Portals provide a first-class way to render children into a DOM node that exists outside the DOM hierarchy of the parent component.
ReactDOM.createPortal(child, container)
The first argument (child
) is any renderable React child, such as an element, string, or fragment. The second argument (container
) is a DOM element.
Normally, when you return an element from a component’s render method, it’s mounted into the DOM as a child of the nearest parent node:
render() { // React mounts a new div and renders the children into it return ( <div> {this.props.children} </div> ); }
However, sometimes it’s useful to insert a child into a different location in the DOM:
render() { // React does *not* create a new div. It renders the children into `domNode`. // `domNode` is any valid DOM node, regardless of its location in the DOM. return ReactDOM.createPortal( this.props.children, domNode, ); }
A typical use case for portals is when a parent component has an overflow: hidden
or z-index
style, but you need the child to visually “break out” of its container. For example, dialogs, hovercards, and tooltips.
Note:
It is important to remember, when working with portals, you’ll need to make sure to follow the proper accessibility guidelines.
Even though a portal can be anywhere in the DOM tree, it behaves like a normal React child in every other way. Features like context work exactly the same regardless of whether the child is a portal, as the portal still exists in the React tree regardless of position in the DOM tree.
This includes event bubbling. An event fired from inside a portal will propagate to ancestors in the containing React tree, even if those elements are not ancestors in the DOM tree. Assuming the following HTML structure:
<html> <body> <div id="app-root"></div> <div id="modal-root"></div> </body> </html>
A Parent
component in #app-root
would be able to catch an uncaught, bubbling event from the sibling node #modal-root
.
// These two containers are siblings in the DOM const appRoot = document.getElementById('app-root'); const modalRoot = document.getElementById('modal-root'); class Modal extends React.Component { constructor(props) { super(props); this.el = document.createElement('div'); } componentDidMount() { // The portal element is inserted in the DOM tree after // the Modal's children are mounted, meaning that children // will be mounted on a detached DOM node. If a child // component requires to be attached to the DOM tree // immediately when mounted, for example to measure a // DOM node, or uses 'autoFocus' in a descendant, add // state to Modal and only render the children when Modal // is inserted in the DOM tree. modalRoot.appendChild(this.el); } componentWillUnmount() { modalRoot.removeChild(this.el); } render() { return ReactDOM.createPortal( this.props.children, this.el, ); } } class Parent extends React.Component { constructor(props) { super(props); this.state = {clicks: 0}; this.handleClick = this.handleClick.bind(this); } handleClick() { // This will fire when the button in Child is clicked, // updating Parent's state, even though button // is not direct descendant in the DOM. this.setState(prevState => ({ clicks: prevState.clicks + 1 })); } render() { return ( <div onClick={this.handleClick}> <p>Number of clicks: {this.state.clicks}</p> <p> Open up the browser DevTools to observe that the button is not a child of the div with the onClick handler. </p> <Modal> <Child /> </Modal> </div> ); } } function Child() { // The click event on this button will bubble up to parent, // because there is no 'onClick' attribute defined return ( <div className="modal"> <button>Click</button> </div> ); } ReactDOM.render(<Parent />, appRoot);
Catching an event bubbling up from a portal in a parent component allows the development of more flexible abstractions that are not inherently reliant on portals. For example, if you render a <Modal />
component, the parent can capture its events regardless of whether it’s implemented using portals.
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Licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International Public License.
https://reactjs.org/docs/portals.html