auto Placement
Chooses the placement that has the most space available automatically.
import {autoPlacement} from '@floating-ui/dom';
This is useful when you don’t know which placement will be best for the floating element, or don’t want to have to explicitly specify it.
Usage
computePosition(referenceEl, floatingEl, {
middleware: [autoPlacement()],
});
Options
These are the options you can pass to autoPlacement()
.
interface AutoPlacementOptions extends DetectOverflowOptions {
crossAxis?: boolean;
alignment?: Alignment | null;
autoAlignment?: boolean;
allowedPlacements?: Array<Placement>;
}
crossAxis
default: false
Determines whether a “most space” strategy is also used for the
cross axis (which runs along the alignment of the floating
element). May be desirable when the allowedPlacements
are all on the same axis.
autoPlacement({
crossAxis: true,
});
alignment
default: undefined
Without options, autoPlacement()
will choose any of the
Side
placements which fit best, i.e. 'top'
,
'right'
, 'bottom'
, or 'left'
.
By specifying an alignment, it will choose those aligned placements.
autoPlacement({
// top-start, right-start, bottom-start, left-start
alignment: 'start',
});
autoAlignment
default: true
When alignment
is specified, this describes whether to
automatically choose placements with the opposite alignment if
they fit better.
autoPlacement({
alignment: 'start',
// Won't also choose 'end' alignments if those fit better
autoAlignment: false,
});
allowedPlacements
default: computed subset of allPlacements
Describes the placements which are allowed to be chosen.
autoPlacement({
// 'right' and 'left' won't be chosen
allowedPlacements: ['top', 'bottom'],
});
autoPlacement({
// Only choose these placements
allowedPlacements: ['top-start', 'bottom-end'],
});
…detectOverflowOptions
All of detectOverflow
’s options
can be passed. For instance:
autoPlacement({
padding: 5, // 0 by default
});
Deriving options from state
You can derive the options from the middleware lifecycle state:
autoPlacement((state) => ({
padding: state.rects.reference.width,
}));
Final placement
The placement returned is always the final one.
computePosition(referenceEl, floatingEl, {
middleware: [autoPlacement()],
}).then(({placement}) => {
console.log(placement); // any side
});
Conflict with flip()
flip()
and autoPlacement()
cannot be used together
inside the same middleware array; make sure you choose only one
of them to use.
The reason is they both try to perform work on the placement but with opposing strategies. Therefore, they will continually try to change the result or work of the other one, leading to a reset loop.
flip()
uses a fallback “no space” strategy. Ensures the preferred placement is kept unless there is no space left.autoPlacement()
uses a primary “most space” strategy. Always chooses the placement with the most space available.