Related
I am building a signup form containing multiple inputs(username, date of birth, etc). After a form is submitted it is stored somewhere containing a list of previous submitted forms.
Link to working sample: https://codesandbox.io/s/react-form-multiple-storage-xcmt3i?file=/src/App.js
Codebase for working sample:
import React, { useState } from "react";
const App = () => {
const [values, setValues] = useState({
userName: "",
dateOfBirth: ""
});
const [submissions, setSubmission] = useState([
{
userName: "april123",
dateOfBirth: "2000-01-01"
}
]);
const addSubmission = (values) => {
const newSubmissions = [...submissions, { values }];
setSubmission(newSubmissions);
console.log(submissions);
};
const handleChange = (event) => {
const value = event.target.value;
setValues({
...values,
[event.target.name]: value
});
};
const handleSubmit = (event) => {
event.preventDefault();
addSubmission(values);
};
return (
<>
<form onSubmit={handleSubmit}>
<h1> Signup Form </h1>
<div>
<label>username</label>
<input
type="text"
name="userName"
onChange={handleChange}
value={values.userName}
required
/>
</div>
<div>
<label>Date of Birth</label>
<input
type="date"
name="dateOfBirth"
onChange={handleChange}
value={values.dateOfBirth || ""}
/>
</div>
<div>
<input type="submit" value="Submit" />
</div>
</form>
</>
);
};
export default App;
Questions:
Is addSubmission setup properly for what I am trying to achieve? Or can it be improved?
Base on console.log() placement, why am I only seeing previous submissions and not current? Screenshot below for details.
Your addSubmission isn't consistent, you initialize it as an array of Objects, but when you add a submission to it you are adding an extra value key, as seen in your second log, where the value at index 1 is an object with a key of value. To resolve this, simply remove the bracket
const newSubmissions = [...submissions, values];
You should also clear the current state values after you have successfully submitted an entry.
SetState is async, which means React might still be updating the state when your console.log is called, and that's why you wouldn't see the current submission, if you place the console.log outside of the function and have it triggered on rerender you would see the new submission.
I have an input component in React that is supposed to trigger a custom handleSubmit function once a user uploads a file:
function PhotoInput({ enableInput }) {
const inputStyle = {
display: 'none'
};
const handleSubmit = (event) => {
console.log("Uploading file...")
// putToS3Bucket(event.target.files[0], '/upload')
};
if (enableInput) {
console.log("logged")
return (
<input
id="file-input"
type="file"
style={inputStyle}
accept="image/*"
onChange={handleSubmit}
/>
);
} else {
return null;
}
}
function PhotoPopover({ width, open, handlePhotoClickClose, enableInput, anchorRef }) {
const navigate = useNavigate();
return (
<>
<MenuPopover
open={open}
onClose={handlePhotoClickClose}
anchorEl={anchorRef.current}
sx={{ width: { width } }}
>
<label for="file-input">
<MenuItem
onClick={handlePhotoClickClose}
sx={{ typography: 'body2', py: 1, px: 2.5 }}
>
<Iconify
icon='eva:settings-2-fill'
sx={{
mr: 2,
width: 24,
height: 24
}}
/>
Change Profile Photo
</MenuItem>
</label>
<PhotoInput enableInput={enableInput} />
</MenuPopover>
</>
);
}
As you can see, this input is wrapped by a MenuItem component from Material. When I click on this MenuItem, a file uploading dialogue appears, but when I choose the file to upload, handleSubmit is not triggered (ie. I don't see "Uploading file..." in the console).
I'm really not sure why this is. I also tried it in a sandbox and it works there, but I don't see the difference between that and this code. Would someone be able to point me in the right direction?
In React, an input type="file" is always an uncontrolled component. You should use the File API to get information about the files uploaded. See The file input Tag.
function PhotoInput({ enableInput }) {
const fileInput = useRef(); /* create a ref*/
const inputStyle = {
display: 'none',
};
const handleSubmit = () => {
event.preventDefault();
/* get current files using ref */
console.log('Uploading file...', fileInput.current.files[0].name);
};
if (enableInput) {
return (
<input
id="file-input"
type="file"
style={inputStyle}
ref={fileInput} /* add ref*/
accept="image/*"
onChange={handleSubmit}
/>
);
} else {
return null;
}
}
Working example
You should change the format of the function call, i.e.:
onChange={(e) => handleSubmit(e)}
So, I am building my first React app, that connects to a Flask backend. I have a specific functional component that fetches a dictionary from the Python program, and I have saved this in a state variable(done using useState, setVariables).
The object is of type
{'A':'x', 'B':'y', 'C':2},
and these are variable, and each render needs to be dynamic, based only on this object.
Based on the current state of this object, I want to display key-value pairs of this object in
<label>insertkey</label>
<input type="text" name = "insertkey" value=insertvalue/>
In addition, I want to be able to save any changes made to these values, and write into the state variable, so that I can send them back to my Flask backend.
I tried looping through each, and inserting as follows:
const [fields, setFields] = useState({});
//intermediate code for fetching and setting the state
useEffect(() => {
for (const [key, value] of Object.entries(fields)) {
console.log(`${key}:${value}`);
insert = insert + `<label> ${key} </label> <input type = 'text' value = ${value} name = ${key} onChange=${changedData()}></input><br/>`
}
document.getElementById('fields_form').innerHTML = insert;
});
const changedData = (evt) => {
setFields({ [evt.target.name]: evt.target.value });
console.log(evt.target.value);
}
//some intermediate code
return (
<div>
<form onSubmit={submitFunction}>
<p id='fields_form'>
</p>
<input type="submit" value="Submit"></input>
</form>
</div>
);
But when I do this, the state is set as 'Undefined'.
I would love to hear about some ways to implement this. Maybe it's a really small fix, and I'm missing it, or perhaps there is a different approach that could be more suitable.
Simple:
const Form = () => {
const [values, setValues] = useState({});
const onChange = (e) => {
const name = e.target.name;
let value = e.target.value;
setValues({ ...values, [name]: value });
};
const onSubmit = (e) => {
// send data or save it to local store
api.send(values)
};
return (
<form encType="multipart/form-data">
<input
type="text"
name="email"
value={value["email"]}
onChange={onChange}
/>
<input
type="text"
name="subject"
value={value["subject"]}
onChange={onChange}
/>
<input
type="text"
name="body"
value={value["body"]}
onChange={onChange}
/>
>
<button type="submit" onClick={onSubmit}>
Save
</button>
</form>
);
};
export default Form;
console.log(values);
It's your solution.
const [fields, setFields] = useState({});
const [values, setValues] = useState({});
// some fetch logic
// happens on loading some data
// for example data structure look's like:
// fetchedData = {
// email: 'email#placeholder'
// subject: 'subject placeholder'
// body: 'body placeholder'
// }
useEffect(() => {
if (fetchedData) {
setFields(fetchedData)
}
}, [fetchedData]);
// happens on fields changed
useEffect(() => {
if (fields) {
setValues(fields)
}
}, [fields]);
const changedData = (evt) => {
setValues({ ...values, [evt.target.name]: evt.target.value });
}
return (
<div>
<form onSubmit={submitFunction}>
{Object.keys(fields).map(_ => (
<input
type="text"
name={_}
value={values[_]}
onChange={changedData}
/>
))}
<input type="submit" value="Submit"></input>
</form>
</div>
);
I have file upload input:
<input onChange={this.getFile} id="fileUpload" type="file" className="upload"/>
And I handle upload this way:
getFile(e) {
e.preventDefault();
let reader = new FileReader();
let file = e.target.files[0];
reader.onloadend = (theFile) => {
var data = {
blob: theFile.target.result, name: file.name,
visitorId: this.props.socketio.visitorId
};
console.log(this.props.socketio);
this.props.socketio.emit('file-upload', data);
};
reader.readAsDataURL(file);
}
If I upload same file twice, then upload event is not fired. How can I fix that? For simple js code it was enough to do the following: this.value = null; in change handler. How can I do it with ReactJS?
I think you can just clear the input value like this :
e.target.value = null;
File input cannot be controlled, there is no React specific way to do that.
Edit For old browsers (<IE11), you can use one of the following techniques.
See http://jsbin.com/zurudemuma/1/edit?js,output (tested on IE10 & 9)
What worked for me was setting a key attribute to the file input, then when I needed to reset it I update the key attribute value:
functionThatResetsTheFileInput() {
let randomString = Math.random().toString(36);
this.setState({
theInputKey: randomString
});
}
render() {
return(
<div>
<input type="file"
key={this.state.theInputKey || '' } />
<button onClick={this.functionThatResetsTheFileInput()} />
</div>
)
}
That forces React to render the input again from scratch.
This work for me - ref={ref => this.fileInput = ref}
<input id="file_input_file" type="file" onChange={(e) => this._handleFileChange(e)} ref={ref=> this.fileInput = ref} />
then in my case once the file was uploaded to the server , I clear it by using the statement below
this.fileInput.value = "";
I do it by updating key inside my file input.
This will force a re-render and previously selected file will go away.
<input type="file" key={this.state.inputKey} />
Changing the state inputKey will re-render the component.
One way to change the inputKey will be to always set it to Date.now() on click of a button which is supposed to clear the field.
With every click onClick you can reset the input, so that even with the same file onChange will be triggered.
<input onChange={this.onChange} onClick={e => (e.target.value = null)} type="file" />
import React, { useRef } from "react";
export default function App() {
const ref = useRef();
const reset = () => {
ref.current.value = "";
};
return (
<>
<input type="file" ref={ref} />
<button onClick={reset}>reset</button>
</>
);
}
The following worked for me using React Hooks. This is done using what is known as a "controlled input". That means, the inputs are controlled by state, or their source of truth is state.
TL;DR Resetting the file input was a two-step process using both the useState() and useRef() hooks.
NOTE: I also included how I reset a text input in case anyone else was curious.
function CreatePost({ user }) {
const [content, setContent] = React.useState("");
const [image, setImage] = React.useState(null); //See Supporting Documentation #1
const imageInputRef = React.useRef(); //See Supporting Documentation #2
function handleSubmit(event) {
event.preventDefault(); //Stop the pesky default reload function
setContent(""); //Resets the value of the first input - See #1
//////START of File Input Reset
imageInputRef.current.value = "";//Resets the file name of the file input - See #2
setImage(null); //Resets the value of the file input - See #1
//////END of File Input Reset
}
return (
<div>
<form onSubmit={handleSubmit}>
<input
type="text"
placeholder="Add Post Content"
onChange={event => setContent(event.target.value)}
value={content} //Make this input's value, controlled by state
/>
<input
type="file"
onChange={event => setImage(event.target.files[0])} //See Supporting Doc #3
ref={imageInputRef} //Apply the ref to the input, now it's controlled - See #2
/>
<button type="submit">Submit Form</button>
</form>
</div>
)
};
Supporting Documentation:
useState Hook
Returns a stateful value, and a function to update it.
useRef Hook
If you pass a ref object to React, React will set its current property to the corresponding DOM node whenever that node changes.
Using files from web apps
If the user selects just one file, it is then only necessary to consider the first file of the list.
You can also include this in your input element if you know you are not going to be using the built-in file input value at all.
<input value={""} ... />
This way the value is always reset to the empty string on render and you don't have to include it awkwardly in an onChange function.
I know file input is always uncontrolled however the following code still works in my own porject, I can reset the input with no problems at all.
constructor(props) {
super(props);
this.state = {
selectedFile: undefined,
selectedFileName: undefined,
imageSrc: undefined,
value: ''
};
this.handleChange = this.handleChange.bind(this);
this.removeImage = this.removeImage.bind(this);
}
handleChange(event) {
if (event.target.files[0]) {
this.setState({
selectedFile: event.target.files[0],
selectedFileName: event.target.files[0].name,
imageSrc: window.URL.createObjectURL(event.target.files[0]),
value: event.target.value,
});
}
}
// Call this function to reset input
removeImage() {
this.setState({
selectedFile: undefined,
selectedFileName: undefined,
imageSrc: undefined,
value: ''
})
}
render() {
return (
<input type="file" value={this.state.value} onChange={this.handleChange} />
);
}
We can reset file input by using key = {this.state.fileInputKey} and initialsing fileInputKey to Date.now() in constructor state.
On file upload success , we need to again assign fileInputKey: Date.now(), so it will have different value than previous and it create new file input component on next render()
We can also do this manually by clicking button to clear/reset file Input
Below is the working code :
import React from "react";
import { Button } from "reactstrap";
class FileUpload extends React.Component {
constructor(props) {
super(props);
this.state = {
selectedFile: null,
fileInputKey: Date.now(),
message: ""
};
this.handleClear = this.handleClear.bind(this);
this.onClickHandler = this.onClickHandler.bind(this);
this.onChangeHandler = this.onChangeHandler.bind(this);
}
onChangeHandler = event => {
this.setState({
selectedFile: event.target.files
});
};
onClickHandler = () => {
if (this.state.selectedFile === null) {
this.setState({
message: "Please select File"
});
return;
}
//axios POST req code to send file to server
{
/**
const data = new FormData()
data = this.state.selectedFile[0]
axios.post("http://localhost:8080/api/uploadFile/", data)
.then(res => {
if (res.status == 200) {
// upload success
}
})
.catch(err => {
//message upload failed
})
*/
}
//after upload to server processed
this.setState({
selectedFile: null,
fileInputKey: Date.now(),
message: "File Uploaded"
});
};
handleClear() {
this.setState({
selectedFile: null,
fileInputKey: Date.now(),
message: ""
});
}
render() {
return (
<div>
<input
type="file"
key={this.state.fileInputKey}
class="form-control"
onChange={this.onChangeHandler}
/>
<button
type="button"
class="btn btn-success btn-block"
onClick={this.onClickHandler}
>
Upload
</button>
<Button
type="button"
value="Clear"
data-test="clear"
onClick={this.handleClear}
>
{" "}
Clear{" "}
</Button>
<br />
<label>{this.state.message}</label>
</div>
);
}
}
export default FileUpload;
Here is my solution using redux form
class FileInput extends React.Component {
constructor() {
super();
this.deleteImage = this.deleteImage.bind(this);
}
deleteImage() {
// Just setting input ref value to null did not work well with redux form
// At the same time just calling on change with nothing didn't do the trick
// just using onChange does the change in redux form but if you try selecting
// the same image again it doesn't show in the preview cause the onChange of the
// input is not called since for the input the value is not changing
// but for redux form would be.
this.fileInput.value = null;
this.props.input.onChange();
}
render() {
const { input: { onChange, value }, accept, disabled, error } = this.props;
const { edited } = this.state;
return (
<div className="file-input-expanded">
{/* ref and on change are key properties here */}
<input
className="hidden"
type="file"
onChange={e => onChange(e.target.files[0])}
multiple={false}
accept={accept}
capture
ref={(input) => { this.fileInput = input; }}
disabled={disabled}
/>
{!value ?
{/* Add button */}
<Button
className="btn-link action"
type="button"
text="Add Image"
onPress={() => this.fileInput.click()}
disabled={disabled}
/>
:
<div className="file-input-container">
<div className="flex-row">
{/* Image preview */}
<img src={window.URL.createObjectURL(value)} alt="outbound MMS" />
<div className="flex-col mg-l-20">
{/* This button does de replacing */}
<Button
type="button"
className="btn-link mg-b-10"
text="Change Image"
onPress={() => this.fileInput.click()}
disabled={disabled}
/>
{/* This button is the one that does de deleting */}
<Button
type="button"
className="btn-link delete"
text="Delete Image"
onPress={this.deleteImage}
disabled={disabled}
/>
</div>
</div>
{error &&
<div className="error-message"> {error}</div>
}
</div>
}
</div>
);
}
}
FileInput.propTypes = {
input: object.isRequired,
accept: string,
disabled: bool,
error: string
};
FileInput.defaultProps = {
accept: '*',
};
export default FileInput;
In my case I had a functional component and after selecting a file it suppose to set the file name in the state so using any solution above was failing except the ref one which i fixed like this.
const fileUpload = props => {
const inputEl = useRef(null)
const onUpload = useCallback(e => {
uploadFile(fileDetails)
.then(res => {
inputEl.current.value = ''
})
.catch(err => {
inputEl.current.value = ''
})
})
return (
<input type='file' ref={inputEl} onChange={handleChange} />
<Button onClick={onUpload}>Upload</Button>
)
}
I recently got stumbled into this issue to reset the File type input field. I think it is still a milestone for most developers. So I thought I should share my solution.
Since we are listening to the onChange event to update the image file into some of our states, we will have our component rerendered once we set the state. In such case, we can specify the value of the input file as empty like value='' which will cause the input field to reset its value after each change of its value.
<input
type="file"
value=''
onChange={onChangeFnc}
/>
How can I manually trigger a click event in ReactJS?
When a user clicks on element1, I want to automatically trigger a click on the input tag.
<div className="div-margins logoContainer">
<div id="element1" className="content" onClick={this.uploadLogoIcon}>
<div className="logoBlank" />
</div>
<input accept="image/*" type="file" className="hide"/>
</div>
You could use the ref prop to acquire a reference to the underlying HTMLInputElement object through a callback, store the reference as a class property, then use that reference to later trigger a click from your event handlers using the HTMLElement.click method.
In your render method:
<input ref={input => this.inputElement = input} ... />
In your event handler:
this.inputElement.click();
Full example:
class MyComponent extends React.Component {
render() {
return (
<div onClick={this.handleClick}>
<input ref={input => this.inputElement = input} />
</div>
);
}
handleClick = (e) => {
this.inputElement.click();
}
}
Note the ES6 arrow function that provides the correct lexical scope for this in the callback. Also note, that the object you acquire this way is an object akin to what you would acquire using document.getElementById, i.e. the actual DOM-node.
Here is the Hooks solution:
import React, {useRef} from 'react';
const MyComponent = () => {
const myRefname= useRef(null);
const handleClick = () => {
myRefname.current.focus();
}
return (
<div onClick={handleClick}>
<input ref={myRefname}/>
</div>
);
}
Got the following to work May 2018 with ES6
React Docs as a reference: https://reactjs.org/docs/refs-and-the-dom.html
import React, { Component } from "react";
class AddImage extends Component {
constructor(props) {
super(props);
this.fileUpload = React.createRef();
this.showFileUpload = this.showFileUpload.bind(this);
}
showFileUpload() {
this.fileUpload.current.click();
}
render() {
return (
<div className="AddImage">
<input
type="file"
id="my_file"
style={{ display: "none" }}
ref={this.fileUpload}
/>
<input
type="image"
src="http://www.graphicssimplified.com/wp-content/uploads/2015/04/upload-cloud.png"
width="30px"
onClick={this.showFileUpload}
/>
</div>
);
}
}
export default AddImage;
You can use ref callback which will return the node. Call click() on that node to do a programmatic click.
Getting the div node
clickDiv(el) {
el.click()
}
Setting a ref to the div node
<div
id="element1"
className="content"
ref={this.clickDiv}
onClick={this.uploadLogoIcon}
>
Check the fiddle
https://jsfiddle.net/pranesh_ravi/5skk51ap/1/
Hope it helps!
In a functional component this principle also works, it's just a slightly different syntax and way of thinking.
const UploadsWindow = () => {
// will hold a reference for our real input file
let inputFile = '';
// function to trigger our input file click
const uploadClick = e => {
e.preventDefault();
inputFile.click();
return false;
};
return (
<>
<input
type="file"
name="fileUpload"
ref={input => {
// assigns a reference so we can trigger it later
inputFile = input;
}}
multiple
/>
<a href="#" className="btn" onClick={uploadClick}>
Add or Drag Attachments Here
</a>
</>
)
}
Riffing on Aaron Hakala's answer with useRef inspired by this answer https://stackoverflow.com/a/54316368/3893510
const myRef = useRef(null);
const clickElement = (ref) => {
ref.current.dispatchEvent(
new MouseEvent('click', {
view: window,
bubbles: true,
cancelable: true,
buttons: 1,
}),
);
};
And your JSX:
<button onClick={() => clickElement(myRef)}>Click<button/>
<input ref={myRef}>
Using React Hooks and the useRef hook.
import React, { useRef } from 'react';
const MyComponent = () => {
const myInput = useRef(null);
const clickElement = () => {
// To simulate a user focusing an input you should use the
// built in .focus() method.
myInput.current?.focus();
// To simulate a click on a button you can use the .click()
// method.
// myInput.current?.click();
}
return (
<div>
<button onClick={clickElement}>
Trigger click inside input
</button>
<input ref={myInput} />
</div>
);
}
this.buttonRef.current.click();
Try this and let me know if it does not work on your end:
<input type="checkbox" name='agree' ref={input => this.inputElement = input}/>
<div onClick={() => this.inputElement.click()}>Click</div>
Clicking on the div should simulate a click on the input element
let timer;
let isDoubleClick = false;
const handleClick = () => {
if(!isDoubleClick) {
isDoubleClick = true;
timer = setTimeout(() => {
isDoubleClick = false;
props.onClick();
}, 200);
} else {
clearTimeout(timer);
props.onDoubleClick();
}
}
return <div onClick={handleClick}></div>
for typescript you could use this code to avoid getting type error
import React, { useRef } from 'react';
const MyComponent = () => {
const fileRef = useRef<HTMLInputElement>(null);
const handleClick = () => {
fileRef.current?.focus();
}
return (
<div>
<button onClick={handleClick}>
Trigger click inside input
</button>
<input ref={fileRef} />
</div>
);
}
If it doesn't work in the latest version of reactjs, try using innerRef
class MyComponent extends React.Component {
render() {
return (
<div onClick={this.handleClick}>
<input innerRef={input => this.inputElement = input} />
</div>
);
}
handleClick = (e) => {
this.inputElement.click();
}
}
imagePicker(){
this.refs.fileUploader.click();
this.setState({
imagePicker: true
})
}
<div onClick={this.imagePicker.bind(this)} >
<input type='file' style={{display: 'none'}} ref="fileUploader" onChange={this.imageOnChange} />
</div>
This work for me
How about just plain old js ?
example:
autoClick = () => {
if (something === something) {
var link = document.getElementById('dashboard-link');
link.click();
}
};
......
var clickIt = this.autoClick();
return (
<div>
<Link id="dashboard-link" to={'/dashboard'}>Dashboard</Link>
</div>
);