Editor
import { Editor } from 'slate-react'The top-level React component that renders the Slate editor itself.
Props
<Editor
id={String}
autoCorrect={Boolean}
autoFocus={Boolean}
className={String}
commands={Object}
onChange={Function}
placeholder={String | Element}
plugins={Array}
queries={Object}
readOnly={Boolean}
role={String}
schema={Object}
spellCheck={Boolean}
value={Value}
style={Object}
tabIndex={Number}
/>id
idString
Id for the top-level rendered HTML element of the editor.
autoCorrect
autoCorrectBoolean
Whether or not the editor should attempt to autocorrect spellcheck errors.
autoFocus
autoFocusBoolean
Whether or not the editor should attempt to give the contenteditable element focus when it's loaded onto the page.
className
classNameString
An optional class name to apply to the contenteditable element.
onChange
onChangeFunction onChange(change: Change)
A change handler that will be called with the change that applied the change. You should usually pass the newly changed change.value back into the editor through its value property. This hook allows you to add persistence logic to your editor.
placeholder
placeholderString || Element
A placeholder string (or React element) that will be rendered if the document only contains a single empty block.
plugins
pluginsArray
An array of Plugins that define the editor's behavior.
readOnly
readOnlyBoolean
Whether the editor should be in "read-only" mode, where all of the rendering is the same, but the user is prevented from editing the editor's content.
role
roleString
ARIA property to define the role of the editor, it defaults to textbox when editable.
spellCheck
spellCheckBoolean
Whether or not spellcheck is turned on for the editor.
style
styleObject
An optional dictionary of styles to apply to the contenteditable element.
tabIndex
tabIndexNumber
Indicates if it should participate to sequential keyboard navigation.
value
valueValue
A Value object representing the current value of the editor.
Plugin-like Props
In addition to its own properties, the editor allows passing any of the properties that a plugin defines as well.
These properties are actually just a convenience—an implicit plugin definition. Internally, they are grouped together and turned into a plugin that is given first priority in the plugin stack.
For example, these two snippets of code are equivalent:
const plugins = [
somePlugin
]
<Editor
onKeyDown={myKeyHandler}
plugins={plugins}
value={value}
/>const editorPlugin = {
onKeyDown: myKeyHandler
}
const plugins = [
editorPlugin,
somePlugin
]
<Editor
plugins={plugins}
value={value}
/>onBeforeInput
onBeforeInputonBlur
onBluronFocus
onFocusonCopy
onCopyonCut
onCutonDrop
onDroponKeyDown
onKeyDownonKeyUp
onKeyUponPaste
onPasteonSelect
onSelectschema
schemaTo see how these properties behave, check out the Plugins reference.
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