Wrapping a react-router Link in an html button

天大地大妈咪最大 提交于 2019-12-02 15:02:52
Naren Yellavula

Do wrapping in the reverse way and you get the original button with the Link attached. No CSS changes required.

 <Link to="/dashboard">
     <button type="button">
          Click Me!
     </button>
 </Link>

Here button is HTML button. It is also applicable to the components imported from third party libraries like Semantic-UI-React.

 import { Button } from 'semantic-ui-react'
 ... 
 <Link to="/dashboard">
     <Button style={myStyle}>
        <p>Click Me!</p>
     </Button>
 </Link>

While this will render in a web browser, beware that:
⚠️Nesting an html button in an html a (or vice-versa) is not valid html

LinkButton component - a solution for React Router v4

First, a note about many other answers to this question.

⚠️ Nesting <button> and <a> is not valid html. ⚠️

Any answer here which suggests nesting a html button in a React Router Link component (or vice-versa) will render in a web browser, but it is not semantic, accessible, or valid html:

<a stuff-here><button>label text</button></a>
<button><a stuff-here>label text</a></button>

Click to validate this markup with validator.w3.org

This can lead to layout/styling issues as buttons are not typically placed inside links.


Using an html <button> tag with React Router <Link> component.

If you only want an html button tag…

<button>label text</button>

…then, here's the right way to get a button that works like React Router’s Link component…

Use React Router’s withRouter HOC to pass these props to your component:

  • history
  • location
  • match
  • staticContext

LinkButton component

Here’s a LinkButton component for you to copy/pasta:

// file: /components/LinkButton.jsx
import React from 'react'
import PropTypes from 'prop-types'
import { withRouter } from 'react-router'

const LinkButton = (props) => {
  const {
    history,
    location,
    match,
    staticContext,
    to,
    onClick,
    // ⬆ filtering out props that `button` doesn’t know what to do with.
    ...rest
  } = props
  return (
    <button
      {...rest} // `children` is just another prop!
      onClick={(event) => {
        onClick && onClick(event)
        history.push(to)
      }}
    />
  )
}

LinkButton.propTypes = {
  to: PropTypes.string.isRequired,
  children: PropTypes.node.isRequired
}

export default withRouter(LinkButton)

Then import the component:

import LinkButton from '/components/LinkButton'

Use the component:

<LinkButton to='/path/to/page'>Push My Buttons!</LinkButton>

If you need an onClick method:

<LinkButton
  to='/path/to/page'
  onClick={(event) => {
    console.log('custom event here!', event)
  }}
>Push My Buttons!</LinkButton>
Chase James

Why not just decorate link tag with the same css as a button.

<Link 
 className="btn btn-pink"
 role="button"
 to="/"
 onClick={this.handleClick()}
> 
 Button1
</Link>

I use Router and < Button/>. No < Link/>

<Button onClick={()=> {this.props.history.replace('/mypage')}}>
   HERE
</Button>

If you are using react-router-dom and material-ui you can use ...

import { Link } from 'react-router-dom'
import Button from '@material-ui/core/Button';

<Button component={Link} to="/open-collective">
  Link
</Button>

You can read more here.

Obed

With styled components this can be easily achieved

First Design a styled button

import styled from "styled-components";
import {Link} from "react-router-dom";

const Button = styled.button`
  background: white;
  color:red;
  font-size: 1em;
  margin: 1em;
  padding: 0.25em 1em;
  border: 2px solid red;
  border-radius: 3px;
`
render(
    <Button as={Link} to="/home"> Text Goes Here </Button>
);

check styled component's home for more

For anyone looking for a solution using React 16.8+ (hooks) and React Router 5:

You can change the route using a button with the following code:

<button onClick={() => props.history.push("path")}>

React Router provides some props to your components, including the push() function on history which works pretty much like the < Link to='path' > element.

You don't need to wrap your components with the Higher Order Component "withRouter" to get access to those props.

Many of the solutions have focused on complicating things.

Using withRouter is a really long solution for something as simple as a button that links to somewhere else in the App.

If you are going for S.P.A. (single page application), the easiest answer I have found is to use with the button's equivalent className.

This ensures you are maintaining shared state / context without reloading your entire app as is done with

import { NavLink } from 'react-router-dom'; // 14.6K (gzipped: 5.2 K)

// Where link.{something} is the imported data
<NavLink className={`bx--btn bx--btn--primary ${link.className}`} to={link.href} activeClassName={'active'}>
    {link.label}
</NavLink>

// Simplified version:
<NavLink className={'bx--btn bx--btn--primary'} to={'/myLocalPath'}>
    Button without using withRouter
</NavLink>
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