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Get viewport/window height in ReactJS

How do I get the viewport height in ReactJS? In normal JavaScript I use

window.innerHeight()

but using ReactJS, I'm not sure how to get this information. My understanding is that

ReactDOM.findDomNode()

only works for components created. However this is not the case for the document or body element, which could give me height of the window.

Using Hooks (React 16.8.0+ )

Create a useWindowDimensions hook.

import { useState, useEffect } from 'react';

function getWindowDimensions() {
  const { innerWidth: width, innerHeight: height } = window;
  return {
    width,
    height
  };
}

export default function useWindowDimensions() {
  const [windowDimensions, setWindowDimensions] = useState(getWindowDimensions());

  useEffect(() => {
    function handleResize() {
      setWindowDimensions(getWindowDimensions());
    }

    window.addEventListener('resize', handleResize);
    return () => window.removeEventListener('resize', handleResize);
  }, []);

  return windowDimensions;
}

And after that you'll be able to use it in your components like this

const Component = () => {
  const { height, width } = useWindowDimensions();

  return (
    <div>
      width: {width} ~ height: {height}
    </div>
  );
}

Working example

Original answer

It's the same in React, you can use window.innerHeight to get the current viewport's height.

As you can see here

This answer is similar to Jabran Saeed's, except it handles window resizing as well. I got it from here .

constructor(props) {
  super(props);
  this.state = { width: 0, height: 0 };
  this.updateWindowDimensions = this.updateWindowDimensions.bind(this);
}

componentDidMount() {
  this.updateWindowDimensions();
  window.addEventListener('resize', this.updateWindowDimensions);
}

componentWillUnmount() {
  window.removeEventListener('resize', this.updateWindowDimensions);
}

updateWindowDimensions() {
  this.setState({ width: window.innerWidth, height: window.innerHeight });
}

I've just edited QoP 's current answer to support SSR and use it with Next.js (React 16.8.0+):

/hooks/useWindowDimensions.js :

import { useState, useEffect } from 'react';

export default function useWindowDimensions() {

  const hasWindow = typeof window !== 'undefined';

  function getWindowDimensions() {
    const width = hasWindow ? window.innerWidth : null;
    const height = hasWindow ? window.innerHeight : null;
    return {
      width,
      height,
    };
  }

  const [windowDimensions, setWindowDimensions] = useState(getWindowDimensions());

  useEffect(() => {
    if (hasWindow) {
      function handleResize() {
        setWindowDimensions(getWindowDimensions());
      }

      window.addEventListener('resize', handleResize);
      return () => window.removeEventListener('resize', handleResize);
    }
  }, [hasWindow]);

  return windowDimensions;
}

/yourComponent.js :

import useWindowDimensions from './hooks/useWindowDimensions';

const Component = () => {
  const { height, width } = useWindowDimensions();
  /* you can also use default values or alias to use only one prop: */
  // const { height: windowHeight = 480 } useWindowDimensions();

  return (
    <div>
      width: {width} ~ height: {height}
    </div>
  );
}
class AppComponent extends React.Component {

  constructor(props) {
    super(props);
    this.state = {height: props.height};
  }

  componentWillMount(){
    this.setState({height: window.innerHeight + 'px'});
  }

  render() {
    // render your component...
  }
}

Set the props

AppComponent.propTypes = {
 height:React.PropTypes.string
};

AppComponent.defaultProps = {
 height:'500px'
};

viewport height is now available as {this.state.height} in rendering template

I found a simple combo of QoP and speckledcarp's answer using React Hooks and resizing features, with slightly less lines of code:

const [width, setWidth]   = useState(window.innerWidth);
const [height, setHeight] = useState(window.innerHeight);
const updateDimensions = () => {
    setWidth(window.innerWidth);
    setHeight(window.innerHeight);
}
useEffect(() => {
    window.addEventListener("resize", updateDimensions);
    return () => window.removeEventListener("resize", updateDimensions);
}, []);

Oh yeah make sure that the resize event is in double quotes, not single. That one got me for a bit ;)

@speckledcarp 's answer is great, but can be tedious if you need this logic in multiple components. You can refactor it as an HOC (higher order component) to make this logic easier to reuse.

withWindowDimensions.jsx

import React, { Component } from "react";

export default function withWindowDimensions(WrappedComponent) {
    return class extends Component {
        state = { width: 0, height: 0 };

        componentDidMount() {
            this.updateWindowDimensions();
            window.addEventListener("resize", this.updateWindowDimensions);
        }

        componentWillUnmount() {
            window.removeEventListener("resize", this.updateWindowDimensions);
        }

        updateWindowDimensions = () => {
            this.setState({ width: window.innerWidth, height: window.innerHeight });
        };

        render() {
            return (
                <WrappedComponent
                    {...this.props}
                    windowWidth={this.state.width}
                    windowHeight={this.state.height}
                    isMobileSized={this.state.width < 700}
                />
            );
        }
    };
}

Then in your main component:

import withWindowDimensions from './withWindowDimensions.jsx';

class MyComponent extends Component {
  render(){
    if(this.props.isMobileSized) return <p>It's short</p>;
    else return <p>It's not short</p>;
}

export default withWindowDimensions(MyComponent);

You can also "stack" HOCs if you have another you need to use, eg withRouter(withWindowDimensions(MyComponent))

Edit: I would go with a React hook nowadays ( example above here ), as they solve some of the advanced issues with HOCs and classes

with a little typescript

 import { useState, useEffect } from 'react'; interface WindowDimentions { width: number; height: number; } function getWindowDimensions(): WindowDimentions { const { innerWidth: width, innerHeight: height } = window; return { width, height }; } export default function useWindowDimensions(): WindowDimentions { const [windowDimensions, setWindowDimensions] = useState<WindowDimentions>( getWindowDimensions() ); useEffect(() => { function handleResize(): void { setWindowDimensions(getWindowDimensions()); } window.addEventListener('resize', handleResize); return (): void => window.removeEventListener('resize', handleResize); }, []); return windowDimensions; }

Adding this for diversity and clean approach.

This code uses functional style approach. I have used onresize instead of addEventListener as mentioned in other answers.

import { useState, useEffect } from "react";

export default function App() {
  const [size, setSize] = useState({
    x: window.innerWidth,
    y: window.innerHeight
  });
  const updateSize = () =>
    setSize({
      x: window.innerWidth,
      y: window.innerHeight
    });
  useEffect(() => (window.onresize = updateSize), []);
  return (
    <>
      <p>width is : {size.x}</p>
      <p>height is : {size.y}</p>
    </>
  );
}

I just spent some serious time figuring some things out with React and scrolling events / positions - so for those still looking, here's what I found:

The viewport height can be found by using window.innerHeight or by using document.documentElement.clientHeight. (Current viewport height)

The height of the entire document (body) can be found using window.document.body.offsetHeight.

If you're attempting to find the height of the document and know when you've hit the bottom - here's what I came up with:

if (window.pageYOffset >= this.myRefII.current.clientHeight && Math.round((document.documentElement.scrollTop + window.innerHeight)) < document.documentElement.scrollHeight - 72) {
        this.setState({
            trueOrNot: true
        });
      } else {
        this.setState({
            trueOrNot: false
        });
      }
    }

(My navbar was 72px in fixed position, thus the -72 to get a better scroll-event trigger)

Lastly, here are a number of scroll commands to console.log(), which helped me figure out my math actively.

console.log('window inner height: ', window.innerHeight);

console.log('document Element client hieght: ', document.documentElement.clientHeight);

console.log('document Element scroll hieght: ', document.documentElement.scrollHeight);

console.log('document Element offset height: ', document.documentElement.offsetHeight);

console.log('document element scrolltop: ', document.documentElement.scrollTop);

console.log('window page Y Offset: ', window.pageYOffset);

console.log('window document body offsetheight: ', window.document.body.offsetHeight);

Whew! Hope it helps someone!

Using Hooks:

using useLayoutEffect is more efficient here:

import { useState, useLayoutEffect } from 'react';

function getWindowDimensions() {
  const { innerWidth: width, innerHeight: height } = window;
  return {
    width,
    height
  };
}

export default function useWindowDimensions() {
  const [windowDimensions, setWindowDimensions] = useState(getWindowDimensions());

  useLayoutEffect(() => {
    function handleResize() {
      setWindowDimensions(getWindowDimensions());
    }

    window.addEventListener('resize', handleResize);
    return () => window.removeEventListener('resize', handleResize);
  }, []);

  return windowDimensions;
}

usage:

const { height, width } = useWindowDimensions();

Good day,

I know I am late to this party, but let me show you my answer.

const [windowSize, setWindowSize] = useState(null)

useEffect(() => {
    const handleResize = () => {
        setWindowSize(window.innerWidth)
    }

    window.addEventListener('resize', handleResize)

    return () => window.removeEventListener('resize', handleResize)
}, [])

for further details please visit https://usehooks.com/useWindowSize/

// just use (useEffect). every change will be logged with current value
import React, { useEffect } from "react";

export function () {
  useEffect(() => {
    window.addEventListener('resize', () => {
      const myWidth  = window.innerWidth;
      console.log('my width :::', myWidth)
   })
  },[window])

  return (
    <>
      enter code here
   </>
  )
}

You can create custom hooks like this: useWindowSize()

import { useEffect, useState } from "react";
import { debounce } from "lodash";

const getWindowDimensions = () => {
  const { innerWidth: width, innerHeight: height } = window;
  return { width, height };
};

export function useWindowSize(delay = 0) {
  const [windowDimensions, setWindowDimensions] = useState(
    getWindowDimensions()
  );

  useEffect(() => {
    function handleResize() {
      setWindowDimensions(getWindowDimensions());
    }
    const debouncedHandleResize = debounce(handleResize, delay);
    window.addEventListener("resize", debouncedHandleResize);
    return () => window.removeEventListener("resize", debouncedHandleResize);
  }, [delay]);

  return windowDimensions;
}

Answers by @speckledcarp and @Jamesl are both brilliant. In my case, however, I needed a component whose height could extend the full window height, conditional at render time.... but calling a HOC within render() re-renders the entire subtree. BAAAD.

Plus, I wasn't interested in getting the values as props but simply wanted a parent div that would occupy the entire screen height (or width, or both).

So I wrote a Parent component providing a full height (and/or width) div. Boom.

A use case:

class MyPage extends React.Component {
  render() {
    const { data, ...rest } = this.props

    return data ? (
      // My app uses templates which misbehave badly if you manually mess around with the container height, so leave the height alone here.
      <div>Yay! render a page with some data. </div>
    ) : (
      <FullArea vertical>
        // You're now in a full height div, so containers will vertically justify properly
        <GridContainer justify="center" alignItems="center" style={{ height: "inherit" }}>
          <GridItem xs={12} sm={6}>
            Page loading!
          </GridItem>
        </GridContainer>
      </FullArea>
    )

Here's the component:

import React, { Component } from 'react'
import PropTypes from 'prop-types'

class FullArea extends Component {
  constructor(props) {
    super(props)
    this.state = {
      width: 0,
      height: 0,
    }
    this.getStyles = this.getStyles.bind(this)
    this.updateWindowDimensions = this.updateWindowDimensions.bind(this)
  }

  componentDidMount() {
    this.updateWindowDimensions()
    window.addEventListener('resize', this.updateWindowDimensions)
  }

  componentWillUnmount() {
    window.removeEventListener('resize', this.updateWindowDimensions)
  }

  getStyles(vertical, horizontal) {
    const styles = {}
    if (vertical) {
      styles.height = `${this.state.height}px`
    }
    if (horizontal) {
      styles.width = `${this.state.width}px`
    }
    return styles
  }

  updateWindowDimensions() {
    this.setState({ width: window.innerWidth, height: window.innerHeight })
  }

  render() {
    const { vertical, horizontal } = this.props
    return (
      <div style={this.getStyles(vertical, horizontal)} >
        {this.props.children}
      </div>
    )
  }
}

FullArea.defaultProps = {
  horizontal: false,
  vertical: false,
}

FullArea.propTypes = {
  horizontal: PropTypes.bool,
  vertical: PropTypes.bool,
}

export default FullArea

I've updated the code with a slight variation by wrapping the getWindowDimensions function in useCallback

import { useCallback, useLayoutEffect, useState } from 'react';

export default function useWindowDimensions() {

    const hasWindow = typeof window !== 'undefined';

    const getWindowDimensions = useCallback(() => {
        const windowWidth = hasWindow ? window.innerWidth : null;
        const windowHeight = hasWindow ? window.innerHeight : null;

        return {
            windowWidth,
            windowHeight,
        };
    }, [hasWindow]);

    const [windowDimensions, setWindowDimensions] = useState(getWindowDimensions());

    useLayoutEffect(() => {
        if (hasWindow) {
            function handleResize() {
                setWindowDimensions(getWindowDimensions());
            }

            window.addEventListener('resize', handleResize);
            return () => window.removeEventListener('resize', handleResize);
        }
    }, [getWindowDimensions, hasWindow]);

    return windowDimensions;
}

This is how you can implement it and get the window width and height on real time inside React functional components:

import React, {useState, useEffect} from 'react' 
const Component = () => {
  const [windowWidth, setWindowWidth] = useState(0)
  const [windowHeight, setWindowHeight] = useState(0)
  
  useEffect(() => {
    window.addEventListener('resize', e => {
      setWindowWidth(window.innerWidth);
    });
  }, [window.innerWidth]);

  useEffect(() => {
    window.addEventListener('resize', e => {
      setWindowHeight(window.innerHeight);
    });
  }, [window.innerHeight]);

  return(
    <h3>Window width is: {windowWidth} and Height: {windowHeight}</h3>
  )
}

You can also try this:

constructor(props) {
        super(props);
        this.state = {height: props.height, width:props.width};
      }

componentWillMount(){
          console.log("WINDOW : ",window);
          this.setState({height: window.innerHeight + 'px',width:window.innerWidth+'px'});
      }

render() {
        console.log("VIEW : ",this.state);
}

Simple way to keep current dimensions in the state, even after window resize:

//set up defaults on page mount
componentDidMount() {
  this.state = { width: 0, height: 0 };
  this.getDimensions(); 

  //add dimensions listener for window resizing
  window.addEventListener('resize', this.getDimensions); 
}

//remove listener on page exit
componentWillUnmount() {
  window.removeEventListener('resize', this.getDimensions); 
}

//actually set the state to the window dimensions
getDimensions = () => {
  this.setState({ width: window.innerWidth, height: window.innerHeight });
  console.log(this.state);
}

It is simple to get with useEffect

useEffect(() => {
    window.addEventListener("resize", () => {
        updateDimention({ 
            ...dimension, 
            width: window.innerWidth, 
            height: window.innerHeight 
        });
        console.log(dimension);
    })
})

As answer from: bren but hooking useEffect to [window.innerWidth]

const [dimension, updateDimention] = useState();
  
  useEffect(() => {
    window.addEventListener("resize", () => {
        updateDimention({ 
            ...dimension, 
            width: window.innerWidth, 
            height: window.innerHeight 
        });
       
    })
},[window.innerWidth]);

 console.log(dimension);

React native web has a useWindowDimensions hook that is ready to be used:

    import { useWindowDimensions } from "react-native";
    const dimensions = useWindowDimensions()

Here you have the most voted answer wrapped in a node package (tested, typescript) ready to use.

Install:

npm i @teambit/toolbox.react.hooks.get-window-dimensions

Usage:

import React from 'react';
import { useWindowDimensions } from '@teambit/toolbox.react.hooks.get-window-dimensions';

const MyComponent = () => {
  const { height, width } = useWindowDimensions();

  return (
    <>
      <h1>Window size</h1>
      <p>Height: {height}</p>
      <p>Width: {width}</p>
    </>
  );
};

There is a package with 93.000+ downloads, named useWindowSize()

npm i @react-hook/window-size

import {
  useWindowSize,
  useWindowWidth,
  useWindowHeight,
} from '@react-hook/window-size'

const Component = (props) => {
  const [width, height] = useWindowSize()
  const onlyWidth = useWindowWidth()
  const onlyHeight = useWindowHeight()
...
}

docs

A combination of @foad abdollahi and @giovannipds answers helped me to find a solution using custom hooks with useLayoutEffect in Nextjs.

function getWindowDimensions() {
    const { innerWidth: width, innerHeight: height } = window;
    return {
      width,
      height,
    };
  }

  function useWindowDimensions() {
    const [windowDimensions, setWindowDimensions] = useState(
      getWindowDimensions()
    );

    useLayoutEffect(() => {
      const isWindow = typeof window !== 'undefined';
      function handleResize() {
        setWindowDimensions(getWindowDimensions());
      }

      isWindow && window.addEventListener('resize', handleResize);
      console.log(windowDimensions);
      return () =>
        isWindow && window.removeEventListener('resize', handleResize);
    }, [windowDimensions]);

    return windowDimensions;
  }

I recommand the usage of the useSyncExternalStore

import { useSyncExternalStore } from "react";

const store = {
  size: {
    height: undefined,
    width: undefined
  }
};

export default function ChatIndicator() {
  const { height, width } = useSyncExternalStore(subscribe, getSnapshot);
  return (
    <h1>
      {width} {height}
    </h1>
  );
}

function getSnapshot() {
  if (
    store.size.height !== window.innerHeight ||
    store.size.width !== window.innerWidth
  ) {
    store.size = { height: window.innerHeight, width: window.innerWidth };
  }
  return store.size;
}

function subscribe(callback) {
  window.addEventListener("resize", callback);
  return () => {
    window.removeEventListener("resize", callback);
  };
}

If you want try it: https://codesandbox.io/s/vibrant-antonelli-5cecpm

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