A popover library for React, using react-portal for better positioning.
npm install react-portal-popover
There's two steps: import the OverlayTrigger
that decorates your toggle element,
then pass in an overlay={}
prop with your ToolTip
that you'd like to display.
import React from 'react';
import ToolTip, { OverlayTrigger } from 'react-portal-popover';
const MyComponent = () => {
const options = {
size: 7,
color: '#999',
foregroundColor: '#fff',
className: 'my-special-tooltip',
useForeground: true,
};
const toolTip = (
<ToolTip position="bottom" options={options}>
<p>My tooltip content</p>
</ToolTip>
);
return (
<div>
<OverlayTrigger overlay={toolTip} label="Excerpt" showLabel="Show" hideLabel="Hide">
<button>Toggle</button>
</OverlayTrigger>
</div>
);
};
There are some options you can pass to the ToolTip
component to customise how
it is displayed. This allows you to define multiple styles of tooltip in the same
application, and saves writing lots of the CSS boilerplate required for drawing arrows.
const options = {
classBase: 'tooltip', // eg .${classBase}--bottom,
className: '', // extra classnames to add to the tooltip element
size: 7, // the size of the arrow
offset: 2, // how many pixels to offset the arrow by
color: '#999', // border colour of your tooltip
foregroundColor: '#fff', // foreground colour of your tooltip
useForeground: true, // render two arrows, a border and a background.
borderWidth: 1, // pixel width of your border
};
<ToolTip position="bottom|top|left|right" options={options} />
closeOnScroll
determines whether the tooltip closes when you scroll the window.
<OverlayTrigger closeOnScroll={true|false} />
nvm install
npm install
npm test
npm run test:watch
npm run lint