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@cyntler/react-doc-viewer

File viewer for React.

This is a fork of https://github.com/Alcumus/react-doc-viewer (inactivity for a long time)

Supported file types

Extension MIME Type
bmp image/bmp
csv text/csv
doc application/msword
docx application/vnd.openxmlformats-officedocument.wordprocessingml.document
gif image/gif
htm text/htm
html text/html
jpg image/jpg
jpeg image/jpeg
pdf application/pdf
png image/png
ppt application/vnd.ms-powerpoint
pptx applicatiapplication/vnd.openxmlformats-officedocument.presentationml.presentation
tiff image/tiff
txt text/plain
xls application/vnd.ms-excel
xlsx application/vnd.openxmlformats-officedocument.spreadsheetml.sheet

Storybook Demo

https://cyntler.github.io/react-doc-viewer

Installation

Use one of the package managers for Node.js.

 npm i @cyntler/react-doc-viewer
 # or
 yarn add @cyntler/react-doc-viewer

Usage

Warning: By default the component height will expand and contract to the current loaded file. The width will expand to fill the parent.

Basic

DocViewer requires at least an array of document objects to function. Each document object must have a uri to a file, either a url that returns a file or a local file.

import DocViewer, { DocViewerRenderers } from "@cyntler/react-doc-viewer";

function App() {
  const docs = [
    { uri: "https://url-to-my-pdf.pdf" }, // Remote file
    { uri: require("./example-files/pdf.pdf") }, // Local File
  ];

  return <DocViewer documents={docs} pluginRenderers={DocViewerRenderers} />;
}

Initial Active Document

By default, the first item in your documents array will be displayed after the component is rendered. However, there is a prop initialActiveDocument that you can point to the initial document that should be displayed.

import DocViewer, { DocViewerRenderers } from "@cyntler/react-doc-viewer";

function App() {
  const docs = [
    { uri: "https://url-to-my-pdf.pdf" }, // Remote file
    { uri: require("./example-files/pdf.pdf") }, // Local File
  ];

  return (
    <DocViewer
      documents={docs}
      initialActiveDocument={docs[1]}
      pluginRenderers={DocViewerRenderers}
    />
  );
}

Displaying blob/uploaded documents

Since 1.6.2 you can use documents in the form of blobs, which allows you to e.g. display uploaded files.

const DocViewerWithInputApp = () => {
  const [selectedDocs, setSelectedDocs] = useState<File[]>([]);

  return (
    <>
      <input
        type="file"
        accept=".pdf"
        multiple
        onChange={(el) =>
          el.target.files?.length &&
          setSelectedDocs(Array.from(el.target.files))
        }
      />
      <DocViewer
        documents={selectedDocs.map((file) => ({
          uri: window.URL.createObjectURL(file),
          fileName: file.name,
        }))}
        pluginRenderers={DocViewerRenderers}
      />
    </>
  );
};

Included Renderers

To use the included renderers. DocViewerRenderers is an Array of all the included renderers.

import DocViewer, { DocViewerRenderers } from "@cyntler/react-doc-viewer";

<DocViewer
  pluginRenderers={DocViewerRenderers}
  {/* ... */}
/>;

Or you can import individual renderers.

import DocViewer, { PDFRenderer, PNGRenderer } from "@cyntler/react-doc-viewer";

<DocViewer
  pluginRenderers={[PDFRenderer, PNGRenderer]}
  {/* ... */}
/>;

Custom Renderer

To create a custom renderer, that will just exist for your project.

import React from "react";
import DocViewer from "@cyntler/react-doc-viewer";

const MyCustomPNGRenderer: DocRenderer = ({
  mainState: { currentDocument },
}) => {
  if (!currentDocument) return null;

  return (
    <div id="my-png-renderer">
      <img id="png-img" src={currentDocument.fileData as string} />
    </div>
  );
};

MyCustomPNGRenderer.fileTypes = ["png", "image/png"];
MyCustomPNGRenderer.weight = 1;

And supply it to pluginRenderers inside an Array.

import DocViewer, { DocViewerRenderers } from "@cyntler/react-doc-viewer";

<DocViewer
  pluginRenderers={[MyCustomPNGRenderer]}
  documents={
    [
      // ...
    ]
  }
/>;

Custom File Loader

If you need to prevent the actual loading of the file by @cyntler/react-doc-viewer.
You can decorate your custom renderer with a callback to do as you wish. e.g. Load the file yourself in an iFrame.

MyCustomPNGRenderer.fileLoader = ({
  documentURI,
  signal,
  fileLoaderComplete,
}) => {
  myCustomFileLoaderCode().then(() => {
    // Whenever you have finished you must call fileLoaderComplete() to remove the loading animation
    fileLoaderComplete();
  });
};

Theme

You can provide a theme object with one or all of the available properties.

<DocViewer
  documents={docs}
  theme={{
    primary: "#5296d8",
    secondary: "#ffffff",
    tertiary: "#5296d899",
    textPrimary: "#ffffff",
    textSecondary: "#5296d8",
    textTertiary: "#00000099",
    disableThemeScrollbar: false,
  }}
/>

Custom pre-fetch HTTP Verb

Some services (such as AWS) provide URLs that works only for one pre-configured verb. By default, @cyntler/react-doc-viewer fetches document metadata through a HEAD request in order to guess its Content-Type. If you need to have a specific verb for the pre-fetching, use the prefetchMethod option on the DocViewer:

import DocViewer, { DocViewerRenderers } from "@cyntler/react-doc-viewer";

<DocViewer prefetchMethod="GET" />;

Custom Request Headers

Provide request headers, i.e. for authenticating with an API etc.

const headers = {
  "X-Access-Token": "1234567890",
  "My-Custom-Header": "my-custom-value",
};

<DocViewer documents={docs} prefetchMethod="GET" requestHeaders={headers} />;

Internationalization (i18n)

From v1.6.0 you can pass the language prop to the DocViewer component to get translated sentences and words that can be displayed by this library.

<DocViewer documents={docs} language="pl" />

The translations are based on the .json files that can be found in the src/locales directory.

Styling

Any styling applied to the <DocViewer> component, is directly applied to the main div container.

CSS Class

<DocViewer documents={docs} className="my-doc-viewer-style" />

CSS Class Default Override

Each component / div already has a DOM id that can be used to style any part of the document viewer.

#react-doc-viewer #header-bar {
  background-color: #faf;
}

React Inline

<DocViewer documents={docs} style={{ width: 500, height: 500 }} />

Styled Components

import styled from "styled-components";

// ...

<MyDocViewer documents={docs} />;

// ...

const MyDocViewer = styled(DocViewer)`
  border-radius: 10px;
`;

Config

You can provide a config object, which configures parts of the component as required.

<DocViewer
  documents={docs}
  config={{
    header: {
      disableHeader: false,
      disableFileName: false,
      retainURLParams: false,
    },
    csvDelimiter: ",", // "," as default,
    pdfZoom: {
      defaultZoom: 1.1, // 1 as default,
      zoomJump: 0.2, // 0.1 as default,
    },
  }}
/>

Overriding Header Component

You can pass a callback function to config.header.overrideComponent that returns a React Element. The function's parameters will be populated and usable, this function will also be re-called whenever the mainState updates. Parameters include the state object from the main component, and document navigation functions for previousDocument and nextDocument.

Example:

const MyHeader: IHeaderOverride = (state, previousDocument, nextDocument) => {
  if (!state.currentDocument || state.config?.header?.disableFileName) {
    return null;
  }

  return (
    <>
      <div>{state.currentDocument.uri || ""}</div>
      <div>
        <button onClick={previousDocument} disabled={state.currentFileNo === 0}>
          Previous Document
        </button>
        <button
          onClick={nextDocument}
          disabled={state.currentFileNo >= state.documents.length - 1}
        >
          Next Document
        </button>
      </div>
    </>
  );
};

<DocViewer
  pluginRenderers={DocViewerRenderers}
  documents={
    {
      // ...
    }
  }
  config={{
    header: {
      overrideComponent: MyHeader,
    },
  }}
/>;

Overriding Loading Renderer

You can pass a callback function to config.loadingRenderer.overrideComponent that returns a React Element.

Example:

const MyLoadingRenderer = ({ document, fileName }) => {
  const fileText = fileName || document?.fileType || "";

  if (fileText) {
    return <div>Loading Renderer ({fileText})...</div>;
  }

  return <div>Loading Renderer...</div>;
};

<DocViewer
  pluginRenderers={DocViewerRenderers}
  documents={
    {
      // ...
    }
  }
  config={{
    loadingRenderer: {
      overrideComponent: MyLoadingRenderer,
    },
  }}
/>;

By default, the loading component is rendered if document loading process takes more than 500 ms.

You can change this time value or disable this feature to make the component display immediately:

const MyLoadingRenderer = ({ document, fileName }) => {
  ...
};

<DocViewer
  pluginRenderers={DocViewerRenderers}
  documents={
    {
      // ...
    }
  }
  config={{
    loadingRenderer: {
      overrideComponent: MyLoadingRenderer,
      showLoadingTimeout: false, // false if you want to disable or number to provide your own value (ms)
    },
  }}
/>;

Overriding No Renderer (Error)

You can pass a callback function to config.noRenderer.overrideComponent that returns a React Element.

Example:

const MyNoRenderer = ({ document, fileName }) => {
  const fileText = fileName || document?.fileType || "";

  if (fileText) {
    return <div>No Renderer Error! ({fileText})</div>;
  }

  return <div>No Renderer Error!</div>;
};

<DocViewer
  pluginRenderers={DocViewerRenderers}
  documents={
    {
      // ...
    }
  }
  config={{
    noRenderer: {
      overrideComponent: MyNoRenderer,
    },
  }}
/>;

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