a tiny TS-compatible React hook which allows you to track visible window viewport size in your components w/ an optional debounce, throttle or custom memo function for updates for optimal rendering.
npm install -D use-viewport-sizes
- extremely lightweight and zero dependencies -- adds 2kb after gzip.
- only one
window.onresize
handler used to subscribe to any changes in an unlimited number of components no matter the use-cases. - optional debounce to delay updates until user stops dragging their window for a moment; this can make expensive components with size-dependent calculations run much faster and your app feel smoother.
- debouncing does not create new handlers or waste re-renders in your component; the results are also pooled from only one resize result.
- optional hash function to update component subtree only at points you would like to.
- supports lazy loaded components and SSR out of the box.
registers dimension changes on every resize event immediately
import useViewportSizes from 'use-viewport-sizes'
function MyComponent(props) {
const [vpWidth, vpHeight] = useViewportSizes();
// ...renderLogic
}
If passed options.dimension
as w
or h
, only the viewport width or height will be
measured and observed for updates.
The only dimension returned in the return array value will be the width or height, according
to what was passed.
import useViewportSizes from 'use-viewport-sizes';
function MyComponent(props) {
const [vpHeight] = useViewportSizes({ dimension: 'h' });
// ...renderLogic
}
If passed options.throttleTimeout
, or options are entered as a Number
, dimension changes
are registered on a throttled basis e.g. with a maximum frequency.
This is useful for listening to expensive components such as data grids which may be too expensive to re-render during window resize dragging.
import useViewportSizes from 'use-viewport-sizes';
function MyExpensivelyRenderedComponent(props) {
const [vpWidth, vpHeight] = useViewportSizes({ throttleTimeout: 1000 }); // 1s throttle
// ...renderLogic
}
If passed options.debounceTimeout
, dimension changes are registered only when a user stops dragging/resizing the window for a specified number of miliseconds. This is an alternative behavior to throttleTimeout
where it may be less
important to update viewport the entire way that a user is resizing.
import useViewportSizes from 'use-viewport-sizes';
function MyExpensivelyRenderedComponent(props) {
const [vpWidth, vpHeight] = useViewportSizes({ debounceTimeout: 1000 }); // 1s debounce
// ...renderLogic
}
If passed an options.hasher
function, this will be used to calculate a hash that only updates the viewport when the calculation changes. In the example here, we are using it to detect when we have a breakpoint change which may change how a component is rendered if this is not fully possible or inconvenient via CSS @media
queries. The hash will also be available as the 3rd value returned from the hook for convenience.
import useViewportSizes from 'use-viewport-sizes';
function getBreakpointHash({ vpW, vpH }) {
if(vpW <= 240) { return 'xs' }
if(vpW <= 320) { return 'sm' }
else if(vpW <= 640) { return 'md' }
else return 'lg';
}
function MyBreakpointBehaviorComponent() {
const [vpW, vpH] = useViewportSizes({ hasher: getBreakpointHash });
// do-something in render and add new update for vpW,
// vpH in this component's subtree only when a breakpoint
// hash updates
}
If you find any issues or would like to request something changed, please feel free to post an issue on Github.
Otherwise, if this was useful and you'd like to show your support, no donations necessary, but please consider checking out the repo and giving it a star (⭐).
- Open Source MIT license