Using a forwardRef component with children in TypeScript

ReactjsTypescriptJsxTsx

Reactjs Problem Overview


Using @types/react 16.8.2 and TypeScript 3.3.1.

I lifted this forward refs example straight from the React documentation and added a couple type parameters:

const FancyButton = React.forwardRef<HTMLButtonElement>((props, ref) => (
  <button ref={ref} className="FancyButton">
    {props.children}
  </button>
));

// You can now get a ref directly to the DOM button:
const ref = React.createRef<HTMLButtonElement>();
<FancyButton ref={ref}>Click me!</FancyButton>;

I get the following error in the last line under FancyButton:

> Type '{ children: string; ref: RefObject<HTMLButtonElement>; }' is not > assignable to type 'IntrinsicAttributes & RefAttributes<HTMLButtonElement>'. Property 'children' does not > exist on type 'IntrinsicAttributes & RefAttributes<HTMLButtonElement>'.ts(2322)

It would seem that the type definition for React.forwardRef's return value is wrong, not merging in the children prop properly. If I make <FancyButton> self-closing, the error goes away. The lack of search results for this error leads me to believe I'm missing something obvious.

Reactjs Solutions


Solution 1 - Reactjs

trevorsg, you need to pass the button properties:

import * as React from 'react'

type ButtonProps = React.HTMLProps<HTMLButtonElement>

const FancyButton = React.forwardRef<HTMLButtonElement, ButtonProps>((props, ref) => (
  <button type="button" ref={ref} className="FancyButton">
    {props.children}
  </button>
))

// You can now get a ref directly to the DOM button:
const ref = React.createRef<HTMLButtonElement>()

<FancyButton ref={ref}>Click me!</FancyButton>

ADDED:

In recent versions of TS and @types/react, you can also use React.ComponentPropsWithoutRef<'button'> instead of React.HTMLProps<HTMLButtonElement>

Solution 2 - Reactjs

The answers given by aMarCruz and euvs both work, but they lie to consumers a little bit. They say they accept all HTMLButtonElement props, but they ignore them instead of forwarding them to the button. If you're just trying to merge in the children prop correctly, then you might want to use React.PropsWithChildren instead:

import React from 'react';

interface FancyButtonProps {
    fooBar?: string; // my custom prop
}

const FancyButton = React.forwardRef<HTMLButtonElement, React.PropsWithChildren<FancyButtonProps>>((props, ref) => (
    <button type="button" ref={ref} className="fancy-button">
        {props.children}
        {props.fooBar}
    </button>
));

FancyButton.displayName = 'FancyButton';

Or explicitly add a children prop:

interface FancyButtonProps {
    children?: React.ReactNode;
    fooBar?: string; // my custom prop
}

const FancyButton = React.forwardRef<HTMLButtonElement, FancyButtonProps>((props, ref) => (
    <button type="button" ref={ref} className="fancy-button">
        {props.children}
        {props.fooBar}
    </button>
));

FancyButton.displayName = 'FancyButton';

Or if you actually want to accept all the button props and forward them (let consumers choose button type="submit", for example), then you might want to use rest/spread:

import React from 'react';

interface FancyButtonProps extends React.ComponentPropsWithoutRef<'button'> {
    fooBar?: string; // my custom prop
}

const FancyButton = React.forwardRef<HTMLButtonElement, FancyButtonProps>(
    ({ children, className = '', fooBar, ...buttonProps }, ref) => (
        <button {...buttonProps} className={`fancy-button ${className}`} ref={ref}>
            {children}
            {fooBar}
        </button>
    ),
);

FancyButton.displayName = 'FancyButton';

Solution 3 - Reactjs

The answer given by aMarCruz works well. However, if you also need to pass custom props to the FancyButton, here is how it can be done.

interface FancyButtonProps extends React.ComponentPropsWithoutRef<'button'> {
    fooBar?: string; // my custom prop
}

const FancyButton = React.forwardRef<HTMLButtonElement, FancyButtonProps>((props, ref) => (
    <button type="button" ref={ref} className="FancyButton">
        {props.children}
        {props.fooBar}
    </button>
));


/// Use later

// You can now get a ref directly to the DOM button:
const ref = React.createRef<HTMLButtonElement>()

<FancyButton ref={ref} fooBar="someValue">Click me!</FancyButton>

Just adding here for completion.

Attributions

All content for this solution is sourced from the original question on Stackoverflow.

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Content TypeOriginal AuthorOriginal Content on Stackoverflow
QuestiontrevorsgView Question on Stackoverflow
Solution 1 - ReactjsaMarCruzView Answer on Stackoverflow
Solution 2 - ReactjsDan StoppelmanView Answer on Stackoverflow
Solution 3 - ReactjseuvsView Answer on Stackoverflow