Earlier this week, we launched Ionic React (read the announcement here). To get started with a new Ionic React project is quite easy, but what if you have an existing React project and want to integrate Ionic into it?
Fortunately the process it pretty easy. In this short guide, I'll go through how to start using Ionic React in an existing project. I'll start with how to use individual components, and then touch on how to get the full Ionic app experience.
Using Individual Ionic Components
Ionic React has around 100 components that you can begin using in your app immediately to help make it more mobile-friendly.
To get started with just using components, add the @ionic/react
package to your project:
npm i @ionic/react
Next, import the core CSS for Ionic somewhere in your main app file:
import '@ionic/react/css/core.css';
Now, you can import any of the components and begin to use them right away. Here we are importing the IonButton
and IonDatetme
components and using them anywhere in our app:
import { IonButton, IonDatetime } from '@ionic/react';
<IonDatetime displayFormat="MM/DD/YYYY" placeholder="Select Date"></IonDatetime>
<IonButton fill="clear">Start</IonButton>
Using Ionic Pages
If you want to convert part of your app and give it the whole Ionic experience, there are a few additional steps to take to get this setup.
First, import some additional CSS files that help set up the overall structure of the page and some utility helpers:
/* Basic CSS for apps built with Ionic */
import '@ionic/react/css/normalize.css';
import '@ionic/react/css/structure.css';
import '@ionic/react/css/typography.css';
/* Optional CSS utils that can be commented out */
import '@ionic/react/css/padding.css';
import '@ionic/react/css/float-elements.css';
import '@ionic/react/css/text-alignment.css';
import '@ionic/react/css/text-transformation.css';
import '@ionic/react/css/flex-utils.css';
import '@ionic/react/css/display.css';
If you are using another CSS framework (like Bootstrap), you might want to isolate the Ionic pages away from them. This will help to ensure there aren't any CSS conflicts between the libraries.
Next, install the @ionic/react-router
library:
npm i @ionic/react-router
The Ionic React Router library is a small wrapper around the popular React Router library and helps provide the functionality we need for native-like page transitions.
The main Ionic page will need a couple of base components. First, use a IonApp
component (from @ionic/react
) as the root component, and then use IonReactRouter
(from @ionic/react-router
).
IonApp
sets up our main container, with the necessary styling needed for our structural components. IonReactRouter
is a small wrapper for React Routers BrowserRouter
and should be used in its place.
Then, wrap all your routes in an IonRouterOutlet
, which is what manages our Ionic pages.
<IonApp>
<IonReactRouter>
<IonRouterOutlet>
<Route path="/" exact component={Home} />
<Route path="/about" exact component={About} />
</IonRouterOutlet>
</IonReactRouter>
</IonApp>
Now you can setup Ionic pages like so:
<IonPage>
<IonHeader>
<IonToolbar>
<IonTitle>My Page</IonTitle>
</IonToolbar>
</IonHeader>
<IonContent>
<IonDatetime displayFormat="MM/DD/YYYY" placeholder="Select Date"></IonDatetime>
<IonButton fill="clear">Start</IonButton>
</IonContent>
</IonPage>
Note that having IonPage
is important to have as the base component for your "Ionic" pages. IonPage
is the element we look for to do the page transition on.
For more information on routing and navigation in Ionic React, see here.
Customize the Theme
To customize the look and feel of the components, we have some CSS variables you can override to provide a theme for your components. Set these somewhere in your main CSS file:
:root {
--ion-color-angular: #ac282b;
--ion-color-communication: #8e8d93;
--ion-color-tooling: #fe4c52;
--ion-color-services: #fd8b2d;
--ion-color-design: #fed035;
--ion-color-workshop: #69bb7b;
--ion-color-food: #3bc7c4;
--ion-color-documentation: #b16be3;
--ion-color-navigation: #6600cc;
--ion-color-primary: #3880ff;
--ion-color-primary-rgb: 56, 128, 255;
--ion-color-primary-contrast: #ffffff;
--ion-color-primary-contrast-rgb: 255, 255, 255;
--ion-color-primary-shade: #3171e0;
--ion-color-primary-tint: #4c8dff;
--ion-color-secondary: #0cd1e8;
--ion-color-secondary-rgb: 12, 209, 232;
--ion-color-secondary-contrast: #ffffff;
--ion-color-secondary-contrast-rgb: 255, 255, 255;
--ion-color-secondary-shade: #0bb8cc;
--ion-color-secondary-tint: #24d6ea;
--ion-color-tertiary: #7044ff;
--ion-color-tertiary-rgb: 112, 68, 255;
--ion-color-tertiary-contrast: #ffffff;
--ion-color-tertiary-contrast-rgb: 255, 255, 255;
--ion-color-tertiary-shade: #633ce0;
--ion-color-tertiary-tint: #7e57ff;
--ion-color-success: #10dc60;
--ion-color-success-rgb: 16, 220, 96;
--ion-color-success-contrast: #ffffff;
--ion-color-success-contrast-rgb: 255, 255, 255;
--ion-color-success-shade: #0ec254;
--ion-color-success-tint: #28e070;
--ion-color-warning: #ffce00;
--ion-color-warning-rgb: 255, 206, 0;
--ion-color-warning-contrast: #ffffff;
--ion-color-warning-contrast-rgb: 255, 255, 255;
--ion-color-warning-shade: #e0b500;
--ion-color-warning-tint: #ffd31a;
--ion-color-danger: #f04141;
--ion-color-danger-rgb: 245, 61, 61;
--ion-color-danger-contrast: #ffffff;
--ion-color-danger-contrast-rgb: 255, 255, 255;
--ion-color-danger-shade: #d33939;
--ion-color-danger-tint: #f25454;
--ion-color-dark: #222428;
--ion-color-dark-rgb: 34, 34, 34;
--ion-color-dark-contrast: #ffffff;
--ion-color-dark-contrast-rgb: 255, 255, 255;
--ion-color-dark-shade: #1e2023;
--ion-color-dark-tint: #383a3e;
--ion-color-medium: #989aa2;
--ion-color-medium-rgb: 152, 154, 162;
--ion-color-medium-contrast: #ffffff;
--ion-color-medium-contrast-rgb: 255, 255, 255;
--ion-color-medium-shade: #86888f;
--ion-color-medium-tint: #a2a4ab;
--ion-color-light: #f4f5f8;
--ion-color-light-rgb: 244, 244, 244;
--ion-color-light-contrast: #000000;
--ion-color-light-contrast-rgb: 0, 0, 0;
--ion-color-light-shade: #d7d8da;
--ion-color-light-tint: #f5f6f9;
}
For more info on theming your Ionic app, see the guide here.
Wrapping up
Adding Ionic React to an existing React project is fairly simple and can be done in just a few minutes.
The great thing about using individual components from Ionic React is that you only import the component you need. Each component is lazy loaded at runtime so that it won't bloat your bundle size. This makes Ionic React ideal for adding it to existing projects that need to look and work great on mobile devices.
Top comments (9)
While attempting to do this, I keep getting the following TS error from imported ionic components such as IonApp, IonContent, and IonButton, but not from IonModal:
Property 'translate' is missing in type '{ children: Element[]; }' but required in type 'Pick
¯_(ツ)_/¯
I've imported the all the CSS .
try updating the @types/react and @types/react-dom to the latest and see if that helps.
No luck.
This is an existing React app built with TS. Please let me know if I can provide more info to be helpful!
hmm, could you get me the versions of the follow:
@ionic/react
react
react-dom
@types/react
@types/react-dom?
Thanks for helping troubleshoot!
"@ionic/react": "^5.0.5",
"@ionic/react-router": "^5.0.5",
"react": "^16.9.0",
"react-dom": "^16.10.2",
"@types/react": "^16.9.2",
"@types/react-dom": "^16.9.0",
github.com/ionic-team/ionic/issues...
Seems like this article is outdated. Here is an updated version.
All my ionic components had class="undefined" and the styles were not applied correctly.
This important piece of code was missing:
Hi there, this looks great! I just had one query. Let's say I used Ionic React with React Suite components (rsuitejs.com), and now I would like to build my app for Android/iOS, would there be any errors e.g. Capacitor errors, etc.?
Any example using ionic icons? I'm getting errors like this: "Mirage: Your app tried to GET 'data:image/svg+xml;utf8,<svg xmlns='http:..."
Thanks in advance!
Nevermind, it was an issue with miragejs, fixed with this config:
this.pretender.get('data:image/*', this.pretender.passthrough);
Cheers!