@sekmet/headlessuireact
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0.0.3 • Public • Published

@headlessui/react

A set of completely unstyled, fully accessible UI components for React, designed to integrate beautifully with Tailwind CSS.

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Installation

# npm
npm install @headlessui/react

# Yarn
yarn add @headlessui/react

Components

This project is still in early development. New components will be added regularly over the coming months.

Roadmap

This project is still in early development, but the plan is to build out all of the primitives we need to provide interactive React examples of all of the components included in Tailwind UI, the commercial component directory that helps us fund the development of our open-source work like Tailwind CSS.

This includes things like:

  • Modals
  • Tabs
  • Slide-overs
  • Mobile menus
  • Accordions

...and more in the future.

We'll be continuing to develop new components on an on-going basis, with a goal of reaching a pretty fleshed out v1.0 by the end of the year.


Transition

View live demo on CodeSandbox

The Transition component lets you add enter/leave transitions to conditionally rendered elements, using CSS classes to control the actual transition styles in the different stages of the transition.

Basic example

The Transition accepts a show prop that controls whether the children should be shown or hidden, and a set of lifecycle props (like enterFrom, and leaveTo) that let you add CSS classes at specific phases of a transition.

import { Transition } from '@headlessui/react'
import { useState } from 'react'

function MyComponent() {
  const [isOpen, setIsOpen] = useState(false)

  return (
    <>
      <button onClick={() => setIsOpen(!isOpen)}>Toggle</button>
      <Transition
        show={isOpen}
        enter="transition-opacity duration-75"
        enterFrom="opacity-0"
        enterTo="opacity-100"
        leave="transition-opacity duration-150"
        leaveFrom="opacity-100"
        leaveTo="opacity-0"
      >
        I will fade in and out
      </Transition>
    </>
  )
}

Showing and hiding content

Wrap the content that should be conditionally rendered in a <Transition> component, and use the show prop to control whether the content should be visible or hidden.

import { Transition } from '@headlessui/react'
import { useState } from 'react'

function MyComponent() {
  const [isOpen, setIsOpen] = useState(false)

  return (
    <>
      <button onClick={() => setIsOpen(!isOpen)}>Toggle</button>
      <Transition
        show={isOpen}
        // ...
      >
        I will fade in and out
      </Transition>
    </>
  )
}

The Transition component will render a div by default, but you can use the as prop to render a different element instead if needed. Any other HTML attributes (like className) can be added directly to the Transition the same way they would be to regular elements.

import { Transition } from '@headlessui/react'
import { useState } from 'react'

function MyComponent() {
  const [isOpen, setIsOpen] = useState(false)

  return (
    <>
      <button onClick={() => setIsOpen(!isOpen)}>Toggle</button>
      <Transition
        show={isOpen}
        as="a"
        href="/my-url"
        className="font-bold"
        // ...
      >
        I will fade in and out
      </Transition>
    </>
  )
}

Animating transitions

By default, a Transition will enter and leave instantly, which is probably not what you're looking for if you're using this library.

To animate your enter/leave transitions, add classes that provide the styling for each phase of the transitions using these props:

  • enter: Applied the entire time an element is entering. Usually you define your duration and what properties you want to transition here, for example transition-opacity duration-75.
  • enterFrom: The starting point to enter from, for example opacity-0 if something should fade in.
  • enterTo: The ending point to enter to, for example opacity-100 after fading in.
  • leave: Applied the entire time an element is leaving. Usually you define your duration and what properties you want to transition here, for example transition-opacity duration-75.
  • leaveFrom: The starting point to leave from, for example opacity-100 if something should fade out.
  • leaveTo: The ending point to leave to, for example opacity-0 after fading out.

Here's an example:

import { Transition } from '@headlessui/react'
import { useState } from 'react'

function MyComponent() {
  const [isOpen, setIsOpen] = useState(false)

  return (
    <>
      <button onClick={() => setIsOpen(!isOpen)}>Toggle</button>
      <Transition
        show={isOpen}
        enter="transition-opacity duration-75"
        enterFrom="opacity-0"
        enterTo="opacity-100"
        leave="transition-opacity duration-150"
        leaveFrom="opacity-100"
        leaveTo="opacity-0"
      >
        I will fade in and out
      </Transition>
    </>
  )
}

In this example, the transitioning element will take 75ms to enter (that's the duration-75 class), and will transition the opacity property during that time (that's transition-opacity).

It will start completely transparent before entering (that's opacity-0 in the enterFrom phase), and fade in to completely opaque (opacity-100) when finished (that's the enterTo phase).

When the element is being removed (the leave phase), it will transition the opacity property, and spend 150ms doing it (transition-opacity duration-150).

It will start as completely opaque (the opacity-100 in the leaveFrom phase), and finish as completely transparent (the opacity-0 in the leaveTo phase).

All of these props are optional, and will default to just an empty string.

Co-ordinating multiple transitions

Sometimes you need to transition multiple elements with different animations but all based on the same state. For example, say the user clicks a button to open a sidebar that slides over the screen, and you also need to fade-in a background overlay at the same time.

You can do this by wrapping the related elements with a parent Transition component, and wrapping each child that needs its own transition styles with a Transition.Child component, which will automatically communicate with the parent Transition and inherit the parent's show state.

import { Transition } from '@headlessui/react'

function Sidebar({ isOpen }) {
  return (
    <Transition show={isOpen}>
      {/* Background overlay */}
      <Transition.Child
        enter="transition-opacity ease-linear duration-300"
        enterFrom="opacity-0"
        enterTo="opacity-100"
        leave="transition-opacity ease-linear duration-300"
        leaveFrom="opacity-100"
        leaveTo="opacity-0"
      >
        {/* ... */}
      </Transition.Child>

      {/* Sliding sidebar */}
      <Transition.Child
        enter="transition ease-in-out duration-300 transform"
        enterFrom="-translate-x-full"
        enterTo="translate-x-0"
        leave="transition ease-in-out duration-300 transform"
        leaveFrom="translate-x-0"
        leaveTo="-translate-x-full"
      >
        {/* ... */}
      </Transition.Child>
    </Transition>
  )
}

The Transition.Child component has the exact same API as the Transition component, but with no show prop, since the show value is controlled by the parent.

Parent Transition components will always automatically wait for all children to finish transitioning before unmounting, so you don't need to manage any of that timing yourself.

Transitioning on initial mount

If you want an element to transition the very first time it's rendered, set the appear prop to true.

This is useful if you want something to transition in on initial page load, or when its parent is conditionally rendered.

import { Transition } from '@headlessui/react'

function MyComponent({ isShowing }) {
  return (
    <Transition
      appear={true}
      show={isShowing}
      enter="transition-opacity duration-75"
      enterFrom="opacity-0"
      enterTo="opacity-100"
      leave="transition-opacity duration-150"
      leaveFrom="opacity-100"
      leaveTo="opacity-0"
    >
      {/* Your content goes here*/}
    </Transition>
  )
}

Component API

Transition

<Transition
  appear={true}
  show={isOpen}
  enter="transition-opacity duration-75"
  enterFrom="opacity-0"
  enterTo="opacity-100"
  leave="transition-opacity duration-150"
  leaveFrom="opacity-100"
  leaveTo="opacity-0"
>
  {/* Your content goes here*/}
</Transition>
Props
Prop Type Description
show Boolean Whether the children should be shown or hidden.
as String Component (Default: 'div') The element or component to render in place of the Transition itself.
appear Boolean (Default: false) Whether the transition should run on initial mount.
unmount Boolean (Default: true) Whether the element should be unmounted or hidden based on the show state.
enter String (Default: '') Classes to add to the transitioning element during the entire enter phase.
enterFrom String (Default: '') Classes to add to the transitioning element before the enter phase starts.
enterTo String (Default: '') Classes to add to the transitioning element immediately after the enter phase starts.
leave String (Default: '') Classes to add to the transitioning element during the entire leave phase.
leaveFrom String (Default: '') Classes to add to the transitioning element before the leave phase starts.
leaveTo String (Default: '') Classes to add to the transitioning element immediately after the leave phase starts.
beforeEnter Function Callback which is called before we start the enter transition.
afterEnter Function Callback which is called after we finished the enter transition.
beforeLeave Function Callback which is called before we start the leave transition.
afterLeave Function Callback which is called after we finished the leave transition.
Render prop arguments
  • None

Transition.Child

<Transition show={isOpen}>
  <Transition.Child
    enter="transition-opacity ease-linear duration-300"
    enterFrom="opacity-0"
    enterTo="opacity-100"
    leave="transition-opacity ease-linear duration-300"
    leaveFrom="opacity-100"
    leaveTo="opacity-0"
  >
    {/* ... */}
  </Transition.Child>
  {/* ... */}
</Transition>
Props
Prop Type Description
as String Component (Default: 'div') The element or component to render in place of the Transition.Child itself.
appear Boolean (Default: false) Whether the transition should run on initial mount.
unmount Boolean (Default: true) Whether the element should be unmounted or hidden based on the show state.
enter String (Default: '') Classes to add to the transitioning element during the entire enter phase.
enterFrom String (Default: '') Classes to add to the transitioning element before the enter phase starts.
enterTo String (Default: '') Classes to add to the transitioning element immediately after the enter phase starts.
leave String (Default: '') Classes to add to the transitioning element during the entire leave phase.
leaveFrom String (Default: '') Classes to add to the transitioning element before the leave phase starts.
leaveTo String (Default: '') Classes to add to the transitioning element immediately after the leave phase starts.
beforeEnter Function Callback which is called before we start the enter transition.
afterEnter Function Callback which is called after we finished the enter transition.
beforeLeave Function Callback which is called before we start the leave transition.
afterLeave Function Callback which is called after we finished the leave transition.
Render prop arguments
  • None

Menu Button (Dropdown)

View live demo on CodeSandbox

The Menu component and related child components are used to quickly build custom dropdown components that are fully accessible out of the box, including correct ARIA attribute management and robust keyboard navigation support.

Basic example

Menu Buttons are built using the Menu, Menu.Button, Menu.Items, and Menu.Item components.

The Menu.Button will automatically open/close the Menu.Items when clicked, and when the menu is open, the list of items receives focus and is automatically navigable via the keyboard.

import { Menu } from '@headlessui/react'

function MyDropdown() {
  return (
    <Menu>
      <Menu.Button>More</Menu.Button>
      <Menu.Items>
        <Menu.Item>
          {({ active }) => (
            <a className={`${active && 'bg-blue-500'}`} href="/account-settings">
              Account settings
            </a>
          )}
        </Menu.Item>
        <Menu.Item>
          {({ active }) => (
            <a className={`${active && 'bg-blue-500'}`} href="/account-settings">
              Documentation
            </a>
          )}
        </Menu.Item>
        <Menu.Item disabled>
          <span className="opacity-75">Invite a friend (coming soon!)</span>
        </Menu.Item>
      </Menu.Items>
    </Menu>
  )
}

Styling the active item

This is a headless component so there are no styles included by default. Instead, the components expose useful information via render props that you can use to apply the styles you'd like to apply yourself.

To style the active Menu.Item you can read the active render prop argument, which tells you whether or not that menu item is the item that is currently focused via the mouse or keyboard.

You can use this state to conditionally apply whatever active/focus styles you like, for instance a blue background like is typical in most operating systems.

import { Menu } from '@headlessui/react'

function MyDropdown() {
  return (
    <Menu>
      <Menu.Button>More</Menu.Button>
      <Menu.Items>
        {/* Use the `active` state to conditionally style the active item. */}
        <Menu.Item>
          {({ active }) => (
            <a
              className={`${active ? 'bg-blue-500 text-white' : 'bg-white text-black'}`}
              href="/account-settings"
            >
              Account settings
            </a>
          )}
        </Menu.Item>
        {/* ... */}
      </Menu.Items>
    </Menu>
  )
}

Showing/hiding the menu

By default, your Menu.Items instance will be shown/hidden automatically based on the internal open state tracked within the Menu component itself.

import { Menu } from '@headlessui/react'

function MyDropdown() {
  return (
    <Menu>
      <Menu.Button>More</Menu.Button>

      {/* By default, this will automatically show/hide when the Menu.Button is pressed. */}
      <Menu.Items>
        <Menu.Item>{/* ... */}</Menu.Item>
        {/* ... */}
      </Menu.Items>
    </Menu>
  )
}

If you'd rather handle this yourself (perhaps because you need to add an extra wrapper element for one reason or another), you can add a static prop to the Menu.Items instance to tell it to always render, and inspect the open slot prop provided by the Menu to control which element is shown/hidden yourself.

import { Menu } from '@headlessui/react'

function MyDropdown() {
  return (
    <Menu>
      {({ open }) => (
        <Menu.Button>More</Menu.Button>
        {open && (
          <div>
            {/* Using `static`, `Menu.Items` is always rendered and ignores the `open` state. */}
            <Menu.Items static>
              <Menu.Item>{/* ... */}</Menu.Item>
              {/* ... */}
            </Menu.Items>
          </div>
        )}
      )}
    </Menu>
  )
}

Disabling an item

Use the disabled prop to disable a Menu.Item. This will make it unselectable via keyboard navigation, and it will be skipped when pressing the up/down arrows.

import { Menu } from '@headlessui/react'

function MyDropdown() {
  return (
    <Menu>
      <Menu.Button>More</Menu.Button>
      <Menu.Items>
        {/* ... */}

        {/* This item will be skipped by keyboard navigation. */}
        <Menu.Item disabled>
          <span className="opacity-75">Invite a friend (coming soon!)</span>
        </Menu.Item>

        {/* ... */}
      </Menu.Items>
    </Menu>
  )
}

Transitions

To animate the opening/closing of the menu panel, use the provided Transition component. All you need to do is mark your Menu.Items as static, wrap it in a <Transition>, and the transition will be applied automatically.

import { Menu, Transition } from '@headlessui/react'

function MyDropdown() {
  return (
    <Menu>
      {({ open }) => (
        <>
          <Menu.Button>More</Menu.Button>

          {/* Use the Transition + open render prop argument to add transitions. */}
          <Transition
            show={open}
            enter="transition duration-100 ease-out"
            enterFrom="transform scale-95 opacity-0"
            enterTo="transform scale-100 opacity-100"
            leave="transition duration-75 ease-out"
            leaveFrom="transform scale-100 opacity-100"
            leaveTo="transform scale-95 opacity-0"
          >
            <Menu.Items static>
              <Menu.Item>{/* ... */}</Menu.Item>
              {/* ... */}
            </Menu.Items>
          </Transition>
        </>
      )}
    </Menu>
  )
}

Rendering additional content

The Menu component is not limited to rendering only its related subcomponents. You can render anything you like within a menu, which gives you complete control over exactly what you are building.

For example, if you'd like to add a little header section to the menu with some extra information in it, just render an extra div with your content in it.

import { Menu } from '@headlessui/react'

function MyDropdown() {
  return (
    <Menu>
      <Menu.Button>More</Menu.Button>
      <Menu.Items>
        <div className="px-4 py-3">
          <p className="text-sm leading-5">Signed in as</p>
          <p className="text-sm font-medium leading-5 text-gray-900 truncate">tom@example.com</p>
        </div>
        <Menu.Item>
          {({ active }) => (
            <a className={`${active && 'bg-blue-500'}`} href="/account-settings">
              Account settings
            </a>
          )}
        </Menu.Item>

        {/* ... */}
      </Menu.Items>
    </Menu>
  )
}

Note that only Menu.Item instances will be navigable via the keyboard.

Rendering a different element for a component

By default, the Menu and its subcomponents each render a default element that is sensible for that component.

For example, Menu.Button renders a button by default, and Menu.Items renders a div. Menu and Menu.Item interestingly do not render an extra element, and instead render their children directly by default.

This is easy to change using the as prop, which exists on every component.

import { Menu } from '@headlessui/react'

function MyDropdown() {
  return (
    {/* Render a `div` instead of no wrapper element */}
    <Menu as="div">
      <Menu.Button>More</Menu.Button>
      {/* Render a `ul` instead of a `div` */}
      <Menu.Items as="ul">
        {/* Render an `li` instead of no wrapper element */}
        <Menu.Item as="li">
          {({ active }) => (
            <a className={`${active && 'bg-blue-500'}`} href="/account-settings">
              Account settings
            </a>
          )}
        </Menu.Item>

        {/* ... */}
      </Menu.Items>
    </Menu>
  )
}

To tell an element to render its children directly with no wrapper element, use as={React.Fragment}.

import { Menu } from '@headlessui/react'

function MyDropdown() {
  return (
    <Menu>
      {/* Render no wrapper, instead pass in a button manually. */}
      <Menu.Button as={React.Fragment}>
        <button>More</button>
      </Menu.Button>
      <Menu.Items>
        <Menu.Item>
          {({ active }) => (
            <a className={`${active && 'bg-blue-500'}`} href="/account-settings">
              Account settings
            </a>
          )}
        </Menu.Item>
        {/* ... */}
      </Menu.Items>
    </Menu>
  )
}

Component API

Menu

<Menu>
  <Menu.Button>More</Menu.Button>
  <Menu.Items>
    <Menu.Item>{/* ... */}</Menu.Item>
    {/* ... */}
  </Menu.Items>
</Menu>
Props
Prop Type Default Description
as String | Component React.Fragment (no wrapper element) The element or component the Menu should render as.
Render prop object
Prop Type Description
open Boolean Whether or not the menu is open.

Menu.Button

<Menu.Button>
  {({ open }) => (
    <>
      <span>More options</span>
      <ChevronRightIcon className={`${open ? 'transform rotate-90' : ''}`} />
    </>
  )}
</Menu.Button>
Props
Prop Type Default Description
as String | Component button The element or component the Menu.Button should render as.
Render prop object
Prop Type Description
open Boolean Whether or not the menu is open.

Menu.Items

<Menu.Items>
  <Menu.Item>{/* ... */}></Menu.Item>
  {/* ... */}>
</Menu.Items>
Props
Prop Type Default Description
as String | Component div The element or component the Menu.Items should render as.
static Boolean false Whether the element should ignore the internally managed open/closed state.
unmount Boolean true Whether the element should be unmounted or hidden based on the open/closed state.

note: static and unmount can not be used at the same time. You will get a TypeScript error if you try to do it.

Render prop object
Prop Type Description
open Boolean Whether or not the menu is open.

Menu.Item

<Menu.Item>
  {({ active }) => (
    <a
      className={`${active ? 'bg-blue-500 text-white' : 'bg-white text-black'}`}
      href="/account-settings"
    >
      Account settings
    </a>
  )}
</Menu.Item>
Props
Prop Type Default Description
as String | Component React.Fragment (no wrapper element) The element or component the Menu.Item should render as.
disabled Boolean false Whether or not the item should be disabled for keyboard navigation and ARIA purposes.
Render prop object
Prop Type Description
active Boolean Whether or not the item is the active/focused item in the list.
disabled Boolean Whether or not the item is the disabled for keyboard navigation and ARIA purposes.

Listbox (Select)

View live demo on CodeSandbox

The Listbox component and related child components are used to quickly build custom listbox components that are fully accessible out of the box, including correct ARIA attribute management and robust keyboard navigation support.

Basic example

Listboxes are built using the Listbox, Listbox.Button, Listbox.Options, Listbox.Option and Listbox.Label components.

The Listbox.Button will automatically open/close the Listbox.Options when clicked, and when the menu is open, the list of items receives focus and is automatically navigable via the keyboard.

import { useState } from 'react'
import { Listbox } from '@headlessui/react'

const people = [
  { id: 1, name: 'Durward Reynolds', unavailable: false },
  { id: 2, name: 'Kenton Towne', unavailable: false },
  { id: 3, name: 'Therese Wunsch', unavailable: false },
  { id: 4, name: 'Benedict Kessler', unavailable: true },
  { id: 5, name: 'Katelyn Rohan', unavailable: false },
]

function MyListbox() {
  const [selectedPerson, setSelectedPerson] = useState(people[0])

  return (
    <Listbox value={selectedPerson} onChange={setSelectedPerson}>
      <Listbox.Button>{selectedPerson.name}</Listbox.Button>
      <Listbox.Options>
        {people.map(person => (
          <Listbox.Option key={person.id} value={person} disabled={person.unavailable}>
            {person.name}
          </Listbox.Option>
        ))}
      </Listbox.Options>
    </Listbox>
  )
}

Styling the active and selected option

This is a headless component so there are no styles included by default. Instead, the components expose useful information via render props that you can use to apply the styles you'd like to apply yourself.

To style the active Listbox.Option you can read the active render prop argument, which tells you whether or not that listbox option is the option that is currently focused via the mouse or keyboard.

To style the selected Listbox.Option you can read the selected render prop argument, which tells you whether or not that listbox option is the option that is currently the value passed to the Listbox.

Note: An option can be both active and selected at the same time!

You can use this state to conditionally apply whatever active/focus styles you like, for instance a blue background like is typical in most operating systems. For the selected state, a checkmark is also common.

import { useState, Fragment } from 'react'
import { Listbox } from '@headlessui/react'
import CheckmarkIcon from './CheckmarkIcon'

const people = [
  { id: 1, name: 'Durward Reynolds' },
  { id: 2, name: 'Kenton Towne' },
  { id: 3, name: 'Therese Wunsch' },
  { id: 4, name: 'Benedict Kessler' },
  { id: 5, name: 'Katelyn Rohan' },
]

function MyListbox() {
  const [selectedPerson, setSelectedPerson] = useState(people[0])

  return (
    <Listbox value={selectedPerson} onChange={setSelectedPerson}>
      <Listbox.Button>{selectedPerson.name}</Listbox.Button>
      <Listbox.Options>
        {people.map(person => (
          /* Use the `active` state to conditionally style the active option. */
          /* Use the `selected` state to conditionally style the selected option. */
          <Listbox.Option as={Fragment} key={person.id} value={person}>
            {({ active, selected }) => (
              <li className={`${active ? 'bg-blue-500 text-white' : 'bg-white text-black'}`}>
                {selected && <CheckmarkIcon />}
                {person.name}
              </li>
            )}
          </Listbox.Option>
        ))}
      </Listbox.Options>
    </Listbox>
  )
}

Using a custom label

By default the Listbox will use the button contents as the label for screenreaders. However you can also render a custom Listbox.Label.

import { useState, Fragment } from 'react'
import { Listbox } from '@headlessui/react'
import CheckmarkIcon from './CheckmarkIcon'

const people = [
  { id: 1, name: 'Durward Reynolds' },
  { id: 2, name: 'Kenton Towne' },
  { id: 3, name: 'Therese Wunsch' },
  { id: 4, name: 'Benedict Kessler' },
  { id: 5, name: 'Katelyn Rohan' },
]

function MyListbox() {
  const [selectedPerson, setSelectedPerson] = useState(people[0])

  return (
    <Listbox value={selectedPerson} onChange={setSelectedPerson}>
      <Listbox.Label>Assignee:</Listbox.Label>
      <Listbox.Button>{selectedPerson.name}</Listbox.Button>
      <Listbox.Options>
        {people.map(person => (
          <Listbox.Option as={Fragment} key={person.id} value={person}>
            {person.name}
          </Listbox.Option>
        ))}
      </Listbox.Options>
    </Listbox>
  )
}

Showing/hiding the listbox

By default, your Listbox.Options instance will be shown/hidden automatically based on the internal open state tracked within the Listbox component itself.

import { useState } from 'react'
import { Listbox } from '@headlessui/react'

const people = [
  { id: 1, name: 'Durward Reynolds', unavailable: false },
  { id: 2, name: 'Kenton Towne', unavailable: false },
  { id: 3, name: 'Therese Wunsch', unavailable: false },
  { id: 4, name: 'Benedict Kessler', unavailable: true },
  { id: 5, name: 'Katelyn Rohan', unavailable: false },
]

function MyListbox() {
  const [selectedPerson, setSelectedPerson] = useState(people[0])

  return (
    <Listbox value={selectedPerson} onChange={setSelectedPerson}>
      <Listbox.Button>{selectedPerson.name}</Listbox.Button>

      {/* By default, this will automatically show/hide when the Listbox.Button is pressed. */}
      <Listbox.Options>
        {people.map(person => (
          <Listbox.Option key={person.id} value={person} disabled={person.unavailable}>
            {person.name}
          </Listbox.Option>
        ))}
      </Listbox.Options>
    </Listbox>
  )
}

If you'd rather handle this yourself (perhaps because you need to add an extra wrapper element for one reason or another), you can add a static prop to the Listbox.Options instance to tell it to always render, and inspect the open slot prop provided by the Listbox to control which element is shown/hidden yourself.

import { useState } from 'react'
import { Listbox } from '@headlessui/react'

const people = [
  { id: 1, name: 'Durward Reynolds', unavailable: false },
  { id: 2, name: 'Kenton Towne', unavailable: false },
  { id: 3, name: 'Therese Wunsch', unavailable: false },
  { id: 4, name: 'Benedict Kessler', unavailable: true },
  { id: 5, name: 'Katelyn Rohan', unavailable: false },
]

function MyListbox() {
  const [selectedPerson, setSelectedPerson] = useState(people[0])

  return (
    <Listbox value={selectedPerson} onChange={setSelectedPerson}>
      {({ open }) => (
        <>
          <Listbox.Button>{selectedPerson.name}</Listbox.Button>
          {open && (
            <div>
              {/* Using `static`, `Listbox.Options` is always rendered and ignores the `open` state. */}
              <Listbox.Options static>
                {people.map(person => (
                  <Listbox.Option key={person.id} value={person} disabled={person.unavailable}>
                    {person.name}
                  </Listbox.Option>
                ))}
              </Listbox.Options>
            </div>
          )}
        </>
      )}
    </Listbox>
  )
}

Disabling an option

Use the disabled prop to disable a Listbox.Option. This will make it unselectable via keyboard navigation, and it will be skipped when pressing the up/down arrows.

import { useState } from 'react'
import { Listbox } from '@headlessui/react'

const people = [
  { id: 1, name: 'Durward Reynolds', unavailable: false },
  { id: 2, name: 'Kenton Towne', unavailable: false },
  { id: 3, name: 'Therese Wunsch', unavailable: false },
  { id: 4, name: 'Benedict Kessler', unavailable: true },
  { id: 5, name: 'Katelyn Rohan', unavailable: false },
]

function MyListbox() {
  const [selectedPerson, setSelectedPerson] = useState(people[0])

  return (
    <Listbox value={selectedPerson} onChange={setSelectedPerson}>
      <Listbox.Button>{selectedPerson.name}</Listbox.Button>
      <Listbox.Options>
        {people.map(person => (
          /* Disabled options will be skipped by keyboard navigation. */
          <Listbox.Option key={person.id} value={person} disabled={person.unavailable}>
            <span className={person.unavailable ? 'opacity-75' : ''}>{person.name}</span>
          </Listbox.Option>
        ))}
      </Listbox.Options>
    </Listbox>
  )
}

Transitions

To animate the opening/closing of the listbox panel, use the provided Transition component. All you need to do is mark your Listbox.Options as static, wrap it in a <Transition>, and the transition will be applied automatically.

import { useState } from 'react'
import { Listbox, Transition } from '@headlessui/react'

const people = [
  { id: 1, name: 'Durward Reynolds', unavailable: false },
  { id: 2, name: 'Kenton Towne', unavailable: false },
  { id: 3, name: 'Therese Wunsch', unavailable: false },
  { id: 4, name: 'Benedict Kessler', unavailable: true },
  { id: 5, name: 'Katelyn Rohan', unavailable: false },
]

function MyListbox() {
  const [selectedPerson, setSelectedPerson] = useState(people[0])

  return (
    <Listbox value={selectedPerson} onChange={setSelectedPerson}>
      {({ open }) => (
        <>
          <Listbox.Button>{selectedPerson.name}</Listbox.Button>
          {/* Use the Transition + open render prop argument to add transitions. */}
          <Transition
            show={open}
            enter="transition duration-100 ease-out"
            enterFrom="transform scale-95 opacity-0"
            enterTo="transform scale-100 opacity-100"
            leave="transition duration-75 ease-out"
            leaveFrom="transform scale-100 opacity-100"
            leaveTo="transform scale-95 opacity-0"
          >
            <Listbox.Options static>
              {people.map(person => (
                <Listbox.Option key={person.id} value={person} disabled={person.unavailable}>
                  {person.name}
                </Listbox.Option>
              ))}
            </Listbox.Options>
          </Transition>
        </>
      )}
    </Listbox>
  )
}

Rendering a different element for a component

By default, the Listbox and its subcomponents each render a default element that is sensible for that component.

For example, Listbox.Label renders a label by default, Listbox.Button renders a button by default, Listbox.Options renders a ul and Listbox.Option renders a li by default. Listbox interestingly does not render an extra element, and instead renders its children directly by default.

This is easy to change using the as prop, which exists on every component.

import { useState } from 'react'
import { Listbox } from '@headlessui/react'

const people = [
  { id: 1, name: 'Durward Reynolds' },
  { id: 2, name: 'Kenton Towne' },
  { id: 3, name: 'Therese Wunsch' },
  { id: 4, name: 'Benedict Kessler' },
  { id: 5, name: 'Katelyn Rohan' },
]

function MyListbox() {
  const [selectedPerson, setSelectedPerson] = useState(people[0])

  return (
    <Listbox as="div" value={selectedPerson} onChange={setSelectedPerson}>
      <Listbox.Button>{selectedPerson.name}</Listbox.Button>
      <Listbox.Options as="div">
        {people.map(person => (
          <Listbox.Option as="span" key={person.id} value={person}>
            {person.name}
          </Listbox.Option>
        ))}
      </Listbox.Options>
    </Listbox>
  )
}

To tell an element to render its children directly with no wrapper element, use as={React.Fragment}.

import { useState, Fragment } from 'react'
import { Listbox } from '@headlessui/react'

const people = [
  { id: 1, name: 'Durward Reynolds' },
  { id: 2, name: 'Kenton Towne' },
  { id: 3, name: 'Therese Wunsch' },
  { id: 4, name: 'Benedict Kessler' },
  { id: 5, name: 'Katelyn Rohan' },
]

function MyListbox() {
  const [selectedPerson, setSelectedPerson] = useState(people[0])

  return (
    <Listbox value={selectedPerson} onChange={setSelectedPerson}>
      <Listbox.Button as={Fragment}>{selectedPerson.name}</Listbox.Button>
      <Listbox.Options>
        {people.map(person => (
          <Listbox.Option key={person.id} value={person}>
            {person.name}
          </Listbox.Option>
        ))}
      </Listbox.Options>
    </Listbox>
  )
}

Component API

Listbox

import { useState } from 'react'
import { Listbox } from '@headlessui/react'

const people = [
  { id: 1, name: 'Durward Reynolds' },
  { id: 2, name: 'Kenton Towne' },
  { id: 3, name: 'Therese Wunsch' },
  { id: 4, name: 'Benedict Kessler' },
  { id: 5, name: 'Katelyn Rohan' },
]

function MyListbox() {
  const [selectedPerson, setSelectedPerson] = useState(people[0])

  return (
    <Listbox value={selectedPerson} onChange={setSelectedPerson}>
      <Listbox.Button>{selectedPerson.name}</Listbox.Button>
      <Listbox.Options>
        {people.map(person => (
          <Listbox.Option key={person.id} value={person}>
            {person.name}
          </Listbox.Option>
        ))}
      </Listbox.Options>
    </Listbox>
  )
}
Props
Prop Type Default Description
as String | Component React.Fragment (no wrapper element) The element or component the Listbox should render as.
disabled Boolean false Enable/Disable the Listbox component.
value T The selected value.
onChange (value: T): void The function to call when a new option is selected.
Render prop object
Prop Type Description
open Boolean Whether or not the listbox is open.
disabled Boolean Whether or not the listbox is disabled.

Listbox.Button

<Listbox.Button>
  {({ open }) => (
    <>
      <span>More options</span>
      <ChevronRightIcon className={`${open ? 'transform rotate-90' : ''}`} />
    </>
  )}
</Listbox.Button>
Props
Prop Type Default Description
as String | Component button The element or component the Listbox.Button should render as.
Render prop object
Prop Type Description
open Boolean Whether or not the listbox is open.
disabled Boolean Whether or not the listbox is disabled.

Listbox.Label

<Listbox.Label>Enable notifications</Listbox.Label>
Props
Prop Type Default Description
as String | Component label The element or component the Listbox.Label should render as.
Render prop object
Prop Type Description
open Boolean Whether or not the listbox is open.
disabled Boolean Whether or not the listbox is disabled.

Listbox.Options

<Listbox.Options>
  <Listbox.Option value="option-a">{/* ... */}></Listbox.Option>
  {/* ... */}>
</Listbox.Options>
Props
Prop Type Default Description
as String | Component ul The element or component the Listbox.Options should render as.
static Boolean false Whether the element should ignore the internally managed open/closed state.
unmount Boolean true Whether the element should be unmounted or hidden based on the open/closed state.

note: static and unmount can not be used at the same time. You will get a TypeScript error if you try to do it.

Render prop object
Prop Type Description
open Boolean Whether or not the listbox is open.

Listbox.Option

<Listbox.Option value="option-a">Option A</Listbox.Option>
Props
Prop Type Default Description
as String | Component li The element or component the Listbox.Option should render as.
value T The option value.
disabled Boolean false Whether or not the option should be disabled for keyboard navigation and ARIA purposes.
Render prop object
Prop Type Description
active Boolean Whether or not the option is the active/focused option in the list.
selected Boolean Whether or not the option is the selected option in the list.
disabled Boolean Whether or not the option is the disabled for keyboard navigation and ARIA purposes.

Switch (Toggle)

View live demo on CodeSandbox

The Switch component and related child components are used to quickly build custom switch/toggle components that are fully accessible out of the box, including correct ARIA attribute management and robust keyboard support.

Basic example

Switches are built using the Switch component. Optionally you can also use the Switch.Group and Switch.Label components.

import { useState } from 'react'
import { Switch } from '@headlessui/react'

function NotificationsToggle() {
  const [enabled, setEnabled] = useState(false)

  return (
    <Switch
      checked={enabled}
      onChange={setEnabled}
      className={`${
        enabled ? 'bg-blue-600' : 'bg-gray-200'
      } relative inline-flex h-6 rounded-full w-8`}
    >
      <span className="sr-only">Enable notifications</span>
      <span
        className={`${
          enabled ? 'translate-x-4' : 'translate-x-0'
        } inline-block w-4 h-4 transform bg-white rounded-full`}
      />
    </Switch>
  )
}

Using a custom label

By default the Switch will use the contents as the label for screenreaders. If you need more control, you can render a Switch.Label outside of the Switch, as long as both the switch and label are within a parent Switch.Group.

Clicking the label will toggle the switch state, like you'd expect from a native checkbox.

import { useState } from 'react'
import { Switch } from '@headlessui/react'

function NotificationsToggle() {
  const [enabled, setEnabled] = useState(false)

  return (
    <Switch.Group>
      <Switch.Label>Enable notifications</Switch.Label>
      <Switch
        checked={enabled}
        onChange={setEnabled}
        className={`${
          enabled ? 'bg-blue-600' : 'bg-gray-200'
        } relative inline-flex h-6 rounded-full w-8`}
      >
        <span
          className={`${
            enabled ? 'translate-x-4' : 'translate-x-0'
          } inline-block w-4 h-4 transform bg-white rounded-full`}
        />
      </Switch>
    </Switch.Group>
  )
}

Component API

Switch

<Switch checked={checkedState} onChange={setCheckedState}>
  <span className="sr-only">Enable notifications</span>
  {/* ... */}
</Switch>
Props
Prop Type Default Description
as String | Component button The element or component the Switch should render as.
checked Boolean Whether or not the switch is checked.
onChange (value: boolean): void The function to call when the switch is toggled.
Render prop object
Prop Type Description
checked Boolean Whether or not the switch is checked.

Switch.Label

<Switch.Group>
  <Switch.Label>Enable notifications</Switch.Label>
  <Switch checked={enabled} onChange={setEnabled} className="...">
    {/* ... */}
  </Switch>
</Switch.Group>
Props
Prop Type Default Description
as String | Component label The element or component the Switch.Label should render as.

Switch.Group

<Switch.Group>
  <Switch.Label>Enable notifications</Switch.Label>
  <Switch checked={enabled} onChange={setEnabled} className="...">
    {/* ... */}
  </Switch>
</Switch.Group>
Props
Prop Type Default Description
as String | Component React.Fragment (no wrapper element) The element or component the Switch.Group should render as.

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