The solution for handling pseudo-states when working with a CSS in JS solution.
yarn add react-pseudo-state
import { PseudoState } from 'react-pseudo-state';
const Button = ({ children, ...props }) => (
<PseudoState>
{(handlers, snapshot) => (
<button
css={{
background: snapshot.isHover ? 'lightBlue' : 'blue',
color: snapshot.isActive ? 'slateGray' : 'lightSlateGray',
outline: snapshot.isFocus && snapshot.focusOrigin === 'keyboard'
? '3px dotted blue'
: null,
}}
{...props}
{...handlers}
>
{children}
</button>
)}
</PseudoState>
);
A higher-order-component is also provided if that's more your speed:
import { withPseudoState } from 'react-pseudo-state';
const ButtonElement = ({ isActive, ...props }) => (
<button css={{ color: isActive ? 'slateGray' : 'lightSlateGray' }} {...props} />
);
export const Button = withPseudoState(ButtonElement);
The native browser behaviour is that Enter
is for anchors and buttons, whilst Space
is only called on buttons. To stay compliant it's recommended to dynamically populate the keyboardSupport
property.
The shape of keyboardSupport
is described below in the Types section. It will default to 'auto'
, which sniffs the event target for a node type.
import { PseudoState } from 'react-pseudo-state';
const Button = (props) => (
<PseudoState keyboardSupport={props.href ? 'enter' : 'both'}>
{(handlers, snapshot) => props.href ? <a /> : <button />)}
</PseudoState>
);
The first argument to the children
function is an object of handlers, which must be spread onto the node returned from children
:
type Handlers = {
onBlur: () => mixed,
onFocus: () => mixed,
onKeyDown?: (event: SyntheticKeyboardEvent<HTMLElement>) => mixed,
onKeyUp?: (event: SyntheticKeyboardEvent<HTMLElement>) => mixed,
onMouseDown: () => mixed,
onMouseEnter: () => mixed,
onMouseLeave: () => mixed,
onMouseUp: () => mixed,
onTouchEnd: () => mixed,
onTouchStart: () => mixed,
};
The second argument is the snapshot, or current state of the element:
type Snapshot = {
focusOrigin: null | 'keyboard' | 'mouse',
isActive: boolean,
isFocus: boolean,
isHover: boolean,
};
The actual PseudoState
component only has two properties:
type Props = {
children: (Handlers, Snapshot) => React$Node,
keyboardSupport: 'auto' | 'enter' | 'space' | 'both' | 'none',
};