477

I want to conditionally show and hide this button group depending on what is passed in from the parent component which looks like this:

    <TopicNav showBulkActions={this.__hasMultipleSelected} />

    __hasMultipleSelected: function() {
      return false; //return true or false depending on data
    }
    var TopicNav = React.createClass({
    render: function() {
    return (
        <div className="row">
            <div className="col-lg-6">
                <div className="btn-group pull-right {this.props.showBulkActions ? 'show' : 'hidden'}">
                    <button type="button" className="btn btn-default dropdown-toggle" data-toggle="dropdown" aria-expanded="false">
                      Bulk Actions <span className="caret"></span>
                    </button>
                    <ul className="dropdown-menu" role="menu">
                      <li><a href="#">Merge into New Session</a></li>
                      <li><a href="#">Add to Existing Session</a></li>
                      <li className="divider"></li>
                      <li><a href="#">Delete</a></li>
                    </ul>
                </div>
            </div>
        </div>
        );
      }
    });

Nothing is happening however, with the {this.props.showBulkActions ? 'show' : 'hidden'}. Am I doing anything wrong here?

1
  • You may also wish to consider react-bootstrap, since this abstracts some of the class stuff into component properties, making what you're trying to do a little easier.
    – Dancrumb
    Jun 14, 2017 at 17:31

24 Answers 24

832

The curly braces are inside the string, so it is being evaluated as string. They need to be outside, so this should work:

<div className={"btn-group pull-right " + (this.props.showBulkActions ? 'show' : 'hidden')}>

Note the space after "pull-right". You don't want to accidentally provide the class "pull-rightshow" instead of "pull-right show". Also the parentheses needs to be there.

6
  • 3
    Thanks! I had to modify it slightly because for some reason it wasn't outputting btn-group pull-right at all. Just show or hidden.
    – apexdodge
    May 29, 2015 at 16:01
  • 1
    This is particularly helpful in certain cases where classnames might not be appropriate. If you are in your render function and you have a map, you might only know whether you want to add a class at the time you are rendering it, so this answer is quite useful for that. Nov 11, 2016 at 17:12
  • great alternative instead of having a bunch of conditional templates in your render or return
    – devonj
    May 16, 2017 at 20:57
  • @apexdodge what modification you had to do. I have the same issue.
    – RamY
    Jun 6, 2018 at 6:56
  • 1
    @RamY One way is to put all the classes inside the conditional this.props.showBulkActions ? 'btn-group pull-right show' : 'btn-group pull-right hidden'). Not elegant but it works.
    – Ian
    Jan 31, 2019 at 14:11
130

As others have commented, classnames utility is the currently recommended approach to handle conditional CSS class names in ReactJs.

In your case, the solution will look like:

var btnGroupClasses = classNames(
  'btn-group',
  'pull-right',
  {
    'show': this.props.showBulkActions,
    'hidden': !this.props.showBulkActions
  }
);

...

<div className={btnGroupClasses}>...</div>

As a side note, I would suggest you to try to avoid using both show and hidden classes, so the code could be simpler. Most likely, you don't need to set a class for something to be shown by default.

2021 addendum: for performance improvement, you can look into clsx as an alternative.

5
  • 22
    Could you elaborate on classNames utility being the "currently recommended approach"? Is that captured in some well-regarded best practices document somewhere? Or just sort of the word of mouth around React and classNames at the moment? Apr 21, 2017 at 1:52
  • 10
    @anied At the time of writing it was recommended in official React documentation: web.archive.org/web/20160602124910/http://facebook.github.io:80/…
    – Diego V
    Apr 24, 2017 at 23:44
  • 7
    It is still mentioned in latest documentation: "If you often find yourself writing code like this, classnames package can simplify it." Sep 4, 2018 at 21:17
  • 2
    As of 2021, instead of classnames you might want to try clsx
    – Kevin Law
    Nov 26, 2021 at 10:38
  • 1
    classnames is still mentioned here - "To make this more readable, you can use a tiny helper library like classnames"
    – jna
    Mar 29 at 21:55
108

If you are using a transpiler (such as Babel or Traceur) you can use the new ES6 "template strings".

Here is the answer of @spitfire109, modified accordingly:

<div className={`btn-group pull-right ${this.props.showBulkActions ? 'shown' : 'hidden'}`}>

This approach allows you to do neat things like that, rendering either s-is-shown or s-is-hidden:

<div className={`s-${this.props.showBulkActions ? 'is-shown' : 'is-hidden'}`}>
1
  • 35
    Be careful with the second approach, especially in large codebases, as it makes the class strings less greppable. For example, if someone searches for s-is-shown or s-is-hidden in the codebase, they won't find this code.
    – mark
    Mar 21, 2018 at 21:33
26

you can simply do the following for example.

let classNameDependsOnCondtion = i18n.language == 'en' ? "classname" : "";

className={`flex flex-col lg:flex-row list-none ${classNameDependsOnCondtion }`}

OR

className={`flex flex-col lg:flex-row list-none ${i18n.language == 'en' ? "classname" : ""}`}
2
  • 2
    If you are conditionally rendering a single className inline and don't want a class to appear for one of the conditions, you can return null or undefined instead of an empty string. Example: className={condition ? 'red' : null} or className={condition ? 'red' : undefined} It's better to keep your markup clean rather than having elements appear like <div class> or `<div class="null"> Feb 12, 2022 at 2:08
  • 1
    @AnthonyAvila true, also its better to use classnames npmjs.com/package/classnames to avoid printing extra empty spaces. Feb 14, 2022 at 17:32
21

You can use here String literals

const Angle = ({show}) => {

   const angle = `fa ${show ? 'fa-angle-down' : 'fa-angle-right'}`;

   return <i className={angle} />
}
17

Replace:

<div className="btn-group pull-right {this.props.showBulkActions ? 'show' : 'hidden'}">`

with:

<div className={`btn-group pull-right ${this.props.showBulkActions ? 'show' : 'hidden'}`}
15

In case you will need only one optional class name:

<div className={"btn-group pull-right " + (this.props.showBulkActions ? "show" : "")}>
2
  • 2
    This will append false class when condition fails.
    – RA.
    Oct 6, 2019 at 23:51
  • instead of "" in the ternary use null, if not, the class property is set in the element, with null not, it's better
    – Kalamarico
    Aug 3, 2021 at 17:21
14

Or use npm classnames. It is very easy and useful especially for constructing the list of classes

13

Expending on @spitfire109's fine answer, one could do something like this:

rootClassNames() {
  let names = ['my-default-class'];
  if (this.props.disabled) names.push('text-muted', 'other-class');

  return names.join(' ');
}

and then within the render function:

<div className={this.rootClassNames()}></div>

keeps the jsx short

12

You can use ES6 arrays instead of classnames. The answer is based on Dr. Axel Rauschmayer article: Conditionally adding entries inside Array and object literals.

<div className={[
                 "classAlwaysPresent", 
                 ...Array.from(condition && ["classIfTrue"])
                ].join(" ")} />
2
  • please expand upon this, what is condition?
    – mibbit
    Dec 14, 2017 at 23:05
  • const condition = (1 === 1); Dec 15, 2017 at 8:01
12

2019:

React is lake a lot of utilities. But you don't need any npm package for that. just create somewhere the function classnames and call it when you need it;

function classnames(obj){
  return Object.entries(obj).filter( e => e[1] ).map( e=>e[0] ).join(' ');
}

or

function classnames(obj){
 return Object.entries(obj).map( ([cls,enb]) => enb? cls: '' ).join(' ');
}

example

  stateClass= {
    foo:true,
    bar:false,
    pony:2
  }
  classnames(stateClass) // return 'foo pony'


 <div className="foo bar {classnames(stateClass)}"> some content </div>

Just For Inspiration

declaring helper DOM element and using it native toggle method:

(DOMToken​List)classList.toggle(class,condition)

example:

const classes = document.createElement('span').classList; 

function classstate(obj){
  for( let n in obj) classes.toggle(n,obj[n]);
 return classes; 
}
 
11
<div className={['foo', condition && 'bar'].filter(Boolean).join(' ')} />

.filter(Boolean) removes "falsey" values from the array. Since class names must be strings, anything other than that would not be included in the new filtered array.

console.log(  ['foo', true  && 'bar'].filter(Boolean).join(' ')  )
console.log(  ['foo', false && 'bar'].filter(Boolean).join(' ')  )

Above written as a function:

const cx = (...list) => list.filter(Boolean).join(' ')

// usage:
<div className={cx('foo', condition && 'bar')} />

var cx = (...list) => list.filter(Boolean).join(' ')
console.log(  cx('foo', 1 && 'bar', 1 && 'baz')  )
console.log(  cx('foo', 0 && 'bar', 1 && 'baz')  )
console.log(  cx('foo', 0 && 'bar', 0 && 'baz')  )

8

More elegant solution, which is better for maintenance and readability:

const classNames = ['js-btn-connect'];

if (isSelected) { classNames.push('is-selected'); }

<Element className={classNames.join(' ')}/>
1
  • Cleanest approach imo. Thanks!
    – PeeJee
    Apr 6, 2022 at 20:19
8

simply use this approach--

<div className={`${this.props.showActions ? 'shown' : 'hidden'}`}>

this is much more neat and clean.

4

you can use this:

<div className={"btn-group pull-right" + (this.props.showBulkActions ? ' show' : ' hidden')}>
3

This is useful when you have more than one class to append. You can join all classes in array with a space.

const visibility = this.props.showBulkActions ? "show" : ""
<div className={["btn-group pull-right", visibility].join(' ')}>
3

I have tried to tailored my answer to include all the best possible solution in the post

There are many different ways of getting this done.

1. Inline inside the class

<div className={`... ${this.props.showBulkActions ? 'show' : 'hidden'}`}>
  ...
</div>

2. Using the values

var btnClass = classNames(
  ...
  {
    'show': this.props.showBulkActions,
    'hidden': !this.props.showBulkActions
  }
);

3. Using a variable

let dependentClass = this.props.showBulkActions ? 'show' : 'hidden';

className={`... ${dependentClass }`}

4. Using clsx

<div className={clsx('...',`${this.props.showBulkActions ? 'show' : 'hidden'}`)}>
  ...
</div>
1

This would work for you

var TopicNav = React.createClass({
render: function() {

let _myClasses = `btn-group pull-right {this.props.showBulkActions?'show':'hidden'}`;

return (
            ...
            <div className={_myClasses}>
               ...
            </div>
    );
  }
});
1

Reference to @split fire answer, we can update it with template literals, which is more readable,For reference Checkout javascript template literal

<div className={`btn-group pull-right ${this.props.showBulkActions ? 'show' : 'hidden'}`}>
0

You can use this npm package. It handles everything and has options for static and dynamic classes based on a variable or a function.

// Support for string arguments
getClassNames('class1', 'class2');

// support for Object
getClassNames({class1: true, class2 : false});

// support for all type of data
getClassNames('class1', 'class2', null, undefined, 3, ['class3', 'class4'], { 
    class5 : function() { return false; },
    class6 : function() { return true; }
});

<div className={getClassNames('show', {class1: true, class2 : false})} /> // "show class1"
0

Based on the value of this.props.showBulkActions you can switch classes dynamically as follows.

<div ...{...this.props.showBulkActions 
? { className: 'btn-group pull-right show' } 
: { className: 'btn-group pull-right hidden' }}>
0
0

I would like to add that you can also use a variable content as a part of the class

<img src={src} alt="Avatar" className={"img-" + messages[key].sender} />

The context is a chat between a bot and a user, and the styles change depending of the sender, this is the browser result:

<img src="http://imageurl" alt="Avatar" class="img-bot">
0

A function to return the correct class based on a param (if present)

  getClass(param){
    let podClass = 'classA'
    switch(param.toLowerCase()){
        case 'B':
            podClass  = 'classB'
            break;
        case 'C':
            podClass  = 'classC'
            break;
    }
    return podClass
}

Now just invoke this function from the div where the corresponding class is to be applied.

 <div className={anyOtherClass + this.getClass(param)}

I successfully used this logic to apply the correct color to my bootstrap table rows.

0
<div className={"h-3 w-3 rounded-full my-auto " + (index.endDate ==="present"? "bg-green-500":"bg-red-500")}></div>

Don't Forget to add an extra space after the static class names.

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