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Radio Group

A radio group allows users to make a single choice from a select number of option

Fruits

Properties

Features

  • Syncs with disabled state of fieldset
  • Syncs with form reset events
  • Can programmatically set radio group value
  • Can programmatically focus and blur radio items

Installation

To use the radio machine in your project, run the following command in your command line:

npm install @zag-js/radio-group @zag-js/react # or yarn add @zag-js/radio-group @zag-js/react

This command will install the framework agnostic radio group logic and the reactive utilities for your framework of choice.

Anatomy

To set up the radio group correctly, you'll need to understand its anatomy and how we name its parts.

Each part includes a data-part attribute to help identify them in the DOM.

On a high level, the radio group consists of:

  • Root: The root container for the radio group
  • Label: The label that gives the user information on the radio group
  • Radio: The root container for the each radio item
  • Radio Label: The label that gives the user information on each radio item
  • Radio Control: The element that visually represents the each radio item.
  • Radio Hidden Input: The native html input that is visually hidden in each radio item.

Usage

First, import the radio group package into your project

import * as radio from "@zag-js/radio-group"

The radio package exports two key functions:

  • machine — The state machine logic for the radio widget.
  • connect — The function that translates the machine's state to JSX attributes and event handlers.

You'll also need to provide a unique id to the useMachine hook. This is used to ensure that every part has a unique identifier.

Next, import the required hooks and functions for your framework and use the radio machine in your project 🔥

import * as radio from "@zag-js/radio-group" import { useMachine, normalizeProps } from "@zag-js/react" const items = [ { id: "apple", label: "Apples" }, { id: "orange", label: "Oranges" }, { id: "mango", label: "Mangoes" }, { id: "grape", label: "Grapes" }, ] function Radio() { const [state, send] = useMachine(radio.machine({ id: "1" })) const api = radio.connect(state, send, normalizeProps) return ( <div {...api.rootProps}> <h3 {...api.labelProps}>Fruits</h3> {items.map((opt) => ( <label key={opt.id} {...api.getRadioProps({ value: opt.id })}> <span {...api.getRadioLabelProps({ value: opt.id })}> {opt.label} </span> <input {...api.getRadioHiddenInputProps({ value: opt.id })} /> <div {...api.getRadioControlProps({ value: opt.id })} /> </label> ))} </div> ) }

Disabling the radio group

To make a radio group disabled, set the context's disabled property to true

const [state, send] = useMachine( radio.machine({ disabled: true, }), )

Setting the initial value

To set the radio group's initial value, set the context's value property to the value of the radio item to be selected by default

const [state, send] = useMachine( radio.machine({ value: "apple", }), )

Listening for changes

When the radio group value changes, the onValueChange callback is invoked.

const [state, send] = useMachine( radio.machine({ onValueChange(details) { // details => { value: string } console.log("radio value is:", details.value) }, }), )

Usage within forms

To use radio group within forms, use the exposed inputProps from the connect function and ensure you pass name value to the machine's context. It will render a hidden input and ensure the value changes get propagated to the form correctly.

const [state, send] = useMachine( radio.machine({ name: "fruits", }), )

Styling guide

Earlier, we mentioned that each radio part has a data-part attribute added to them to select and style them in the DOM.

Checked State

When the radio input is checked, the data-state attribute is added to the

[data-part="radio"][data-state="checked|unchecked"] { /* styles for radio checked or unchecked state */ } [data-part="radio-control"][data-state="checked|unchecked"] { /* styles for radio checked or unchecked state */ } [data-part="radio-label"][data-state="checked|unchecked"] { /* styles for radio checked or unchecked state */ }

Focused State

When the radio input is focused, the data-focus attribute is added to the root, control and label parts.

[data-part="radio"][data-focus] { /* styles for radio focus state */ } [data-part="radio-control"][data-focus] { /* styles for radio control focus state */ } [data-part="radio-label"][data-focus] { /* styles for radio label focus state */ }

Disabled State

When the radio is disabled, the data-disabled attribute is added to the root, control and label parts.

[data-part="radio"][data-disabled] { /* styles for radio disabled state */ } [data-part="radio-control"][data-disabled] { /* styles for radio control disabled state */ } [data-part="radio-label"][data-disabled] { /* styles for radio label disabled state */ }

Invalid State

When the radio is invalid, the data-invalid attribute is added to the root, control and label parts.

[data-part="radio"][data-invalid] { /* styles for radio invalid state */ } [data-part="radio-control"][data-invalid] { /* styles for radio control invalid state */ } [data-part="radio-label"][data-invalid] { /* styles for radio label invalid state */ }

Methods and Properties

The radio's api provides properties and methods you can use to programmatically read and set the radio group's value.

  • valuestringThe current value of the radio group
  • setValue(value: string) => voidFunction to set the value of the radio group
  • clearValue() => voidFunction to clear the value of the radio group
  • focus() => voidFunction to focus the radio group
  • getRadioState(props: RadioStateReturns the state details of a radio input

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