A simple widget that can be resized via a handle.
You can either use the <Resizable>
element directly, or use the much simpler <ResizableBox>
element.
See the example and associated code in TestLayout and ResizableBox for more details.
Make sure you use the associated styles in /css/styles.css, as without them, you will have problems with handle placement and visibility.
You can pass options directly to the underlying Draggable
instance by using the prop draggableOpts
.
See the demo for more on this.
var Resizable = require('react-resizable').Resizable; // or,
var ResizableBox = require('react-resizable').ResizableBox;
...
render: function() {
return (
<ResizableBox width={200} height={200} draggableOpts={{...}}
minConstraints={[100, 100]} maxConstraints={[300, 300]}>
<span>Contents</span>
</ResizableBox>
);
}
{
// Functions
onResizeStop: React.PropTypes.func,
onResizeStart: React.PropTypes.func,
onResize: React.PropTypes.func,
width: React.PropTypes.number.isRequired,
height: React.PropTypes.number.isRequired,
// If you change this, be sure to update your css
handleSize: React.PropTypes.array,
// These will be passed wholesale to react-draggable
draggableOpts: React.PropTypes.object
}
{
lockAspectRatio: React.PropTypes.bool, // Preserves aspect
// Constaints coords, pass [x,y]
minConstraints: React.PropTypes.arrayOf(React.PropTypes.number),
maxConstraints: React.PropTypes.arrayOf(React.PropTypes.number),
// Initial width/height - otherwise use CSS
height: React.PropTypes.number,
width: React.PropTypes.number
}