A fork of react-tabs which supports server side rendering
The current version of react tabs cannot be used for server side rendering. Check the issue here - #56
This is a hacky fix to get it working by passing a custom id generation function to the <Tabs>
component, which does not use a stateful counter to assign ids to the children of <Tabs>
It isn't the ideal solution, but till the original authors have a better idea, this seems like the only way to get it working.
Supports React ^0.14.0 or ^15.0.0
$ npm install react-tabs-isomorphic --save
import React, { Component } from 'react';
import { render } from 'react-dom';
import { Tab, Tabs, TabList, TabPanel } from 'react-tabs';
let idCounter = 0;
const generateIds = () => `custom-id-${idCounter++}`
class App extends Component {
handleSelect(index, last) {
console.log('Selected tab: ' + index + ', Last tab: ' + last);
}
render() {
return (
{/*
<Tabs/> is a composite component and acts as the main container.
`onSelect` is called whenever a tab is selected. The handler for
this function will be passed the current index as well as the last index.
`selectedIndex` is the tab to select when first rendered. By default
the first (index 0) tab will be selected.
`forceRenderTabPanel` By default this react-tabs will only render the selected
tab's contents. Setting `forceRenderTabPanel` to `true` allows you to override the
default behavior, which may be useful in some circumstances (such as animating between tabs).
*/}
<Tabs
onSelect={this.handleSelect}
selectedIndex={2}
generateIdsFn={generateIds}
>
{/*
<TabList/> is a composit component and is the container for the <Tab/>s.
*/}
<TabList>
{/*
<Tab/> is the actual tab component that users will interact with.
Selecting a tab can be done by either clicking with the mouse,
or by using the keyboard tab to give focus then navigating with
the arrow keys (right/down to select tab to the right of selected,
left/up to select tab to the left of selected).
The content of the <Tab/> (this.props.children) will be shown as the label.
*/}
<Tab>Foo</Tab>
<Tab>Bar</Tab>
<Tab>Baz</Tab>
</TabList>
{/*
<TabPanel/> is the content for the tab.
There should be an equal number of <Tab/> and <TabPanel/> components.
<Tab/> and <TabPanel/> components are tied together by the order in
which they appear. The first (index 0) <Tab/> will be associated with
the <TabPanel/> of the same index. Running this example when
`selectedIndex` is 0 the tab with the label "Foo" will be selected
and the content shown will be "Hello from Foo".
As with <Tab/> the content of <TabPanel/> will be shown as the content.
*/}
<TabPanel>
<h2>Hello from Foo</h2>
</TabPanel>
<TabPanel>
<h2>Hello from Bar</h2>
</TabPanel>
<TabPanel>
<h2>Hello from Baz</h2>
</TabPanel>
</Tabs>
);
}
}
render(<App/>, document.getElementById('container'));
MIT