A simple, small, and content-agnostic modal for Svelte.
Live demo: https://svelte.dev/repl/033e824fad0a4e34907666e7196caec4?version=3.20.1
Works with: Svelte >=v3.4
(Tested until to v3.20
)
npm install --save svelte-simple-modal
Import the Modal
component into your main Svelte component (e.g., App.svelte
).
The Modal
is exposing two context functions open()
and close()
for opening
and closing the modal. open()
expects two arguments: a Svelte Component
and optionally an object literal with the component's props
.
<!-- App.svelte -->
<script>
import Content from './Content.svelte';
import Modal from 'svelte-simple-modal';
</script>
<Modal>
<Content />
</Modal>
<!-- Content.svelte -->
<script>
import { getContext } from 'svelte';
import Surprise from './Surprise.svelte';
const { open } = getContext('simple-modal');
const showSurprise = () => {
open(Surprise, { message: "It's a modal!" });
};
</script>
<p><button on:click={showSurprise}>Show me a surprise!</button></p>
<!-- Surprise.svelte -->
<script>
export let message;
</script>
<p>
๐ {message} ๐พ
</p>
IMPORTANT: In your main application's bundler you need to make sure that the
svelte
dependencies are resolved globally, meaning that the main application's
version of svelte
is used for bundling.
If you're using Rollup you can achieve this by setting the dedupe
option of rollup-plugin-node-resolve
as follows:
import resolve from 'rollup-plugin-node-resolve';
export default {
plugins: [
resolve({
// Below is the important line!
dedupe: ['svelte', 'svelte/transition', 'svelte/internal']
}),
]
};
FOR SAPPER USERS: If you're using Sapper make sure you install svelte-simple-modal as a dev-dependency! If you're curious why please take a look at https://github.com/sveltejs/sapper-template#using-external-components
npm install -D svelte-simple-modal
The <Modal />
component accepts the following properties:
- show: A Svelte component to show as the modal. See an alternative to the context API for details.
- key: The context key that is used to expose
open()
andclose()
. Adjust to avoid clashes with other contexts. (Default:simple-modal
) - setContext: You can normally ingore this property when you have configured your app bundler properly. If you want to bundle simple-modal with its own version of Svelte you have to pass
setContext()
from your main app to simple-modal using this parameter. (Default:setContext()
of the associatedsvelte
version.) - closeButton: If
true
a button for closing the modal is rendered. Note, you can also pass in a custom Svelte component as the close button to have full control over the styling. (Default:true
) - closeOnEsc: If
true
the modal will close when pressing the escape key. (Default:true
) - closeOnOuterClick: If
true
the modal will close when clicking outside the modal window. (Default:true
) - transitionBg: Transition function for the background. (Default
svelte:fade
) - transitionBgProps: Properties of the transition function for the background. (Default
{}
) - transitionWindow: Transition function for the window. (Default
svelte:fade
) - transitionWindowProps: Properties of the transition function for the window. (Default
{}
) - styleBg: Style properties of the background. (Default
{top: 0, left: 0}
) - styleWindowWrap: Style properties of the modal window wrapper element. (Default
{}
) - styleWindow: Style properties of the modal window. (Default
{}
) - styleContent: Style properties of the modal content. (Default
{}
) - styleCloseButton: Style properties of the built-in close button. (Default
{}
)
The <Modal />
component dispatches the following events:
open
: dispatched when the modal window starts to open.opened
: dispatched when the modal window opened.close
: dispatched when the modal window starts to close.closed
: dispatched when the modal window closed.
Alternatively, you can listen to those events via callbacks passed to open()
and close()
.
You can access the context via getContext('simple-modal')
. It exposes the following two methods:
# open(Component, props = {}, options = {}, callbacks = {})
Opens the modal with <Component {props}>
rendered as the content. options
can be used to adjust the modal behavior once for the modal that is about to be opened. The options
allows to customize all parameters except key
and setContext
:
{
closeButton: false,
closeOnEsc: false,
closeOnOuterClick: false,
transitionBg: fade,
transitionBgProps: {
duration: 5000
},
transitionWindow: fly,
transitionWindowProps: {
y: 100,
duration: 250
},
styleBg: { backgroundImage: 'http://example.com/my-background.jpg' },
styleWindow: { fontSize: '20em' },
styleContent: { color: 'yellow' },
styleCloseButton: { width: '3rem', height: '3rem' }
}
Callbacks are triggered at the beginning and end of the opening and closing transition. The following callbacks are supported:
{
onOpen: () => { /* modal window starts to open */ },
onOpened: () => { /* modal window opened */ },
onClose: () => { /* modal window starts to close */ },
onClosed: () => { /* modal window closed */ },
}
This feature requires Svelte >=v3.19!
Unfortunately, it's not possible to adjust all styles of the built-in close button via the styleCloseButton
option. If you need full control you can implement your own Svelte component and use that as the close button. To do so specify your component via the closeButton
option as follows:
<!-- CloseButton.svelte -->
<script>
// This property is used by Modal.svelte to pass down the close function
export let onClose;
</script>
<style>
/* Customize to your liking */
button {
position: absolute;
top: -3rem;
right: 0;
}
</style>
<button on:click={onClose}>Custom Close Button</button>
<!-- Content.svelte -->
<script>
import { getContext } from 'svelte';
import Surprise from './Surprise.svelte';
import CloseButton from './CloseButton.svelte';
const { open } = getContext('simple-modal');
const showSurprise = () => {
open(Surprise, { message: "It's a modal!" }, { closeButton: CloseButton });
};
</script>
<p><button on:click={showSurprise}>Show me a surprise!</button></p>
# close(callbacks = {})
Closes the modal. Similar to open()
, this method supports adding callbacks for the closing transition:
{
onClose: () => { /* modal window starts to close */ },
onClosed: () => { /* modal window closed */ },
}
If you prefer stores over the context API, e.g., to open a modal from a component that is not a child of <Modal />
, you can use the show
property of <Modal />
as follows:
<!-- App.svelte -->
<script>
import { writable } from 'svelte/store';
import Content from './Content.svelte';
import Popup from './Popup.svelte';
export const modal = writable(null);
function showModal() {
modal.set(Popup)
}
</script>
<Content />
<button on:click={showModal}>Show modal</button>
<!-- Content.svelte -->
<script>
import Modal from 'svelte-simple-modal';
import SomethingElse from './SomethingElse.svelte';
import { modal } from './App.svelte';
</script>
<Modal show={$modal}>
<SomethingElse />
</Modal>
Since it was not obvious to me how to pre-bind props to a Svelte component, I've added a helper function called bind
that achieves this.
<script>
import { bind } from 'svelte-simple-modal';
import Popup from './Popup.svelte';
import { modal } from './App.svelte';
modal.set(bind(Popup, { name: 'custom name' }));
</script>
If you've worked with React/JSX then think of const c = bind(Component, props)
as the equivalent of const c = <Component ...props />
.