56

There is a modal in this answer https://stackoverflow.com/a/26789089/883571 which is creating a React-based Modal by appending it to <body>. However, I found it not compatible with the transition addons provided by React.

How to create one with transitions(during enter and leave)?

8 Answers 8

73

At react conf 2015, Ryan Florence demonstrated using portals. Here's how you can create a simple Portal component...

var Portal = React.createClass({
  render: () => null,
  portalElement: null,
  componentDidMount() {
    var p = this.props.portalId && document.getElementById(this.props.portalId);
    if (!p) {
      var p = document.createElement('div');
      p.id = this.props.portalId;
      document.body.appendChild(p);
    }
    this.portalElement = p;
    this.componentDidUpdate();
  },
  componentWillUnmount() {
    document.body.removeChild(this.portalElement);
  },
  componentDidUpdate() {
    React.render(<div {...this.props}>{this.props.children}</div>, this.portalElement);
  }
});

and then everything you can normally do in React you can do inside of the portal...

    <Portal className="DialogGroup">
       <ReactCSSTransitionGroup transitionName="Dialog-anim">
         { activeDialog === 1 && 
            <div key="0" className="Dialog">
              This is an animated dialog
            </div> }
       </ReactCSSTransitionGroup>
    </Portal> 

jsbin demo

You can also have a look at Ryan's react-modal, although I haven't actually used it so I don't know how well it works with animation.

5
49

I wrote the module react-portal that should help you.

Usage:

import { Portal } from 'react-portal';
 
<Portal>
  This text is portaled at the end of document.body!
</Portal>
 
<Portal node={document && document.getElementById('san-francisco')}>
  This text is portaled into San Francisco!
</Portal>
3
  • 3
    What the! Dude, this should be the #1 answer.
    – LessQuesar
    Jan 20, 2017 at 11:53
  • This is an amazing module!! Best answer for me! Nov 18, 2021 at 21:32
  • Holy...Freaking...Crap! - I have been fighting with this for hours. One line of import, and some <Portal> tags around my modal, and boom, it works immediately. You are a completely amazing person.
    – Alverstone
    Nov 16, 2022 at 22:53
31

React 15.x

Here's an ES6 version of the method described in this article:

import React from 'react';
import ReactDOM from 'react-dom';
import PropTypes from 'prop-types';

export default class BodyEnd extends React.PureComponent {
    
    static propTypes = {
        children: PropTypes.node,
    };
    
    componentDidMount() {
        this._popup = document.createElement('div');
        document.body.appendChild(this._popup);
        this._render();
    }

    componentDidUpdate() {
        this._render();
    }

    componentWillUnmount() {
        ReactDOM.unmountComponentAtNode(this._popup);
        document.body.removeChild(this._popup);
    }

    _render() {
        ReactDOM.render(this.props.children, this._popup);
    }
    
    render() {
        return null;
    }
}

Just wrap any elements you want to be at the end of the DOM with it:

<BodyEnd><Tooltip pos={{x,y}}>{content}</Tooltip></BodyEnd>

React 16.x

Here's an updated version for React 16:

import React from 'react';
import ReactDOM from 'react-dom';

export default class BodyEnd extends React.Component {

    constructor(props) {
        super(props);
        this.el = document.createElement('div');
        this.el.style.display = 'contents';
        // The <div> is a necessary container for our
        // content, but it should not affect our layout.
        // Only works in some browsers, but generally
        // doesn't matter since this is at
        // the end anyway. Feel free to delete this line.
    }
    
    componentDidMount() {
        document.body.appendChild(this.el);
    }

    componentWillUnmount() {
        document.body.removeChild(this.el);
    }
    
    render() {
        return ReactDOM.createPortal(
            this.props.children,
            this.el,
        );
    }
}

Working example

5
  • 1
    thanks mpen this above is best and simplest way by far and works on Cordova
    – user6144056
    Oct 20, 2017 at 6:41
  • @OZZIE Try using ReactDOM.createPortal instead. I bet that'll work! (Sorry, I don't the full code to post right now)
    – mpen
    Jan 4, 2019 at 18:30
  • @mpen ah, yeah I realised after posting the comment that the link was to another solution, I though the code you posted was related to this :) would be awesome if this works, although I would be a bit fond of being able to claim that modals aren't well supported in React but now they are :< I hate modals/popups :)
    – OZZIE
    Jan 6, 2019 at 15:59
  • 1
    @OZZIE Haha.. they're not so bad once you have some good functions/components for working with them. I updated the code for React 16.
    – mpen
    Jan 6, 2019 at 21:11
  • @mpen I think they are bad UX, except for some rare prompts like "Are you sure ..?"
    – OZZIE
    Jan 7, 2019 at 7:23
18

As other answers have stated this can be done using Portals. Starting from v16.0 Portals are included in React.

<body>
  <div id="root"></div>
  <div id="portal"></div>
</body>

Normally, when you return an element from a component's render method, it's mounted into the DOM as a child of the nearest parent node, but with portals you can insert a child into a different location in the DOM.

const PortalComponent = ({ children, onClose }) => {
  return createPortal(
    <div className="modal" style={modalStyle} onClick={onClose}>
      {children}
    </div>,
    // get outer DOM element
    document.getElementById("portal")
  );
};

class App extends React.Component {
  constructor(props) {
    super(props);

    this.state = {
      modalOpen: false
    };
  }

  render() {
    return (
      <div style={styles}>
        <Hello name="CodeSandbox" />
        <h2>Start editing to see some magic happen {"\u2728"}</h2>
        <button onClick={() => this.setState({ modalOpen: true })}>
          Open modal
        </button>
        {this.state.modalOpen && (
          <PortalComponent onClose={() => this.setState({ modalOpen: false })}>
            <h1>This is modal content</h1>
          </PortalComponent>
        )}
      </div>
    );
  }
}

render(<App />, document.getElementById("root"));

Check working example here.

1
  • 3
    The most up-to-date answer as of January 2018... all the way down here.. makes you wonder whether this repeated issue is something that SO should think about
    – Elad Katz
    Jan 4, 2018 at 8:16
3

The fundamental problem here is that in React you're only allowed to mount component to its parent, which is not always the desired behavior. But how to address this issue?

I've made the solution, addressed to fix this issue. More detailed problem definition, src and examples can be found here: https://github.com/fckt/react-layer-stack#rationale

Rationale

react/react-dom comes comes with 2 basic assumptions/ideas:

  • every UI is hierarchical naturally. This why we have the idea of components which wrap each other
  • react-dom mounts (physically) child component to its parent DOM node by default

The problem is that sometimes the second property isn't what you want in your case. Sometimes you want to mount your component into different physical DOM node and hold logical connection between parent and child at the same time.

Canonical example is Tooltip-like component: at some point of development process you could find that you need to add some description for your UI element: it'll render in fixed layer and should know its coordinates (which are that UI element coord or mouse coords) and at the same time it needs information whether it needs to be shown right now or not, its content and some context from parent components. This example shows that sometimes logical hierarchy isn't match with the physical DOM hierarchy.

Take a look at https://github.com/fckt/react-layer-stack/blob/master/README.md#real-world-usage-example to see the concrete example which is answer to your question:

import { Layer, LayerContext } from 'react-layer-stack'
// ... for each `object` in array of `objects`
  const modalId = 'DeleteObjectConfirmation' + objects[rowIndex].id
  return (
    <Cell {...props}>
        // the layer definition. The content will show up in the LayerStackMountPoint when `show(modalId)` be fired in LayerContext
        <Layer use={[objects[rowIndex], rowIndex]} id={modalId}> {({
            hideMe, // alias for `hide(modalId)`
            index } // useful to know to set zIndex, for example
            , e) => // access to the arguments (click event data in this example)
          <Modal onClick={ hideMe } zIndex={(index + 1) * 1000}>
            <ConfirmationDialog
              title={ 'Delete' }
              message={ "You're about to delete to " + '"' + objects[rowIndex].name + '"' }
              confirmButton={ <Button type="primary">DELETE</Button> }
              onConfirm={ this.handleDeleteObject.bind(this, objects[rowIndex].name, hideMe) } // hide after confirmation
              close={ hideMe } />
          </Modal> }
        </Layer>

        // this is the toggle for Layer with `id === modalId` can be defined everywhere in the components tree
        <LayerContext id={ modalId }> {({showMe}) => // showMe is alias for `show(modalId)`
          <div style={styles.iconOverlay} onClick={ (e) => showMe(e) }> // additional arguments can be passed (like event)
            <Icon type="trash" />
          </div> }
        </LayerContext>
    </Cell>)
// ...
6
  • Please make it explicit that this is your own library, and please read How to offer personal open-source libraries?
    – Martijn Pieters
    Nov 21, 2016 at 6:58
  • 3
    "I propose the solution, addressed to fix this issue" - isn't enough? And this is not only about library, but more about the pattern, library is complementary in this case
    – fckt
    Nov 22, 2016 at 1:11
  • No, it is not enough. You are promoting your own library as the proposed solution. You did so in a lot of places. Our community considers such promotion without disclosure to be a form of astroturfing.
    – Martijn Pieters
    Nov 22, 2016 at 8:28
  • 2
    ok, could we agree first, that this is not clear, barely subjective, controversial topic? What if somebody write answers and explanations instead of me? How it will change the discourse?
    – fckt
    Nov 23, 2016 at 7:02
  • btw, I read to links you shared, all statements are pretty clear, fair and logically consistent IMO. I'm sorry also for raising such a topic, don't sure this is a good place for it..
    – fckt
    Nov 23, 2016 at 7:11
3

I think this code is more or less self explanatory and covers the core solution of what most people are looking for:

ReactDOM.render(
  <Modal />,
  document.body.appendChild( document.createElement( 'div' ) ),
)
2

I've written a library to help with this. I avoid the DOM insertion hacks used by Portal strategies out there and instead make use of context based registries to pass along components from a source to a target.

My implementation makes use of the standard React render cycles. The components that you teleport/inject/transport don't cause a double render cycle on the target - everything happens synchronously.

The API is also structured in a manner to discourage the use of magic strings in your code to define the source/target. Instead you are required to explicitly create and decorate components that will be used as the target (Injectable) and the source (Injector). As this sort of thing is generally considered quite magical I think explicit Component representation (requiring direct imports and usage) may help alleviate confusion on where a Component is being injected.

Although my library won't allow you to render as a direct child of the document.body you can achieve an acceptable modal effect by binding to a root level component in your component tree. I plan on adding an example of this use case soon.

See https://github.com/ctrlplusb/react-injectables for more info.

1

Hope it helps. This is my current implementation of a transition modal based on the anwser above:

  React = require 'react/addons'

  keyboard = require '../util/keyboard'
  mixinLayered = require '../mixin/layered'

  $ = React.DOM
  T = React.PropTypes
  cx = React.addons.classSet

  module.exports = React.createFactory React.createClass
    displayName: 'body-modal'
    mixins: [mixinLayered]

    propTypes:
      # this components accepts children
      name:             T.string.isRequired
      title:            T.string
      onCloseClick:     T.func.isRequired
      showCornerClose:  T.bool
      show:             T.bool.isRequired

    componentDidMount: ->
      window.addEventListener 'keydown', @onWindowKeydown

    componentWillUnmount: ->
      window.removeEventListener 'keydown', @onWindowKeydown

    onWindowKeydown: (event) ->
      if event.keyCode is keyboard.esc
        @onCloseClick()

    onCloseClick: ->
      @props.onCloseClick()

    onBackdropClick: (event) ->
      unless @props.showCornerClose
        if event.target is event.currentTarget
          @onCloseClick()

    renderLayer: ->
      className = "body-modal is-for-#{@props.name}"
      $.div className: className, onClick: @onBackdropClick,
        if @props.showCornerClose
          $.a className: 'icon icon-remove', onClick: @onCloseClick
        $.div className: 'box',
          if @props.title?
            $.div className: 'title',
              $.span className: 'name', @props.title
              $.span className: 'icon icon-remove', @onCloseClick
          @props.children

    render: ->
      $.div()

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