A hook that will save you from endless scrolling problems! Infinite scrolling that really works and is very easy to integrate!
This hook allows you to create simple, lightweight components with infinite scrolling in all directions, supporting both windowed and scrollable elements.
Works with any third-party libraries, you just need to specify the correct container for the ref
object.
Check out the demo for some examples.
- ⏬ Universal - Ability to use all types of HTML elements or any UI or virtualized libraries
- 📦 Support for all loading directions - You can infinitely scroll a component in any direction or in all directions at once (
up
,down
,left
,right
) - 📏 No need to specify heights - No need to pass the dimensions of the component, scrollbar or element
- 💬 Support for "chat history" - Reverse mode includes
- 👫 Cross-browser - Works out-of-the-box for most browsers, regardless of version.
- ⚙️ Matches native API - Intuitive to use
- 🛠 Written in TypeScript - It'll fit right into your existing TypeScript project
- 📲 Mobile-friendly - Supports mobile devices and touch screens.
- ✅ Fully unit tested -
100%
test coverage - 🌳 Tree-shakeable - Only include the parts you use
- 💥 Lightweight - Around
~2.4kB
- 💨 No dependencies
# with npm
npm install --save react-easy-infinite-scroll-hook
# with yarn
yarn add react-easy-infinite-scroll-hook
You can create infinite scrolling in any direction
and in any pair
, for example: up-down
, down-right
, etc.
and even all at once
.
import useInfiniteScroll from 'react-easy-infinite-scroll-hook';
const InfiniteListComponent = ({ isLoading, items, canLoadMore, next }) => {
// TypeScript example:
// const ref = useInfiniteScroll<YourElemntType>(...props);
const ref = useInfiniteScroll({
// Function to fetch more items
next,
// The number of items loaded if you use the "Y-scroll" axis ("up" and "down")
// if you are using the "X-scroll" axis ("left" and "right") use "columnCount" instead
// you can also use "rowCount" and "columnCount" if you use "Y-scroll" and "X-scroll" at the same time
rowCount: items.length,
// Whether there are more items to load
// if marked "true" in the specified direction, it will try to load more items if the threshold is reached
// support for all directions "up", "down", "left", "right", both individually and in all directions at the same time
hasMore: { down: canLoadMore },
});
return (
<div
ref={ref}
style={{
height: 500,
overflowY: 'auto',
}}
>
{items.map((item) => (
<div key={item.key}>{item.value}</div>
))}
{isLoading && <div>Loading...</div>}
</div>
);
};
This hook supports all react-virtualized components (Collection
, Grid
, MultiGrid
, List
, Masonry
, Table
). Check out the demo for more examples.
Try it live:
Component | Description | Link |
---|---|---|
List | Virtualized List component with infinite scroll |
|
Grid | Virtualized Grid component with infinite scroll down and right |
import useInfiniteScroll from 'react-easy-infinite-scroll-hook';
import { List } from 'react-virtualized';
const VirtualizedInfiniteListComponent = ({ isLoading, items, canLoadMore, next }) => {
const ref = useInfiniteScroll({
next,
rowCount: items.length,
hasMore: { down: canLoadMore },
});
return (
<div>
<List
ref={ref}
width={500}
height={500}
rowHeight={60}
rowCount={items.length}
rowRenderer={({ key, index, style }) => {
const item = data[index];
return (
<div key={key} style={style}>
{item}
</div>
);
}}
/>
{isLoading && <div>Loading...</div>}
</div>
);
};
After initialization, this hook returns a React ref
object, which you must pass to your element ref
.
Name | Required | Description | Type | Default Value |
---|---|---|---|---|
next | Yes | A callback when more items are requested by the user. Receives a single parameter specifying the direction to load e.g. (direction) => Promise<void> |
Function | |
hasMore | Yes | Whether there are more items to load. If marked true in the specified direction, it will try to load more items if the threshold is reached. Expect object with directions to load { up: false, down: false, left: false, right: false } |
object | |
rowCount | Condition | Number of items in a vertical list (scroll axis Y ). Required if you are using vertical scroll. |
number | |
columnCount | Condition | Number of items in a horizontal list (scroll axis X ). Required if you are using horizontal scroll. |
number | |
onScroll | The callback is called when the container is scrolled: ({ clientHeight: number, scrollHeight: number, scrollTop: number, clientWidth: number, scrollWidth: number, scrollLeft: number }) => void |
Function | ||
initialScroll | The initial scroll position of the element, which is applied after the ref has been initialized | object | ||
reverse | The direction of the scroll axis is used to create scrolling in the opposite direction, for example when using the CSS style flex-direction: 'row-reverse' |
object | ||
scrollThreshold | The threshold at which the next function is called. It can be specified in pixels from the scrollbar value, for example '200px' and as a percentage of the container size from 0.1 to 1 (1 is 100% ) |
number or string | 1 |
|
windowScroll | When set to true , uses a window as the scroll element. If you are using a scroll window, then anything you pass to the ref will be ignored |
boolean | false |
react-easy-infinite-scroll-hook
aims to support all evergreen browsers and recent mobile browsers for iOS and Android. IE 9+ is also supported.
If you find a browser-specific problem, please report it.
- Any DOM element with scroll
- react-virtualized components
- @tanstack/virtual-core
Yes you can! To use it with other libraries you must specify the correct DOM element for the
ref
object.
Yes, just pass
reverse: { column: true }
to props forflex-direction: 'column-reverse'
orreverse: { row: true }
forflex-direction: 'row-reverse'
.
MultiGrid
is a complex component with a lot of scrollable containers, and to use it you must specify the correct container for theref
object:
import React, { useCallback } from 'react';
import useInfiniteScroll from 'react-easy-infinite-scroll-hook';
import { MultiGrid } from 'react-virtualized';
const VirtualizedInfiniteMultiGridComponent = ({ isLoading, items, canLoadMore, next }) => {
const ref = useInfiniteScroll({
next,
columnCount: items.length,
hasMore: { right: canLoadMore },
});
// Use `useCallback` so we don't recreate the function on each render - Could result in infinite loop
const selectRef = useCallback(
(node) => {
ref.current = node?._bottomRightGrid;
},
[ref]
);
return (
<div>
<MultiGrid ref={selectRef} {...props} />
{isLoading && <div>Loading...</div>}
</div>
);
};
react-easy-infinite-scroll-hook
works with any DOM element, so just specify the correct container for theref
object:
import React, { useCallback } from 'react';
import useInfiniteScroll from 'react-easy-infinite-scroll-hook';
import { FixedSizeList } from 'react-window';
const Component = ({ isLoading, items, canLoadMore, next }) => {
const ref = useInfiniteScroll({
next,
columnCount: items.length,
hasMore: { right: canLoadMore },
});
// Use `useCallback` so we don't recreate the function on each render - Could result in infinite loop
const setRef = useCallback((node) => {
if(node)
ref.current=node._outerRef
}, []);
return (
<FixedSizeList
ref={setRef}
className="List"
width={600}
height={500}
itemSize={60}
itemCount={items.length}
>
{Row}
</FixedSizeList>);
};
Please read through our contributing guidelines. Included are directions for opening issues, coding standards, and notes on development.
Code released under the MIT License.