#Installation
#Readme
Reactive primitives for observing resizing of HTML elements.
makeResizeObserver
— Instantiate a new ResizeObserver that automatically get's disposed on cleanup.createResizeObserver
— Create resize observer instance, listening for changes to size of reactive element targets array.createWindowSize
— Creates a reactive store-like object of current width and height dimensions of the browser window.createElementSize
— Creates a reactive store-like object of current width and height dimensions of html element.
#makeResizeObserver
Instantiate a new ResizeObserver that automatically get's disposed on cleanup.
#How to use it
makeResizeObserver
returns observe
and unobserve
functions for managing targets.
import { makeResizeObserver } from "@solid-primitives/resize-observer";
const { observe, unobserve } = makeResizeObserver(handleObserverCallback, { box: "content-box" });
observe(document.body);
observe(ref);
function handleObserverCallback(entries: ResizeObserverEntry[]) {
for (const entry of entries) {
console.log(entry.contentRect.width);
}
}
#Disposing
makeResizeObserver
will dispose itself with it's parent reactive owner.
To dispose early, wrap the primitive with a createRoot
.
const { dispose } = createRoot(dispose => {
const { observe, unobserve } = makeResizeObserver(handleObserverCallback);
return { dispose, observe, unobserve };
});
// dispose early
dispose();
#createResizeObserver
Create resize observer instance, listening for changes to size of reactive element targets array.
Disposes automatically itself with it's parent reactive owner.
#How to use it
import { createResizeObserver } from "@solid-primitives/resize-observer";
let ref!: HTMLDivElement;
// can in onMount if the target variable isn't yet populated
onMount(() => {
createResizeObserver(ref, ({ width, height }, el) => {
if (el === ref) console.log(width, height);
});
});
<div ref={ref} />;
#Reactive targets
The targets
argument can be a reactive signal or top-level store array.
const [targets, setTargets] = createSignal([document.body]);
createResizeObserver(targets, ({ width, height }, el) => {});
// updating the signal will unobserve removed elements and observe added ones
setTargets(p => [...p, element]);
// createResizeObserver supports top-lever store arrays too
const [targets, setTargets] = createStore([document.body]);
createResizeObserver(targets, ({ width, height }, el) => {});
setTargets(targets.length, element);
#createWindowSize
Creates a reactive store-like object of current width and height dimensions of the browser window.
#How to use it
import { createWindowSize } from "@solid-primitives/resize-observer";
const size = createWindowSize();
createEffect(() => {
size.width; // => number
size.height; // => number
});
#useWindowSize
useWindowSize
is a singleton root primitive. It is providing the same reactive object as createWindowSize
, but the object instance, signals and event-listeners are shared between dependents, making it more optimized to use in multiple places at once.
import { useWindowSize } from "@solid-primitives/resize-observer";
const size = useWindowSize();
createEffect(() => {
size.width; // => number
size.height; // => number
});
#Media Queries
The createWindowSize
isn't meant to be used for creating media queries.
If you want a reactive interface for media-queries, please checkout the media package.
#createElementSize
Creates a reactive store-like object of current width and height dimensions of html element.
It uses ResizeObserver
under the hood—to observe when the element size changes—and getBoundingClientRect
to get the current size.
#How to use it
createElementSize
needs to be provided a target. It can be an HTML element, or a reactive signal returning one. Target also takes falsy values to disable tracking.
import { createElementSize } from "@solid-primitives/resize-observer";
const size = createElementSize(document.body);
createEffect(() => {
size.width; // => number
size.height; // => number
});
// reactive target
const [target, setTarget] = createSignal<HTMLElement>();
const size = createElementSize(target);
createEffect(() => {
size.width; // => number | null
size.height; // => number | null
});
<div ref={setTarget} />;
#Demo
#Changelog
See CHANGELOG.md
#Contributors
Thanks to Moshe Udimar for this contribution!