143

Using Facebook React. In a settings page, I have a multiline textarea where a user can enter multiline text (in my case, an address).

<textarea value={address} />

When I try to display the address, so something like {address}, it doesn't show the line breaks and is all on one line.

<p>{address}</p>

Any ideas how to solve this?

1
  • I spent a lot of time debugging this so I'm leaving this for future selves like me: check your react states if you think that saving into the state is removing the newline characters. Apr 16, 2023 at 16:09

7 Answers 7

397

There's no reason to use JS. You can easily tell the browser how to handle newline using the white-space CSS property:

white-space: pre-line;

pre-line

Sequences of whitespace are collapsed. Lines are broken at newline characters, at <br>, and as necessary to fill line boxes.

Check out this demo:

<style>
  #p_wrap {
    white-space: pre-line;
  }
</style>

<textarea id="textarea"></textarea>
<p id="p_standard"></p>
<hr>
<p id="p_wrap"></p>
<script>
  textarea.addEventListener('keypress', function(e) {
    p_standard.textContent = e.target.value
    p_wrap.textContent = e.target.value
  })
</script>

browser support

5
  • This works multiple ways: if you try to render a line break (<br />) in JSX through a variable, it will "safely" render the markup instead of adding the line break. Using escape characters with this CSS works around that safety mechanism as well as fixing the stated issue.
    – bvoyelr
    Aug 29, 2017 at 14:03
  • very nice and simple solution. Now all new line characters are working as expected for texarea.
    – Namish
    Jan 4, 2018 at 12:33
  • This is one of those answers I feel like upvoting multiple times. Thanks a bunch @enanupe Sep 12, 2021 at 18:21
  • This is the one. Apr 13, 2022 at 3:39
  • I don't know what's going on here but this doesn't work for me in Chrome with React 18, it just renders the \n. Nov 7, 2023 at 18:37
47

This is to be expected, you would need to convert the new line (\n) characters to HTML line breaks

An article about using it in react: React Newline to break (nl2br)

To quote article:

Because you know that everything in React is functions, you can't really do this

this.state.text.replace(/(?:\r\n|\r|\n)/g, '<br />')

Since that would return a string with DOM nodes inside, that is not allowed either, because has to be only a string.

You then can try do something like this:

{this.props.section.text.split(“\n”).map(function(item) {
  return (
    {item}
    <br/>
  )
})}    

That is not allowed either because again React is pure functions and two functions can be next to each other.

tldr. Solution

{this.props.section.text.split(“\n”).map(function(item) {
  return (
    <span>
      {item}
      <br/>
    </span>
  )
})}

Now we're wrapping each line-break in a span, and that works fine because span’s has display inline. Now we got a working nl2br line-break solution

7
  • Thanks Mark, works like a charm. Any chance you could put the answer here? Stackoverflow doesn't like external links (could disappear, harder to view list of answers,...) and I'll mark your answer as correct.
    – denislexic
    Mar 28, 2016 at 17:23
  • 4
    Note to others: You also need to add a key attribute to the span because it's in a loop. so it would be ....map(function (item, i) { return <span key={i}>{item}<br/></span> })
    – denislexic
    Oct 17, 2016 at 5:49
  • 1
    Great answer! This was helpful for me. ALSO, if you have MULTIPLE line breaks, you can prevent the excess <br /> from rendering for the last item: ....map(function (item, i, arr) { return <span key={i}>{item}{ arr.length-1 === i ? null : <br/>}</span> }). Notice that I included the 3rd argument for .map()
    – Lasha
    Oct 27, 2016 at 8:04
  • 1
    I don't understand how you got this to work. What I get displayed in the <textarea> is [object Object]
    – Ed.
    Feb 16, 2017 at 16:34
  • @Ed. It's to display HTML text not in a textarea. Does that help?
    – denislexic
    Jun 20, 2017 at 2:30
21

The solution is to set the property white-space on the element displaying the content of your textarea:

white-space: pre-line;
4

Pete's previous proposal with standalone component is great solution although it misses one important thing. Lists needs keys. I adjusted it a bit and my version (without console warnings) looks like this:

const NewLineToBr = ({ children = '' }) => children.split('\n')
  .reduce((arr, line, index) => arr.concat(
    <Fragment key={index}>
      {line}
      <br />
    </Fragment>,
  ), [])

It uses React 16's Fragments

1
  • index as keys are only safe if you are sure the mapped data is "static" and won't ever change in its lifecycle, otherwise you are likely to have issues with it.
    – enapupe
    Nov 20, 2018 at 18:45
3

A small addition to answers above: white-space property should better be used with word-wrap to prevent overflowing.

p {
  white-space: pre-wrap;
  word-wrap: break-word;   
}
4
2

As of React 16 a component can return an array of elements, which means you can create a component like this:

export default function NewLineToBr({children = ""}){
  return children.split('\n').reduce(function (arr,line) {
    return arr.concat(
      line,
      <br />
    );
  },[]);
}

which you'd use like this:

<p>
  <NewLineToBr>{address}</NewLineToBr>
</p>
1
  • I had to change '\n' to '\\n'.
    – dustydojo
    Sep 19, 2019 at 13:49
0

Love webit version. I did not know about the Fragment component, it is so useful. No need to use the reduce method though. Map is enough. Also, list do need keys in react , but it is bad habit to use index from the iterating method for it. eslint kept on smashing this in my warning until I had the confusion bug. So it'd look like this :

const NewLine = ({ children }) =>
   children.split("\n").map(line => (
    <Fragment key={uuidv4()}>
      {line}
      <br />
    </Fragment>
  ));
1
  • 4
    It's a bad idea using uuids as key in React because EACH new render will consider this element is new and thus adapt the DOM.
    – enapupe
    Nov 20, 2018 at 18:44

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