for HTML divs in React.js
react-round-div makes your rounded rectangles look smoother for a more pleasant feel. The package
weighs just under 10KB and has an almost "plug and play"-integration into your code, so that you have to do
next to nothing to up the style of your project.
Here is a very clear demonstration of these smooth corners:
npm i react-round-div| Gzipped | Minified + Gzipped | |
|---|---|---|
react-round-div |
7.81 KB | 5.27 KB |
react-round-div + dependencies |
21.01 KB | 9.45 KB |
Simply import the package and replace any divs with rounded corners (border-radius) that you want to
improve. react-round-div will handle the rest.
import RoundDiv from 'react-round-div';
const App = () => {
return (
<RoundDiv>
<p>Hello smooth corners!</p>
</RoundDiv>
)
};
export default App;If you have set a box-shadow in your CSS, react-round-div will convert it to
a drop-shadow(). This happens
because otherwise, the old rounded corners may shine through. If you want react-round-div to not convert
your box-shadows, add the dontConvertShadow option:
<RoundDiv dontConvertShadow>
<p>Content</p>
</RoundDiv>This package is still in the starting blocks, some cases where it might not behave as expected. For example, some border styles are not rendered correctly, and some transitions and animations on the div may not work properly.
There are a couple of css properties, that you can't reliably set inline with RoundDiv:
- the
backgroundproperty and all the properties it is a shorthand for - the
border,border-image, and all the properties they are a shorthand for overflowbox-shadowfilter, if you haven't setdontConvertShadow
You shouldn't set these properties inline. Instead, set them in a stylesheet. This behaviour may change in future
versions. The filter property in particular will only not work, if you have set a box-shadow AND have not
set dontConvertShadow. This may also change in future versions.
Unlike the html <div>, RoundDiv still rounds the corners of borders if you have set a border image. This looks great with gradients, but might clash with the use of actual images as borders.
You may notice a flash of white in the border before the gradient is shown. To combat this, define a border-color for the element in addition to the border-image gradient. This gives the browser a fallback to show before the RoundDiv script generates the smooth corners.