Refs and the DOM
Refs provide a way to access DOM nodes or React elements created in the render method.
In the typical React dataflow, props are the only way that parent components interact with their children. To modify a child, you re-render it with new props. However, there are a few cases where you need to imperatively modify a child outside of the typical dataflow. The child to be modified could be an instance of a React component, or it could be a DOM element. For both of these cases, React provides an escape hatch.
When to Use Refs
There are a few good use cases for refs:
- Managing focus, text selection, or media playback.
- Triggering imperative animations.
- Integrating with third-party DOM libraries.
Avoid using refs for anything that can be done declaratively.
For example, instead of exposing open()
and close()
methods on a Dialog
component, pass an isOpen
prop to it.
Don’t Overuse Refs
Your first inclination may be to use refs to “make things happen” in your app. If this is the case, take a moment and think more critically about where state should be owned in the component hierarchy. Often, it becomes clear that the proper place to “own” that state is at a higher level in the hierarchy. See the Lifting State Up guide for examples of this.
Note
The examples below have been updated to use the
React.createRef()
API introduced in React 16.3. If you are using an earlier release of React, we recommend using callback refs instead.
Creating Refs
Refs are created using the useRef
hook and attached to React elements via the ref
attribute.
function MyComponent() {
const myRef = useRef(null);
return <div ref={myRef} />;}
Accessing Refs
When a ref is passed to an element, a reference to the node becomes accessible at the current
attribute of the ref.
const node = myRef.current;
The value of the ref differs depending on the type of the node:
- When the
ref
attribute is used on an HTML element, theref
created withuseRef
receives the underlying DOM element as itscurrent
property. - When the
ref
attribute is used on a custom class component, theref
object receives the mounted instance of the component as itscurrent
.
The examples below demonstrate the differences.
Adding a Ref to a DOM Element
This code uses a ref
to store a reference to a DOM node:
function CustomTextInput() {
// create a ref to store the textInput DOM element
const textInput = useRef(null);
function focusTextInput() {
// Explicitly focus the text input using the raw DOM API
// Note: we're accessing "current" to get the DOM node
textInput.current.focus(); }
// tell React that we want to associate the <input> ref
// with the `textInput` that we created in the constructor
return (
<div>
<input
type="text"
ref={textInput} /> <input
type="button"
value="Focus the text input"
onClick={focusTextInput}
/>
</div>
);
}
React will assign the current
property with the DOM element when the component mounts, and assign it back to null
when it unmounts. ref
updates happen before useEffect
functions get called.
Adding a Ref to a Component
If we wanted to wrap the CustomTextInput
above to simulate it being clicked immediately after mounting, we could use a ref to get access to the custom input and call its focusTextInput
function manually:
function AutoFocusTextInput() {
const textInput = useRef(null);
useEffect(() => {
textInput.current.focusTextInput(); }, [])
return (
<CustomTextInput ref={textInput} /> );
}
Exposing DOM Refs to Parent Components
In rare cases, you might want to have access to a child’s DOM node from a parent component. This is generally not recommended because it breaks component encapsulation, but it can occasionally be useful for triggering focus or measuring the size or position of a child DOM node.
While you could add a ref to the child component, this is not an ideal solution, as you would only get a component instance rather than a DOM node. Additionally, this wouldn’t work with function components.
If you use React 16.3 or higher, we recommend to use ref forwarding for these cases. Ref forwarding lets components opt into exposing any child component’s ref as their own. You can find a detailed example of how to expose a child’s DOM node to a parent component in the ref forwarding documentation.
If you use React 16.2 or lower, or if you need more flexibility than provided by ref forwarding, you can use this alternative approach and explicitly pass a ref as a differently named prop.
When possible, we advise against exposing DOM nodes, but it can be a useful escape hatch. Note that this approach requires you to add some code to the child component. If you have absolutely no control over the child component implementation, your last option is to use findDOMNode()
, but it is discouraged and deprecated in StrictMode
.