Handle change on Autocomplete Component from material ui
Are you sure you used onChange
correctly?
onChange
signature: function(event: object, value: any) => void
I needed to hit my api on every input change to get my tags from backend!
Use Material-ui onInputChange if you want to get your suggested tags on every input change!
this.state = {
// labels are temp, will change every time on auto complete
labels: [],
// these are the ones which will be send with content
selectedTags: [],
}
}
//to get the value on every input change
onInputChange(event,value){
console.log(value)
//response from api
.then((res) => {
this.setState({
labels: res
})
})
}
//to select input tags
onSelectTag(e, value) {
this.setState({
selectedTags: value
})
}
<Autocomplete
multiple
options={top100Films}
getOptionLabel={option => option.title}
onChange={this.onSelectTag} // click on the show tags
onInputChange={this.onInputChange} //** on every input change hitting my api**
filterSelectedOptions
renderInput={(params) => (
<TextField
{...params}
variant="standard"
label="Multiple values"
placeholder="Favorites"
margin="normal"
fullWidth
/>
As Yuki already mentioned, make sure you did use the onChange
function properly. It receives two parameters. According to the documentation:
Signature:
function(event: object, value: any) => void
.
event
: The event source of the callback
value
: null (The value/values within the Autocomplete component).
Here's an example:
import React from 'react';
import Chip from '@material-ui/core/Chip';
import Autocomplete from '@material-ui/lab/Autocomplete';
import TextField from '@material-ui/core/TextField';
export default class Tags extends React.Component {
constructor(props) {
super(props);
this.state = {
tags: []
};
this.onTagsChange = this.onTagsChange.bind(this);
}
onTagsChange = (event, values) => {
this.setState({
tags: values
}, () => {
// This will output an array of objects
// given by Autocompelte options property.
console.log(this.state.tags);
});
}
render() {
return (
<div style={{ width: 500 }}>
<Autocomplete
multiple
options={top100Films}
getOptionLabel={option => option.title}
defaultValue={[top100Films[13]]}
onChange={this.onTagsChange}
renderInput={params => (
<TextField
{...params}
variant="standard"
label="Multiple values"
placeholder="Favorites"
margin="normal"
fullWidth
/>
)}
/>
</div>
);
}
}
const top100Films = [
{ title: 'The Shawshank Redemption', year: 1994 },
{ title: 'The Godfather', year: 1972 },
{ title: 'The Godfather: Part II', year: 1974 },
{ title: 'The Dark Knight', year: 2008 },
{ title: '12 Angry Men', year: 1957 },
{ title: "Schindler's List", year: 1993 },
{ title: 'Pulp Fiction', year: 1994 },
{ title: 'The Lord of the Rings: The Return of the King', year: 2003 },
{ title: 'The Good, the Bad and the Ugly', year: 1966 },
{ title: 'Fight Club', year: 1999 },
{ title: 'The Lord of the Rings: The Fellowship of the Ring', year: 2001 },
{ title: 'Star Wars: Episode V - The Empire Strikes Back', year: 1980 },
{ title: 'Forrest Gump', year: 1994 },
{ title: 'Inception', year: 2010 },
];
I wanted to update my state when I select an option from the autocomplete. I had a global onChange handler that manages for all inputs
const {name, value } = event.target;
setTukio({
...tukio,
[name]: value,
});
That updates the object dynamically based on the name of the field. But on the Autocomplete the name returns blank. So I changed the handler from onChange
to onSelect
. Then either create a separate function to handle the change or as in my case added an if statement to check if the name is not passed.
// This one will set state for my onSelect handler of the autocomplete
if (!name) {
setTukio({
...tukio,
tags: value,
});
} else {
setTukio({
...tukio,
[name]: value,
});
}
The above approach works if u have a single autocomplete. If you have multiple u can pass a custom function like below
<Autocomplete
options={tags}
getOptionLabel={option => option.tagName}
id="tags"
name="tags"
autoComplete
includeInputInList
onSelect={(event) => handleTag(event, 'tags')}
renderInput={(params) => <TextField {...params} hint="koo, ndama nyonya" label="Tags" margin="normal" />}
/>
// The handler
const handleTag = ({ target }, fieldName) => {
const { value } = target;
switch (fieldName) {
case 'tags':
console.log('Value ', value)
// Do your stuff here
break;
default:
}
};