Dialog
A dialog is a window overlaid on either the primary window or another dialog window. Content behind a modal dialog is inert, meaning that users cannot interact with it.
Features
- Supports modal and non-modal modes.
- Focus is trapped and scrolling is blocked in the modal mode.
- Provides screen reader announcements via rendered title and description.
- Pressing
Esccloses the dialog.
Installation
To use the dialog machine in your project, run the following command in your command line:
npm install @zag-js/dialog @zag-js/react # or yarn add @zag-js/dialog @zag-js/react
npm install @zag-js/dialog @zag-js/solid # or yarn add @zag-js/dialog @zag-js/solid
npm install @zag-js/dialog @zag-js/vue # or yarn add @zag-js/dialog @zag-js/vue
npm install @zag-js/dialog @zag-js/vue # or yarn add @zag-js/dialog @zag-js/vue
This command will install the framework agnostic dialog logic and the reactive utilities for your framework of choice.
Anatomy
To use the dialog component correctly, you'll need to understand its anatomy and how we name its parts.
Each part includes a
data-partattribute to help identify them in the DOM.
Usage
First, import the dialog package into your project
import * as dialog from "@zag-js/dialog"
The dialog package exports two key functions:
machine— The state machine logic for the dialog widget as described in WAI-ARIA specification.connect— The function that translates the machine's state to JSX attributes and event handlers.
You'll need to provide a unique
idto theuseMachinehook. This is used to ensure that every part has a unique identifier.
Next, import the required hooks and functions for your framework and use the dialog machine in your project 🔥
import * as dialog from "@zag-js/dialog" import { useMachine, normalizeProps, Portal } from "@zag-js/react" export function Dialog() { const [state, send] = useMachine(dialog.machine({ id: "1" })) const api = dialog.connect(state, send, normalizeProps) return ( <> <button {...api.triggerProps}>Open Dialog</button> {api.isOpen && ( <Portal> <div {...api.backdropProps} /> <div {...api.positionerProps}> <div {...api.contentProps}> <h2 {...api.titleProps}>Edit profile</h2> <p {...api.descriptionProps}> Make changes to your profile here. Click save when you are done. </p> <div> <input placeholder="Enter name..." /> <button>Save</button> </div> <button {...api.closeTriggerProps}>Close</button> </div> </div> </Portal> )} </> ) }
import * as dialog from "@zag-js/dialog" import { Portal } from "solid-js/web" import { useMachine, normalizeProps } from "@zag-js/solid" import { createMemo, createUniqueId, Show } from "solid-js" export default function Page() { const [state, send] = useMachine(dialog.machine({ id: createUniqueId() })) const api = createMemo(() => dialog.connect(state, send, normalizeProps)) return ( <> <button {...api().triggerProps}>Open Dialog</button> <Show when={api().isOpen}> <Portal> <div {...api().backdropProps} /> <div {...api().positionerProps}> <div {...api().contentProps}> <h2 {...api().titleProps}>Edit profile</h2> <p {...api().descriptionProps}> Make changes to your profile here. Click save when you are done. </p> <button {...api().closeTriggerProps}>X</button> <input placeholder="Enter name..." /> <button>Save Changes</button> </div> </div> </Portal> </Show> </> ) }
import * as dialog from "@zag-js/dialog" import { normalizeProps, useMachine } from "@zag-js/vue" import { computed, defineComponent, h, Fragment, Teleport } from "vue" export default defineComponent({ name: "Dialog", setup() { const [state, send] = useMachine(dialog.machine({ id: "1" })) const apiRef = computed(() => dialog.connect(state.value, send, normalizeProps), ) return () => { const api = apiRef.value return ( <> <button {...api.triggerProps}>Open Dialog</button> {api.isOpen && ( <Teleport to="body"> <div {...api.backdropProps} /> <div {...api.positionerProps}> <div {...api.contentProps}> <h2 {...api.titleProps}>Edit profile</h2> <p {...api.descriptionProps}> Make changes to your profile here. Click save when you are done. </p> <button {...api.closeTriggerProps}>X</button> <input placeholder="Enter name..." /> <button>Save Changes</button> </div> </div> </Teleport> )} </> ) } }, })
<script setup> import * as dialog from "@zag-js/dialog"; import { normalizeProps, useMachine } from "@zag-js/vue"; import { computed, Teleport } from "vue"; const [state, send] = useMachine(dialog.machine({ id: "1" })); const api = computed(() => dialog.connect(state.value, send, normalizeProps)); </script> <template> <button ref="ref" v-bind="api.triggerProps">Open Dialog</button> <Teleport to="body"> <div v-if="api.isOpen"> <div v-bind="api.backdropProps" /> <div v-bind="api.positionerProps"> <div v-bind="api.contentProps"> <h2 v-bind="api.titleProps">Edit profile</h2> <p v-bind="api.descriptionProps"> Make changes to your profile here. Click save when you are done. </p> <button v-bind="api.closeTriggerProps">X</button> <input placeholder="Enter name..." /> <button>Save Changes</button> </div> </div> </div> </Teleport> </template>
Managing focus within the dialog
When the dialog opens, it automatically sets focus on the first focusable elements and traps focus within it, so that tabbing is constrained to it.
To control the element that should receive focus on open, pass the
initialFocusEl context (which can be an element or a function that returns an
element)
export function Dialog() { // initial focused element ref const inputRef = useRef(null) const [state, send] = useMachine( dialog.machine({ initialFocusEl: () => inputRef.current, }), ) // ... return ( //... <input ref={inputRef} /> // ... ) }
export function Dialog() { // initial focused element signal const [inputEl, setInputEl] = createSignal() const [state, send] = useMachine( dialog.machine({ initialFocusEl: inputEl, }), ) // ... return ( //... <input ref={setInputEl} /> // ... ) }
export default defineComponent({ name: "Dialog", setup() { // initial focused element ref const inputRef = ref(null) const [state, send] = useMachine( dialog.machine({ initialFocusEl: () => inputRef.value, }), ) // ... return () => ( //... <input ref={inputRef} /> // ... ) }, })
<script setup> import { ref } from "vue"; // initial focused element ref const inputRef = ref(null); const [state, send] = useMachine( dialog.machine({ initialFocusEl: () => inputRef.value, }) ); </script> <template> <input ref="inputRef" /> </template>
To set the element that receives focus when the dialog closes, pass the
finalFocusEl in the similar fashion as shown above.
Closing the dialog on interaction outside
By default, the dialog closes when you click its overlay. You can set
closeOnInteractOutside to false if you want the modal to stay visible.
const [state, send] = useMachine( dialog.machine({ closeOnInteractOutside: false, }), )
Listening for open state changes
When the dialog is opened or closed, the onOpenChange callback is invoked.
const [state, send] = useMachine( dialog.machine({ onOpenChange(details) { // details => { open: boolean } console.log("open:", details.open) }, }), )
Controlling the scroll behavior
When the dialog is open, it prevents scrolling on the body element. To disable
this behavior, set the preventScroll context to false.
const [state, send] = useMachine( dialog.machine({ preventScroll: false, }), )
Creating an alert dialog
The dialog has support for dialog and alert dialog roles. It's set to dialog
by default. To change it's role, pass the role: alertdialog property to the
machine's context.
That's it! Now you have an alert dialog.
const [state, send] = useMachine( dialog.machine({ role: "alertdialog", }), )
By definition, an alert dialog will contain two or more action buttons. We recommended setting focus to the least destructive action via
initialFocusEl
Styling guide
Earlier, we mentioned that each accordion part has a data-part attribute added
to them to select and style them in the DOM.
[data-part="trigger"] { /* styles for the trigger element */ } [data-part="backdrop"] { /* styles for the backdrop element */ } [data-part="positioner"] { /* styles for the positioner element */ } [data-part="content"] { /* styles for the content element */ } [data-part="title"] { /* styles for the title element */ } [data-part="description"] { /* styles for the description element */ } [data-part="close-trigger"] { /* styles for the close trigger element */ }
Open and closed state
The dialog has two states: open and closed. You can use the data-state
attribute to style the dialog or trigger based on its state.
[data-part="content"][data-state="open|closed"] { /* styles for the open state */ } [data-part="trigger"][data-state="open|closed"] { /* styles for the open state */ }
Methods and Properties
Machine Context
The dialog machine exposes the following context properties:
idsPartial<{ trigger: string; positioner: string; backdrop: string; content: string; closeTrigger: string; title: string; description: string; }>The ids of the elements in the dialog. Useful for composition.trapFocusbooleanWhether to trap focus inside the dialog when it's openedpreventScrollbooleanWhether to prevent scrolling behind the dialog when it's openedmodalbooleanWhether to prevent pointer interaction outside the element and hide all content below itinitialFocusElHTMLElement | (() => HTMLElement)Element to receive focus when the dialog is openedfinalFocusElHTMLElement | (() => HTMLElement)Element to receive focus when the dialog is closedrestoreFocusbooleanWhether to restore focus to the element that had focus before the dialog was openedonOpenChange(details: OpenChangeDetails) => voidCallback to be invoked when the dialog is opened or closedcloseOnInteractOutsidebooleanWhether to close the dialog when the outside is clickedcloseOnEscapeKeyDownbooleanWhether to close the dialog when the escape key is pressedonEscapeKeyDown(event: KeyboardEvent) => voidCallback to be invoked when the escape key is pressedaria-labelstringHuman readable label for the dialog, in event the dialog title is not renderedrole"dialog" | "alertdialog"The dialog's roleopenbooleanWhether the dialog is opendir"ltr" | "rtl"The document's text/writing direction.idstringThe unique identifier of the machine.getRootNode() => Node | ShadowRoot | DocumentA root node to correctly resolve document in custom environments. E.x.: Iframes, Electron.onPointerDownOutside(event: PointerDownOutsideEvent) => voidFunction called when the pointer is pressed down outside the componentonFocusOutside(event: FocusOutsideEvent) => voidFunction called when the focus is moved outside the componentonInteractOutside(event: InteractOutsideEvent) => voidFunction called when an interaction happens outside the component
Machine API
The dialog api exposes the following methods:
isOpenbooleanWhether the dialog is openopen() => voidFunction to open the dialogclose() => voidFunction to close the dialog
Edit this page on GitHub