React Circular Progressbar
A circular Pie progress indicator component, built with SVG. Easily customizable with CSS.
Installation
Install the npm module:
npm install react-pie-progressbar
Important: you'll also need to copy src/styles.css into your repo to use the default styling!
Usage
Import the component:
import CircularProgressbar from 'react-pie-progressbar';
..and use the component in your JSX:
<CircularProgressbar percentage={60} />
Props
Name | Description |
---|---|
percentage |
Numeric percentage to display, from 0-100. Required. |
className |
Classes to apply to the svg element |
strokeWidth |
Width of circular line as a percentage relative to total width of component. Default: 8 . |
background |
Whether to display background color. Default: false . |
backgroundPadding |
Padding between background and edge of svg as a percentage relative to total width of component. Default: 0 . |
initialAnimation |
Toggle whether to animate progress starting from 0% on initial mount. Default: false . |
classForPercentage |
Function which returns an additional class to apply to top-level svg element, which can be used for coloring/styling percentage ranges differently. Example: (percent) => percent < 100 ? 'incomplete' : 'complete' . |
textForPercentage |
Function which returns text to display, can be configured based on percentage. Example: (pct) => `${pct}%` . |
backgroundImage |
String which has the url of the image. Default: ``. |
classes |
Object mapping to override classNames of each svg element (root, trail, path, text, background). Enables styling with react-jss. See this PR for more detail. |
Customizing styles
Use plain CSS to customize the styling - the default CSS is a good starting point, but you can modify it as needed. There are CSS hooks for the path, trail, text, and background of the progressbar which you can customize, e.g.:
.CircularProgressbar-path { stroke: red; }
.CircularProgressbar-trail { stroke: gray; }
.CircularProgressbar-text { fill: yellow; }
.CircularProgressbar-background { fill: green; }
You can also use the className
prop to add different classes to the top-level SVG element, and then use that to add different themes to different instances, e.g.:
<CircularProgressbar percentage={25} className="progressbar-red" />
<CircularProgressbar percentage={25} className="progressbar-blue" />
.progressbar-red .CircularProgressbar-path { stroke: red; }
.progressbar-blue .CircularProgressbar-path { stroke: blue; }
Development
To run demo locally on localhost:8080:
npm install
npm start
Keep CI tests passing by running npm test
and npm run lint
often.