layout | title |
---|---|
default |
Field Components |
A Field
component displays a given property of a REST resource. Such components are used in the List
and Show
views, but you can also use them in the Edit
and Create
views for read-only fields.
The most usual of all field components is <TextField>
, and it displays one field of the current record in plain text:
// in src/posts.js
import * as React from "react";
import { List, Datagrid, TextField } from 'react-admin';
export const PostList = (props) => (
<List {...props}>
<Datagrid>
<TextField source="id" />
<TextField source="title" />
<TextField source="body" />
</Datagrid>
</List>
);
Field
components need a record
and a source
prop to work, and basically display the record[source]
data. There is nothing magic there - you can easily write your own:
{% raw %}
const PurpleTextField = ({ record, source }) => (
<span style={{ color: 'purple' }}>{record[source]}</span>
);
{% endraw %}
Some react-admin components (e.g. <Datagrid>
or <SimpleShowLayout>
) clone their children and pass them a record
value. That's why most of the time, you don't have to pass the record
manually. But you can totally render a Field
component by passing it a record
value ; in fact, it's a great way to understand how Field
components work:
// a post looks like
// { id: 123, title: "Hello, world", author: "John Doe", body: "..." }
const PostShow = ({ id }) => {
const { data, loaded } = useGetOne('books', id);
if (!loaded) return <span>Loading</span>;
return (
<dl>
<dt>Title</dt>
<dd><TextField record={data} source="title" /></dd>
<dt>Author</dt>
<dd><PurpleTextField record={data} source="author" /></dd>
</dl>
);
}
All field components accept the following props:
Prop | Required | Type | Default | Description |
---|---|---|---|---|
record |
Required | Object |
- | Object containing the properties to display. <Datagrid> , <SimpleForm> and other components inject that prop to their children |
source |
Required | string |
- | Name of the property to display |
label |
Optional | string | ReactElement |
source |
Used as a table header or an input label |
sortable |
Optional | boolean |
true |
When used in a List , should the list be sortable using the source attribute? Setting it to false disables the click handler on the column header. |
sortBy |
Optional | string |
source |
When used in a List , specifies the actual source to be used for sorting when the user clicks the column header |
sortByOrder |
Optional | ASC | DESC |
ASC |
When used in a List , specifies the sort order to be used for sorting when the user clicks the column header |
className |
Optional | string |
- | A class name (usually generated by JSS) to customize the look and feel of the field element itself |
cellClassName |
Optional | string |
- | A class name (usually generated by JSS) to customize the look and feel of the field container (e.g. the <td> in a Datagrid ) |
headerClassName |
Optional | string |
- | A class name (usually generated by JSS) to customize the look and feel of the field header (e.g. the <th> in a Datagrid ) |
formClassName |
Optional | string |
- | A class name (usually generated by JSS) to customize the look and feel of the field container when it is used inside <SimpleForm> or <TabbedForm> |
addLabel |
Optional | boolean |
false |
Defines the visibility of the label when the field is used in <SimpleForm> , <FormTab> , <SimpleShowLayout> , or <Tab> . It's true for all react-admin <Field> components. |
textAlign |
Optional | string |
'left' | Defines the text alignment inside a cell. Set to right for right alignment (e.g. for numbers) |
emptyText |
Optional | string |
'' | Defines a text to be shown when a field has no value |
Tip: You can use field components inside the Edit
or Show
views, too:
export const PostShow = ({ ...props }) => (
<Show {...props}>
<SimpleShowLayout>
<TextField source="title" />
</SimpleShowLayout>
</Show>
);
Tip: If you display a record with a complex structure, you can use a path with dot separators as the source
attribute. For instance, if the API returns the following 'book' record:
{
id: 1234,
title: 'War and Peace',
author: {
firstName: 'Leo',
lastName: 'Tolstoi'
}
}
Then you can display the author first name as follows:
<TextField source="author.firstName" />
Tip: If you want to format a field according to the value, use a higher-order component to do conditional formatting, as described in the Theming documentation.
Tip: If your interface has to support multiple languages, don't use the label
prop, and put the localized labels in a dictionary instead. See the Translation documentation for details.
Display a collection using <Field>
child components.
Ideal for embedded arrays of objects, e.g. tags
and backlinks
in the following post
object:
{
id: 123,
tags: [
{ name: 'foo' },
{ name: 'bar' }
],
backlinks: [
{
uuid: '34fdf393-f449-4b04-a423-38ad02ae159e',
date: '2012-08-10T00:00:00.000Z',
url: 'http://example.com/foo/bar.html',
},
{
uuid: 'd907743a-253d-4ec1-8329-404d4c5e6cf1',
date: '2012-08-14T00:00:00.000Z',
url: 'https://blog.johndoe.com/2012/08/12/foobar.html',
}
]
}
The child must be an iterator component (like <Datagrid>
or <SingleFieldList>
).
Here is how to display all the backlinks of the current post as a <Datagrid>
:
<ArrayField source="backlinks">
<Datagrid>
<DateField source="date" />
<UrlField source="url" />
</Datagrid>
</ArrayField>
And here is how to display all the tags of the current post as <Chip>
components:
<ArrayField source="tags">
<SingleFieldList>
<ChipField source="name" />
</SingleFieldList>
</ArrayField>
Prop | Required | Type | Default | Description |
---|---|---|---|---|
fieldKey |
Optional | string | - | Name for the field to be used as key when displaying children |
<ArrayField>
also accepts the common field props.
If the array value contains a lot of items, you may experience slowdowns in the UI. In such cases, set the fieldKey
prop to use one field as key, and reduce CPU and memory usage:
-<ArrayField source="backlinks">
+<ArrayField source="backlinks" fieldKey="uuid">
<Datagrid>
<DateField source="date" />
<UrlField source="url" />
</Datagrid>
</ArrayField>
Tip: If you need to render a custom collection, it's often simpler to write your own component:
const TagsField = ({ record }) => (
<ul>
{record.tags.map(item => (
<li key={item.name}>{item.name}</li>
))}
</ul>
)
TagsField.defaultProps = {
addLabel: true
};
Displays a boolean value as a check.
import { BooleanField } from 'react-admin';
<BooleanField source="commentable" />
Prop | Required | Type | Default | Description |
---|---|---|---|---|
valueLabelTrue |
Optional | string | 'true' | Aria label for the truthy value |
valueLabelFalse |
Optional | string | 'false' | Aria label for the falsy value |
TrueIcon |
Optional | SvgIconComponent | @material-ui/icons/Done |
Icon to show for the truthy value |
FalseIcon |
Optional | SvgIconComponent | @material-ui/icons/Clear |
Icon to show for the falsy value |
<BooleanField>
also accepts the common field props.
Rule name | Description |
---|---|
root |
Applied to the root element |
To override the style of all instances of <BooleanField>
using the material-ui style overrides, use the RaBooleanField
key.
The <BooleanField>
includes a tooltip text for accessibility (or to query in "end to end" tests). By default, it is the translated value ('true' or 'false' in English).
If you need to override it, you can use the valueLabelTrue
and valueLabelFalse
props, which both accept a string. These strings may be translation keys:
// English labels
<BooleanField source="published" valueLabelTrue="Has been published" valueLabelFalse="Has not been published yet" />
// Translation keys
<BooleanField source="published" valueLabelTrue="myapp.published.true" valueLabelFalse="myapp.published.false" />
You can customize the icons to show by setting the TrueIcon
and FalseIcon
props which accept a SvgIcon type.
import AlarmOnIcon from '@material-ui/icons/AlarmOn';
import AlarmOffIcon from '@material-ui/icons/AlarmOff';
<BooleanField source="alarm" TrueIcon={AlarmOnIcon} FalseIcon={AlarmOffIcon} />
Displays a value inside a "Chip", which is Material UI's term for a label.
Rule name | Description |
---|---|
chip |
Applied to the underlying Material UI's Chip component |
To override the style of all instances of <ChipField>
using the material-ui style overrides, use the RaChipField
key.
import { ChipField } from 'react-admin';
<ChipField source="category" />
This field type is especially useful for one to many relationships, e.g. to display a list of books for a given author:
import { ChipField, SingleFieldList, ReferenceManyField } from 'react-admin';
<ReferenceManyField reference="books" target="author_id">
<SingleFieldList>
<ChipField source="title" />
</SingleFieldList>
</ReferenceManyField>
Any additional props are passed to material-ui's <Chip>
element. Check The material-ui <Chip>
documentation for details.
Displays a date or datetime using the browser locale (thanks to Date.toLocaleDateString()
and Date.toLocaleString()
).
import { DateField } from 'react-admin';
<DateField source="publication_date" />
Prop | Required | Type | Default | Description |
---|---|---|---|---|
locales |
Optional | string | '' | Override the browser locale in the date formatting. Passed as first argument to Intl.DateTimeFormat() . |
options |
Optional | Object | - | Date formatting options. Passed as second argument to Intl.DateTimeFormat() . |
showTime |
Optional | boolean | false | If true, show date and time. If false, show only date |
<DateField>
also accepts the common field props.
This component accepts a showTime
attribute (false
by default) to force the display of time in addition to date. It uses Intl.DateTimeFormat()
if available, passing the locales
and options
props as arguments. If Intl is not available, it ignores the locales
and options
props.
{% raw %}
<DateField source="publication_date" />
// renders the record { id: 1234, publication_date: new Date('2017-04-23') } as
<span>4/23/2017</span>
<DateField source="publication_date" showTime />
// renders the record { id: 1234, publication_date: new Date('2017-04-23 23:05') } as
<span>4/23/2017, 11:05:00 PM</span>
<DateField source="publication_date" options={{ weekday: 'long', year: 'numeric', month: 'long', day: 'numeric' }} />
// renders the record { id: 1234, publication_date: new Date('2017-04-23') } as
<span>Sunday, April 23, 2017</span>
<DateField source="publication_date" locales="fr-FR" />
// renders the record { id: 1234, publication_date: new Date('2017-04-23') } as
<span>23/04/2017</span>
{% endraw %}
See Intl.DateTimeFormat documentation for the options
prop syntax.
Tip: If you need more formatting options than what Intl.DateTimeFormat
can provide, build your own field component leveraging a third-party library like moment.js.
<EmailField>
displays an email as a <a href="mailto:" />
link.
import { EmailField } from 'react-admin';
<EmailField source="personal_email" />
If you need a special function to render a field, <FunctionField>
is the perfect match. It passes the record
to a render
function supplied by the developer. For instance, to display the full name of a user
record based on first_name
and last_name
properties:
import { FunctionField } from 'react-admin';
<FunctionField label="Name" render={record => `${record.first_name} ${record.last_name}`} />
Prop | Required | Type | Default | Description |
---|---|---|---|---|
render |
Required | function | - | A function returning a string (or an element) to display based on a record |
<FunctionField>
also accepts the common field props.
Tip: Technically, you can omit the source
and sortBy
properties for the <FunctionField>
since you provide the render function. However, providing a source
or a sortBy
will allow the Datagrid
to make the column sortable, since when a user clicks on a column, the Datagrid
uses these properties to sort. Should you provide both, sortBy
will override source
for sorting the column.
If you need to display an image based on a path contained in a record field, you can use the <ImageField />
component:
import { ImageField } from 'react-admin';
<ImageField source="url" title="title" />
// renders the record { id: 123, url: 'cat.png', title: 'meow' } as
<div>
<img src="cat.png" title="meow" />
</div>
This field is also often used within the component to display a preview.
Prop | Required | Type | Default | Description |
---|---|---|---|---|
src |
Optional | string | - | A function returning a string (or an element) to display based on a record |
title |
Optional | string | record.title | The name of the property containing the image source if the value is an array of objects |
<ImageField>
also accepts the common field props.
Rule name | Description |
---|---|
list |
Applied to the underlying <ul> component when sourceValue prop is an array |
image |
Applied to each underlying <img> component |
To override the style of all instances of <ImageField>
using the material-ui style overrides, use the RaImageField
key.
The optional title
prop points to the picture title property, used for both alt
and title
attributes. It can either be a hard-written string, or a path within your JSON object:
// { picture: { url: 'cover.jpg', title: 'Larry Cover (French pun intended)' } }
<ImageField source="picture.url" title="picture.title" />
// renders img title as "Larry Cover (French pun intended)"
<ImageField source="picture.url" title="Picture" />
// renders img title as "Picture", since "Picture" is not a path in previous given object
If the record actually contains an array of images in the property defined by the source
prop, the src
prop will be needed to determine the src
value of the images, for example:
// This is the record
{
pictures: [
{ url: 'image1.jpg', desc: 'First image' },
{ url: 'image2.jpg', desc: 'Second image' },
],
}
<ImageField source="pictures" src="url" title="desc" />
If you need to render a link to a file based on a path contained in a record field, you can use the <FileField />
component:
import { FileField } from 'react-admin';
<FileField source="url" title="title" />
// renders the record { id: 123, url: 'doc.pdf', title: 'Presentation' } as
<div>
<a href="doc.pdf" title="Presentation">Presentation</a>
</div>
This field is also often used within an component to display preview.
Prop | Required | Type | Default | Description |
---|---|---|---|---|
src |
Optional | string |
- | A function returning a string (or an element) to display based on a record |
title |
Optional | string |
record.title | The name of the property containing the image source if the value is an array of objects |
target |
Optional | string |
- | The link target. Set to "_blank" to open the file on a new tab |
download |
Optional | boolean | string |
- | Prompts the user to save the linked URL instead of navigating to it |
ping |
Optional | string |
- | A space-separated list of URLs. When the link is followed, the browser will send POST requests with the body PING to the URLs. Typically for tracking. |
rel |
Optional | string |
- | The relationship of the linked URL as space-separated link types (e.g. 'noopener', 'canonical', etc.). |
<FileField>
also accepts the common field props.
Rule name | Description |
---|---|
root |
Applied to the root element |
To override the style of all instances of <FileField>
using the material-ui style overrides, use the RaFileField
key.
The optional title
prop points to the file title property, used for title
attributes. It can either be a hard-written string, or a path within your JSON object:
// { file: { url: 'doc.pdf', title: 'Presentation' } }
<FileField source="file.url" title="file.title" />
// renders the file name as "Presentation"
<FileField source="file.url" title="File" />
// renders the file name as "File", since "File" is not a path in previous given object
If the record actually contains an array of files in its property defined by the source
prop, the src
prop will be needed to determine the href
value of the links, for example:
// This is the record
{
files: [
{ url: 'image1.jpg', desc: 'First image' },
{ url: 'image2.jpg', desc: 'Second image' },
],
}
<FileField source="files" src="url" title="desc" />
You can optionally set the target
prop to choose which window will the link try to open in.
// Will make the file open in new window
<FileField source="file.url" target="_blank" />
This Enterprise Edition component allows to render Markdown data as HTML.
import { Show, SimpleShowLayout, TextField } from 'react-admin';
import { MarkdownField } from '@react-admin/ra-markdown';
const PostShow = props => (
<Show {...props}>
<SimpleShowLayout>
<TextField source="title" />
<MarkdownField source="description" />
</SimpleShowLayout>
</Show>
);
Check the ra-markdown
documentation for more details.
Displays a number formatted according to the browser locale, right aligned.
import { NumberField } from 'react-admin';
<NumberField source="score" />
// renders the record { id: 1234, score: 567 } as
<span>567</span>
Prop | Required | Type | Default | Description |
---|---|---|---|---|
locales |
Optional | string | '' | Override the browser locale in the date formatting. Passed as first argument to Intl.DateTimeFormat() . |
options |
Optional | Object | - | Number formatting options. Passed as second argument to Intl.NumberFormat() . |
<NumberField>
also accepts the common field props.
<NumberField>
uses Intl.NumberFormat()
if available, passing the locales
and options
props as arguments. This allows a perfect display of decimals, currencies, percentages, etc.
If Intl is not available, it outputs numbers as is (and ignores the locales
and options
props).
{% raw %}
import { NumberField } from 'react-admin';
<NumberField source="score" options={{ maximumFractionDigits: 2 }}/>
// renders the record { id: 1234, score: 567.3567458569 } as
<span>567.35</span>
<NumberField source="share" options={{ style: 'percent' }} />
// renders the record { id: 1234, share: 0.2545 } as
<span>25%</span>
<NumberField source="price" options={{ style: 'currency', currency: 'USD' }} />
// renders the record { id: 1234, price: 25.99 } as
<span>$25.99</span>
<NumberField source="price" locales="fr-FR" options={{ style: 'currency', currency: 'USD' }} />
// renders the record { id: 1234, price: 25.99 } as
<span>25,99 $US</span>
{% endraw %}
See Intl.NumberFormat documentation for the options
prop syntax.
Tip: If you need more formatting options than what Intl.NumberFormat
can provide, build your own field component leveraging a third-party library like numeral.js.
Tip: When used in a Show
view, the right alignment may look weird. Disable it by setting the textAlign
attribute to "left":
import { NumberField } from 'react-admin';
<NumberField source="score" textAlign="left" />
When you need to display an enumerated field, <SelectField>
maps the value to a string.
For instance, if the gender
field can take values "M" and "F", here is how to display it as either "Male" or "Female":
import { SelectField } from 'react-admin';
<SelectField source="gender" choices={[
{ id: 'M', name: 'Male' },
{ id: 'F', name: 'Female' },
]} />
Prop | Required | Type | Default | Description |
---|---|---|---|---|
optionText |
Optional | `string | Function | Element` |
optionValue |
Optional | string |
'id' | Name of the field to compare to the value to find the matching choice |
translateChoice |
Optional | boolean |
true |
Whether or not the choice text should be translated |
<SelectField>
also accepts the common field props.
By default, the text is built by:
- finding a choice where the 'id' property equals the field value
- using the 'name' property and the option text
You can also customize the properties to use for the lookup value and text, thanks to the optionValue
and optionText
attributes.
const choices = [
{ _id: 123, full_name: 'Leo Tolstoi', sex: 'M' },
{ _id: 456, full_name: 'Jane Austen', sex: 'F' },
];
<SelectField source="author_id" choices={choices} optionText="full_name" optionValue="_id" />
optionText
also accepts a function, so you can shape the option text at will:
const choices = [
{ id: 123, first_name: 'Leo', last_name: 'Tolstoi' },
{ id: 456, first_name: 'Jane', last_name: 'Austen' },
];
const optionRenderer = choice => `${choice.first_name} ${choice.last_name}`;
<SelectField source="author_id" choices={choices} optionText={optionRenderer} />
optionText
also accepts a React Element, that will be cloned and receive the related choice as the record
prop. You can use Field components there.
const choices = [
{ id: 123, first_name: 'Leo', last_name: 'Tolstoi' },
{ id: 456, first_name: 'Jane', last_name: 'Austen' },
];
const FullNameField = ({ record }) => <Chip>{record.first_name} {record.last_name}</Chip>;
<SelectField source="author_id" choices={choices} optionText={<FullNameField />}/>
The current choice is translated by default, so you can use translation identifiers as choices:
const choices = [
{ id: 'M', name: 'myroot.gender.male' },
{ id: 'F', name: 'myroot.gender.female' },
];
However, in some cases (e.g. inside a <ReferenceField>
), you may not want the choice to be translated. In that case, set the translateChoice
prop to false
.
<SelectField source="gender" choices={choices} translateChoice={false}/>
Tip: <SelectField>
sets translateChoice
to true
by default.
<ReferenceField>
is useful for displaying many-to-one and one-to-one relationships. This component fetches a referenced record (using the dataProvider.getMany()
method), and passes it to its child. A <ReferenceField>
displays nothing on its own, it just fetches the data and expects its child to render it. Usual child components for <ReferenceField>
are other <Field>
components.
For instance, if a post
has one author from the users
resource, referenced by a user_id
field, here is how to fetch the user
related to each post
record in a list, and display the name
for each:
import * as React from "react";
import { List, Datagrid, ReferenceField, TextField, EditButton } from 'react-admin';
export const PostList = (props) => (
<List {...props}>
<Datagrid>
<TextField source="id" />
<ReferenceField label="User" source="user_id" reference="users">
<TextField source="name" />
</ReferenceField>
<TextField source="title" />
<EditButton />
</Datagrid>
</List>
);
With this configuration, <ReferenceField>
wraps the user's name in a link to the related user <Edit>
page.
Prop | Required | Type | Default | Description |
---|---|---|---|---|
reference |
Required | string |
- | The name of the resource for the referenced records, e.g. 'posts' |
children |
Required | Element |
- | The Field element used to render the referenced record |
link |
Optional | string |
'edit' | Target of the link wrapping the rendered child |
sortBy |
Optional | `string | Function` | source |
<ReferenceField>
also accepts the common field props.
Rule name | Description |
---|---|
link |
Applied to each child element |
To override the style of all instances of <ReferenceField>
using the material-ui style overrides, use the RaReferenceField
key.
<ReferenceField>
accepts a reference
attribute, which specifies the resource to fetch for the related record.
Note: You must add a <Resource>
for the reference resource - react-admin needs it to fetch the reference data. You can omit the list
prop in this reference if you want to hide it in the sidebar menu.
<Admin dataProvider={myDataProvider}>
<Resource name="posts" list={PostList} />
<Resource name="users" />
</Admin>
To change the link from the <Edit>
page to the <Show>
page, set the link
prop to "show".
<ReferenceField label="User" source="user_id" reference="users" link="show">
<TextField source="name" />
</ReferenceField>
By default, <ReferenceField>
is sorted by its source
. To specify another attribute to sort by, set the sortBy
prop to the according attribute's name.
<ReferenceField label="User" source="user_id" reference="users" sortBy="user.name">
<TextField source="name" />
</ReferenceField>
You can also prevent <ReferenceField>
from adding a link to children by setting link
to false
.
// No link
<ReferenceField label="User" source="user_id" reference="users" link={false}>
<TextField source="name" />
</ReferenceField>
You can also use a custom link
function to get a custom path for the children. This function must accept record
and reference
as arguments.
// Custom path
<ReferenceField label="User" source="user_id" reference="users" link={(record, reference) => `/my/path/to/${reference}/${record.id}`}>
<TextField source="name" />
</ReferenceField>
Tip: React-admin accumulates and deduplicates the ids of the referenced records to make one dataProvider.getMany()
call for the entire list, instead of n dataProvider.getOne()
calls. So for instance, if the API returns the following list of posts:
[
{
id: 123,
title: 'Totally agree',
user_id: 789,
},
{
id: 124,
title: 'You are right my friend',
user_id: 789
},
{
id: 125,
title: 'Not sure about this one',
user_id: 735
}
]
Then react-admin renders the <PostList>
with a loader for the <ReferenceField>
, fetches the API for the related users in one call (GET http://path.to.my.api/users?ids=[789,735]
), and re-renders the list once the data arrives. This accelerates the rendering and minimizes network load.
<ReferenceManyField>
is useful for displaying one-to-many relationships, when the foreign key is carried by the referenced resource. For instance, if a user
has many books
and the books
resource exposes a user_id
field, <ReferenceManyField>
can fetch all the books authored by a given user.
This component fetches a list of referenced records by a reverse lookup of the current record.id
in the target
field of another resource (using the dataProvider.getManyReference()
REST method), and passes them to its child. The child must be an iterator component (like <SingleFieldList>
or <Datagrid>
), which usually has one or more child <Field>
components.
For instance, here is how to show the authors of the comments related to each post in a list by matching post.id
to comment.post_id
. We're using <SingleFieldList>
to display an inline list using only one field for each of the referenced record:
import * as React from "react";
import { List, Datagrid, ChipField, ReferenceManyField, SingleFieldList, TextField } from 'react-admin';
export const PostList = (props) => (
<List {...props}>
<Datagrid>
<TextField source="id" />
<TextField source="title" type="email" />
<ReferenceManyField label="Comments by" reference="comments" target="post_id">
<SingleFieldList>
<ChipField source="author.name" />
</SingleFieldList>
</ReferenceManyField>
<EditButton />
</Datagrid>
</List>
);
Prop | Required | Type | Default | Description |
---|---|---|---|---|
children |
Required | Element |
- | The Iterator element used to render the referenced records |
reference |
Required | string |
- | The name of the resource for the referenced records, e.g. 'books' |
target |
Required | string | - | Target field carrying the relationship on the referenced resource, e.g. 'user_id' |
filter |
Optional | Object |
- | Filters to use when fetching the related records, passed to getManyReference() |
pagination |
Optional | Element |
- | Pagination element to display pagination controls. empty by default (no pagination) |
perPage |
Optional | number |
25 | Maximum number of referenced records to fetch |
sort |
Optional | { field, order } |
{ field: 'id', order: 'DESC' } |
Sort order to use when fetching the related records, passed to getManyReference() |
<ReferenceManyField>
also accepts the common field props.
<ReferenceManyField>
accepts a reference
attribute, which specifies the resource to fetch for the related record. It also accepts a source
attribute which defines the field containing the value to look for in the target
field of the referenced resource. By default, this is the id
of the resource (post.id
in the previous example).
Note: You must add a <Resource>
for the reference resource - react-admin needs it to fetch the reference data. You can omit the list
prop in this reference if you want to hide it in the sidebar menu.
You can use a <Datagrid>
instead of a <SingleFieldList>
- but not inside another <Datagrid>
! This is useful if you want to display a read-only list of related records. For instance, if you want to show the comments
related to a post
in the post's <Show>
view:
import * as React from 'react';
import { ReferenceManyField, Datagrid, DateField, EditButton, Show, SimpleShowLayout, TextField } from "react-admin";
const PostShow = props => (
<Show {...props}>
<SimpleShowLayout>
<TextField source="title" />
<TextField source="teaser" />
<ReferenceManyField
reference="comments"
target="post_id"
label="Comments"
>
<Datagrid>
<DateField source="created_at" />
<TextField source="author.name" />
<TextField source="body" />
<EditButton />
</Datagrid>
</ReferenceManyField>
<DateField source="published_at" />
</SimpleShowLayout>
</Show>
);
By default, react-admin restricts the possible values to 25 and displays no pagination control. You can change the limit by setting the perPage
prop:
<ReferenceManyField perPage={10} reference="comments" target="post_id">
...
</ReferenceManyField>
And if you want to allow users to paginate the list, pass a <Pagination>
element as the pagination
prop:
import { Pagination } from 'react-admin';
<ReferenceManyField pagination={<Pagination />} reference="comments" target="post_id">
...
</ReferenceManyField>
By default, it orders the possible values by id desc. You can change this order by setting the sort
prop (an object with field
and order
properties).
{% raw %}
<ReferenceManyField sort={{ field: 'created_at', order: 'DESC' }} reference="comments" target="post_id">
...
</ReferenceManyField>
{% endraw %}
Also, you can filter the query used to populate the possible values. Use the filter
prop for that.
{% raw %}
<ReferenceManyField filter={{ is_published: true }} reference="comments" target="post_id">
...
</ReferenceManyField>
{% endraw %}
This Enterprise Edition component fetches a list of referenced records by lookup in an associative table, and passes the records down to its child component, which must be an iterator component.
For instance, here is how to fetch the authors related to a book record by matching book.id to book_authors.post_id, then matching book_authors.author_id to authors.id, and then display the author last_name for each, in a :
import React from 'react';
import {
Show,
SimpleShowLayout,
TextField,
DateField,
SingleFieldList,
ChipField,
} from 'react-admin';
import { ReferenceManyToManyField } from '@react-admin/ra-many-to-many';
export const BookShow = (props) => (
<Show {...props}>
<SimpleShowLayout>
<TextField source="title" />
<DateField source="publication_date">
<ReferenceManyToManyField
reference="authors"
through="book_authors"
using="book_id,author_id"
>
<SingleFieldList>
<ChipField source="last_name" />
</SingleFieldList>
</ReferenceManyToManyField>
<EditButton />
</SimpleShowLayout>
</Show>
);
This example uses the following schema:
┌──────────────────┐ ┌──────────────┐ ┌───────────────┐
│ books │ │ book_authors │ │ authors │
│------------------│ │--------------│ │---------------│
│ id │───┐ │ id │ │ id │
│ title │ └──╼│ book_id │ ┌──│ first_name │
│ body │ │ author_id │╾──┘ │ last_name │
│ publication_date │ │ is_public │ │ date_of_birth │
└──────────────────┘ └──────────────┘ └───────────────┘
Check the ra-relationships
documentation for more details.
Use <ReferenceArrayField>
to display a one-to-many relationship based on an array of foreign keys. This component fetches a list of referenced records (using the dataProvider.getMany()
method), and passes them to its child. A <ReferenceArrayField>
displays nothing on its own, it just fetches the data and expects its child to render it.
For instance, if each post contains a list of tag ids (e.g. { id: 1234, title: 'Lorem Ipsum', tag_ids: [1, 23, 4] }
), here is how to fetch the list of tags for each post in a list, and display the name
for each tag
in a <ChipField>
:
import * as React from "react";
import { List, Datagrid, ChipField, ReferenceArrayField, SingleFieldList, TextField } from 'react-admin';
export const PostList = (props) => (
<List {...props}>
<Datagrid>
<TextField source="id" />
<TextField source="title" />
<ReferenceArrayField label="Tags" reference="tags" source="tag_ids">
<SingleFieldList>
<ChipField source="name" />
</SingleFieldList>
</ReferenceArrayField>
<EditButton />
</Datagrid>
</List>
);
<ReferenceArrayField>
fetches the tag
resources related to each post
resource by matching post.tag_ids
to tag.id
. Once it receives the related resources, <ReferenceArrayField>
passes them to its child component using the ids
and data
props, so the child must be an iterator component (like <SingleFieldList>
or <Datagrid>
). The iterator component usually has one or more child <Field>
components.
Prop | Required | Type | Default | Description |
---|---|---|---|---|
reference |
Required | string |
- | The name of the resource for the referenced records, e.g. 'tags' |
children |
Required | Element |
- | The Field element used to render the referenced records |
sortBy |
Optional | `string | Function` | source |
filter |
Optional | Object |
- | Filters to use when fetching the related records (the filtering is done client-side) |
pagination |
Optional | Element |
- | Pagination element to display pagination controls. empty by default (no pagination) |
perPage |
Optional | number |
1000 | Maximum number of results to display |
sort |
Optional | { field, order } |
{ field: 'id', order: 'DESC' } |
Sort order to use when displaying the related records (the sort is done client-side) |
<ReferenceArrayField>
also accepts the common field props.
Rule name | Description |
---|---|
progress |
Applied to the Material UI's LinearProgress component while loaded prop is false |
To override the style of all instances of <ReferenceArrayField>
using the material-ui style overrides, use the RaReferenceArrayField
key.
<ReferenceArrayField>
expects a reference
attribute, which specifies the resource to fetch for the related records. It also expects a source
attribute, which defines the field containing the list of ids to look for in the referenced resource.
Note: You must add a <Resource>
component for the reference resource to your <Admin>
component, because react-admin needs it to fetch the reference data. You can omit the list
prop in this Resource if you don't want to show an entry for it in the sidebar menu.
export const App = () => (
<Admin dataProvider={restProvider('http://path.to.my.api')}>
<Resource name="posts" list={PostList} />
<Resource name="tags" /> // <= this one is compulsory
</Admin>
);
In an Edit of Show view, you can combine <ReferenceArrayField>
with <Datagrid>
to display related resources in a table. For instance, to display more details about the tags related to a post in the PostShow
view:
import * as React from "react";
import { Show, SimpleShowLayout, TextField, ReferenceArrayField, Datagrid, ShowButton } from 'react-admin';
export const PostShow = (props) => (
<Show {...props}>
<SimpleShowLayout>
<TextField source="id" />
<TextField source="title" />
<ReferenceArrayField label="Tags" reference="tags" source="tag_ids">
<Datagrid>
<TextField source="id" />
<TextField source="name" />
<ShowButton />
</Datagrid>
</ReferenceArrayField>
<EditButton />
</SimpleShowLayout>
</Show>
);
This component displays some HTML content. The content is "rich" (i.e. unescaped) by default.
import { RichTextField } from 'react-admin';
<RichTextField source="body" />
Prop | Required | Type | Default | Description |
---|---|---|---|---|
stripTags |
Optional | boolean |
false |
If true , remove all HTML tags and render text only |
<RichTextField>
also accepts the common field props.
The stripTags
prop allows to remove all HTML markup, preventing some display glitches (which is especially useful in list views, or when truncating the content).
import { RichTextField } from 'react-admin';
<RichTextField source="body" stripTags />
The simplest of all fields, <TextField>
simply displays the record property as plain text.
import { TextField } from 'react-admin';
<TextField label="Author Name" source="name" />
<UrlField>
displays an url in an <a href="">
tag.
import { UrlField } from 'react-admin';
<UrlField source="site_url" />
All field components accept a className
prop, allowing you to customize their style to your liking. We advise you to use the Material UI styling solution, JSS, to generate those classes. See their documentation about that.
import { makeStyles } from '@material-ui/core/styles';
const useStyles = makeStyles({
price: { color: 'purple' },
});
const PriceField = props => {
const classes = useStyles();
return <TextField className={classes.price} {...props} />;
};
export const ProductList = (props) => (
<List {...props}>
<Datagrid>
<PriceField source="price" />
</Datagrid>
</List>
);
// renders in the Datagrid as
<td><span class="[class name generated by JSS]">2</span></td>
React-admin usually delegates the rendering of field components to material-ui components. Refer to the material-ui documentation to see the default styles for elements.
You may want to customize the cell style inside a DataGrid
. You can use the cellClassName
for that:
{% raw %}
import { makeStyles } from '@material-ui/core/styles';
const useStyles = makeStyles({
priceCell: { fontWeight: 'bold' },
});
const PriceField = props => {
const classes = useStyles();
return <TextField cellClassName={classes.priceCell} {...props} />;
};
export const ProductList = (props) => (
<List {...props}>
<Datagrid>
<PriceField source="price" />
</Datagrid>
</List>
);
// renders in the Datagrid as
<td class="[class name generated by JSS]"><span>2</span></td>
{% endraw %}
You may want to override the field header (the <th>
element in the Datagrid
). In that case, use the headerClassName
prop:
{% raw %}
import { makeStyles } from '@material-ui/core/styles';
const useStyles = makeStyles({
priceHeader: { fontWeight: 'bold' },
});
const PriceField = props => {
const classes = useStyles();
return <TextField headerClassName={classes.priceHeader} {...props} />;
}
export const ProductList = (props) => (
<List {...props}>
<Datagrid>
<PriceField source="price" />
</Datagrid>
</List>
);
// renders in the table header as
<th class="[class name generated by JSS]"><button>Price</button></th>
{% endraw %}
Finally, sometimes, you just want to right align the text of a cell. Use the textAlign
prop, which accepts either left
or right
:
{% raw %}
const PriceField = props => (
<TextField {...props} />
);
PriceField.defaultProps = {
textAlign: 'right',
};
{% endraw %}
You can find components for react-admin in third-party repositories.
- OoDeLally/react-admin-clipboard-list-field: a quick and customizable copy-to-clipboard field.
If you don't find what you need in the list above, you can write your own Field component. It must be a regular React component, accepting not only a source
attribute, but also a record
attribute. React-admin will inject the record
based on the API response data at render time. The field component only needs to find the source
in the record
and display it.
For instance, here is an equivalent of react-admin's <TextField>
component:
import * as React from "react";
import PropTypes from 'prop-types';
const TextField = ({ source, record = {} }) => <span>{record[source]}</span>;
TextField.propTypes = {
label: PropTypes.string,
record: PropTypes.object,
source: PropTypes.string.isRequired,
};
export default TextField;
Tip: The label
attribute isn't used in the render()
method, but react-admin uses it to display the table header.
Tip: If you want to support deep field sources (e.g. source values like author.name
), use lodash/get
to replace the simple object lookup:
import get from 'lodash/get';
const TextField = ({ source, record = {} }) => <span>{get(record, source)}</span>;
If you are not looking for reusability, you can create even simpler components, with no attributes. Let's say an API returns user records with firstName
and lastName
properties, and that you want to display a full name in a user list.
{
id: 123,
firstName: 'John',
lastName: 'Doe'
}
The component will be:
import * as React from "react";
import { List, Datagrid, TextField } from 'react-admin';
const FullNameField = ({ record = {} }) => <span>{record.firstName} {record.lastName}</span>;
FullNameField.defaultProps = { label: 'Name' };
export const UserList = (props) => (
<List {...props}>
<Datagrid>
<FullNameField source="lastName" />
</Datagrid>
</List>
);
Tip: In such custom fields, the source
is optional. React-admin uses it to determine which column to use for sorting when the column header is clicked. In case you use the source
property for additional purposes, the sorting can be overridden by the sortBy
property on any Field
component.
React-admin lets you use the same Field
components in the List
view and in the Show
view. But if you use the <FullNameField>
custom field component defined earlier in a Show
view, something is missing: the Field
label. Why do other fields have a label and not this custom Field
? And how can you create a Field
component that has a label in the Show
view, but not in the List
view?
React-admin uses a trick: the Show
view layouts (<SimpleShowLayout>
and <TabbedShowLayout>
) inspect their Field
children, and whenever one has the addLabel
prop set to true
, the layout adds a label.
That means that the only thing you need to add to a custom component to make it usable in a Show
view is an addLabel: true
default prop.
FullNameField.defaultProps = {
addLabel: true,
};
In a Show view, you may want to display or hide fields based on the value of another field - for instance, show an email
field only if the hasEmail
boolean field is true
.
For such cases, you can use the custom field approach: use the injected record
prop, and render another Field based on the value.
import * as React from "react";
import { EmailField } from 'react-admin';
const ConditionalEmailField = ({ record, ...rest }) =>
record && record.hasEmail
? <EmailField source="email" record={record} {...rest} />
: null;
export default ConditionalEmailField;
Tip: Always check the record
is defined before inspecting its properties, as react-admin displays the Show
view before fetching the record from the data provider. So the first time it renders the show view for a resource, the record
is undefined
.
This ConditionalEmailField
is properly hidden when hasEmail
is false
. But when hasEmail
is true
, the Show layout renders it... without a label. And if you add a addLabel
default prop, the Show
layout will render the label regardless of the hasEmail
value...
One solution is to add the label manually in the custom component:
import * as React from "react";
import { Labeled, EmailField } from 'react-admin';
const ConditionalEmailField = ({ record, ...rest }) =>
record && record.hasEmail
? (
<Labeled label="Email">
<EmailField source="email" record={record} {...rest} />
</Labeled>
)
: null;
export default ConditionalEmailField;
This comes with a drawback, though: the <ConditionalEmailField>
cannot be used in a List view anymore, as it will always have a label. If you want to reuse the custom component in a List, this isn't the right solution.
An alternative solution is to split the <Show>
component. Under the hood, the <Show>
component is composed of two sub-components: the <ShowController>
component, which fetches the record, and the <ShowView>
, which is responsible for rendering the view title, actions, and children. <ShowController>
uses the render props pattern:
// inside react-admin
const Show = props => (
<ShowController {...props}>
{controllerProps => <ShowView {...props} {...controllerProps} />}
</ShowController>
);
The <ShowController>
fetches the record
from the data provider, and passes it to its child function when received (among the controllerProps
). That means the following code:
import { Show, SimpleShowLayout, TextField } from 'react-admin';
const UserShow = props => (
<Show {...props}>
<SimpleShowLayout>
<TextField source="username" />
<TextField source="email" />
</SimpleShowLayout>
</Show>
);
Is equivalent to:
import { ShowController, ShowView, SimpleShowLayout, TextField } from 'react-admin';
const UserShow = props => (
<ShowController {...props}>
{controllerProps =>
<ShowView {...props} {...controllerProps}>
<SimpleShowLayout>
<TextField source="username" />
<TextField source="email" />
</SimpleShowLayout>
</ShowView>
}
</ShowController>
);
If you want one field to be displayed based on the record
, for instance to display the email field only if the hasEmail
field is true
, you just need to test the value from controllerProps.record
, as follows:
import { ShowController, ShowView, SimpleShowLayout, TextField } from 'react-admin';
const UserShow = props => (
<ShowController {...props}>
{controllerProps =>
<ShowView {...props} {...controllerProps}>
<SimpleShowLayout>
<TextField source="username" />
{controllerProps.record && controllerProps.record.hasEmail &&
<TextField source="email" />
}
</SimpleShowLayout>
</ShowView>
}
</ShowController>
);
And now you can use a regular Field component, and the label displays correctly in the Show view.