Virtual Elements
Position a floating element relative to a custom reference area, useful for context menus, range selections, following the cursor, and more.
Usage
The most basic virtual element is a plain object that has a
getBoundingClientRect
method, which mimics a real
element’s one:
// A virtual element that is 20 x 20 px starting from (0, 0)
const virtualEl = {
getBoundingClientRect() {
return {
x: 0,
y: 0,
top: 0,
left: 0,
bottom: 20,
right: 20,
width: 20,
height: 20,
};
},
};
computePosition(virtualEl, floatingEl);
A point reference, such as a mouse event, is one such use case:
function onClick({clientX, clientY}) {
const virtualEl = {
getBoundingClientRect() {
return {
width: 0,
height: 0,
x: clientX,
y: clientY,
top: clientY,
left: clientX,
right: clientX,
bottom: clientY,
};
},
};
computePosition(virtualEl, floatingEl).then(({x, y}) => {
// Position the floating element relative to the click
});
}
document.addEventListener('click', onClick);
contextElement
This property is useful if your
getBoundingClientRect
method is derived from a real
element, to ensure clipping and position update detection works
as expected.
const virtualEl = {
getBoundingClientRect() {
return {
// ...
};
},
contextElement: document.querySelector('#context'),
};
getClientRects
This property is useful when using range selections and the
inline
middleware.
const virtualEl = {
getBoundingClientRect: () => range.getBoundingClientRect(),
getClientRects: () => range.getClientRects(),
};