use-keyup
React hook for listening to custom keyup
events.
Introduction
This hook optimizes keyboard event handling by only initializing a single event listener for each target used, resulting in a more streamlined and efficient process.
This library is also SSR safe, and only runs on the client.
Installation
Install this package with npm
.
npm i @buildinams/use-keyup
Usage
To listen to a single key:
import useKeyup from "@buildinams/use-keyup";
useKeyup("Escape", () => {}); // Do something on "Escape"...
To listen to key modifiers:
import useKeyup from "@buildinams/use-keyup";
useKeyup("KeyG", (event: KeyboardEvent) => {
if (event.ctrlKey) // Do something on "Ctrl + G"...
});
To listen to multiple keys:
import useKeyup from "@buildinams/use-keyup";
useKeyup(["KeyA", "KeyG"], () => {}); // Do something on "A" or "G"...
Note: When using multiple keys, the callback will be called if any of the defined keys are pressed.
Using Custom Targets
By default, the hook will listen to the window
object. You can however listen to any custom target by passing it as target
within the optional config object. This accepts any object that extends EventTarget
, such as; document
or HTMLElement
. For example:
import useKeyup from "@buildinams/use-keyup";
const elementRef = useRef<HTMLDivElement>(null);
useKeyup("Enter", () => {}, { target: elementRef });
Conditionally Listening to Events
You can conditionally listen to events by passing a isEnabled
prop the config object. This accepts a boolean
value, and will only listen to events if the value is true
(default). For example:
import useKeyup from "@buildinams/use-keyup";
const [isEnabled, setIsEnabled] = useState(false);
useKeyup("Enter", () => {}, { isEnabled });
Requirements
This library requires a minimum React version of 17.0.0
.
Requests and Contributing
Found an issue? Want a new feature? Get involved! Please contribute using our guideline here.