therefore be set as deprecated, see MDN for details.

Examples

import React from 'react';
import KeyHandler, { KEYPRESS } from 'react-key-handler';

export default class Demo extends React.Component {
  state = { showMenu: false };

  render() {
    const { showMenu } = this.state;

    return (
      <React.Fragment>
        <KeyHandler
          keyEventName={KEYPRESS}
          keyValue="s"
          onKeyHandle={this.toggleMenu}
        />

        {showMenu && (
          <ol>
            <li>hello</li>
            <li>world</li>
          </ol>
        )}
      </React.Fragment>
    );
  },

  toggleMenu = (event) => {
    event.preventDefault();

    this.setState({ showMenu: !this.state.showMenu });
  };
}

The prop types of the KeyHandler component are:

NameTypeRequiredDefault
keyEventNamestringno'keyup''keydown', 'keypress' or 'keyup'
keyValuestringyes *Any given KeyboardEvent.key
codestringyes *Any given KeyboardEvent.code
keyCode†numberyes *Any given KeyboardEvent.keyCode
onKeyHandlefunctionyesFunction that is called when they key is handled

* You should pass at least one of these props.

† Note that the keyCode is frequently browser specific and has therefore be set as deprecated, see MDN for details.

Example

This library does not handle key events for form elements such as <input /> and <textarea />.

React does a fine job supporting these already via keyboard events.

Examples

TODO: explain the differences between the different key events.

The three available key events are

  • keyValue This corresponds to the true value. This is the value of the key pressed by the user while taking into considerations the state of modifier keys such as the shiftKey as well as the keyboard locale/layout
  • code This corresponds to the physical key on the keyboard (as opposed to the character generated by pressing the key). In other words, this property returns a value which isn't altered by keyboard layout or the state of the modifier keys. The value is a string specific to the key, e.g. 'Digit0'
  • keyCode This is similar to code but numeric and also deprecated.

We recommend you to use the new Web standard KeyboardEvent.key or the KeyboardEvent.code over the deprecated KeyboardEvent.keyCode.

Note that in React key is a reserved property, and thus we use keyValue when referring to the key property.

Browser support:

There's no need to worry about browser support because internally we normalize deprecated HTML5 keyValue values and translate from legacy keyCode values, similar to how React does this for their SyntheticKeyboardEvent.

More information:

W3C Working Draft.

$ git clone <this repo>
$ cd react-key-handler
$ npm install

To start the server:

$ npm demo

This starts a development server, which will automatically rebuild the demo app as you change files and supports hot module replacement for fast development:

$ open http://localhost:1234

To run all tests:

$ npm test

Or you can run the linters, unit tests and check for type errors individually:

$ npm run test:lint
$ npm run test:unit
$ npm run test:flow

Bug reports and pull requests are welcome on . This project is intended to be a safe, welcoming space for collaboration, and contributors are expected to adhere to the Contributor Covenant code of conduct.

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< The MIT License >
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