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I'm looking for a way to detect if a click event happened outside of a component, as described in this article. jQuery closest() is used to see if the target from a click event has the dom element as one of its parents. If there is a match the click event belongs to one of the children and is thus not considered to be outside of the component.

So in my component, I want to attach a click handler to the window. When the handler fires I need to compare the target with the dom children of my component.

The click event contains properties like "path" which seems to hold the dom path that the event has traveled. I'm not sure what to compare or how to best traverse it, and I'm thinking someone must have already put that in a clever utility function... No?

I'm looking for a way to detect if a click event happened outside of a component, as described in this article. jQuery closest() is used to see if the target from a click event has the dom element as one of its parents. If there is a match the click event belongs to one of the children and is thus not considered to be outside of the component.

So in my component, I want to attach a click handler to the window. When the handler fires I need to compare the target with the dom children of my component.

The click event contains properties like "path" which seems to hold the dom path that the event has traveled. I'm not sure what to compare or how to best traverse it, and I'm thinking someone must have already put that in a clever utility function... No?

Share Improve this question edited Aug 21, 2022 at 23:36 Yilmaz 49k18 gold badges212 silver badges266 bronze badges asked Sep 13, 2015 at 18:34 Thijs KoerselmanThijs Koerselman 23.2k25 gold badges84 silver badges118 bronze badges 8
  • Could you attach the click handler to the parent rather than the window? – J. Mark Stevens Commented Sep 13, 2015 at 18:47
  • If you attach a click handler to the parent you know when that element or one of their children is clicked, but I need to detect all other places that are clicked, so the handler needs to be attached to the window. – Thijs Koerselman Commented Sep 13, 2015 at 18:50
  • I looked at the article after the previous response. How about setting a clickState in the top component and passing click actions from the kids. Then you would check the props in the kids to manage open close state. – J. Mark Stevens Commented Sep 13, 2015 at 19:01
  • The top component would be my app. But the listening component is several levels deep and has no strict position in the dom. I can't possibly add click handlers to all components in my app just because one of them is interested to know if you clicked somewhere outside of it. Other components should not be aware of this logic because that would create terrible dependencies and boilerplate code. – Thijs Koerselman Commented Sep 13, 2015 at 19:14
  • 22 I would like to recommend you a very nice lib. created by AirBnb: github.com/airbnb/react-outside-click-handler – Osoian Marcel Commented Apr 5, 2019 at 13:35
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57 Answers 57

Reset to default 1 2 Next 1581

The following solution uses ES6 and follows best practices for binding as well as setting the ref through a method.

To see it in action:

  • Hooks Implementation
  • Class Implementation After React 16.3
  • Class Implementation Before React 16.3

Hooks Implementation:

import React, { useRef, useEffect } from "react";

/**
 * Hook that alerts clicks outside of the passed ref
 */
function useOutsideAlerter(ref) {
  useEffect(() => {
    /**
     * Alert if clicked on outside of element
     */
    function handleClickOutside(event) {
      if (ref.current && !ref.current.contains(event.target)) {
        alert("You clicked outside of me!");
      }
    }
    // Bind the event listener
    document.addEventListener("mousedown", handleClickOutside);
    return () => {
      // Unbind the event listener on clean up
      document.removeEventListener("mousedown", handleClickOutside);
    };
  }, [ref]);
}

/**
 * Component that alerts if you click outside of it
 */
export default function OutsideAlerter(props) {
  const wrapperRef = useRef(null);
  useOutsideAlerter(wrapperRef);

  return <div ref={wrapperRef}>{props.children}</div>;
}

Class Implementation:

After 16.3

import React, { Component } from "react";

/**
 * Component that alerts if you click outside of it
 */
export default class OutsideAlerter extends Component {
  constructor(props) {
    super(props);

    this.wrapperRef = React.createRef();
    this.handleClickOutside = this.handleClickOutside.bind(this);
  }

  componentDidMount() {
    document.addEventListener("mousedown", this.handleClickOutside);
  }

  componentWillUnmount() {
    document.removeEventListener("mousedown", this.handleClickOutside);
  }

  /**
   * Alert if clicked on outside of element
   */
  handleClickOutside(event) {
    if (this.wrapperRef && !this.wrapperRef.current.contains(event.target)) {
      alert("You clicked outside of me!");
    }
  }

  render() {
    return <div ref={this.wrapperRef}>{this.props.children}</div>;
  }
}

Before 16.3

import React, { Component } from "react";

/**
 * Component that alerts if you click outside of it
 */
export default class OutsideAlerter extends Component {
  constructor(props) {
    super(props);

    this.setWrapperRef = this.setWrapperRef.bind(this);
    this.handleClickOutside = this.handleClickOutside.bind(this);
  }

  componentDidMount() {
    document.addEventListener("mousedown", this.handleClickOutside);
  }

  componentWillUnmount() {
    document.removeEventListener("mousedown", this.handleClickOutside);
  }

  /**
   * Set the wrapper ref
   */
  setWrapperRef(node) {
    this.wrapperRef = node;
  }

  /**
   * Alert if clicked on outside of element
   */
  handleClickOutside(event) {
    if (this.wrapperRef && !this.wrapperRef.contains(event.target)) {
      alert("You clicked outside of me!");
    }
  }

  render() {
    return <div ref={this.setWrapperRef}>{this.props.children}</div>;
  }
}

I was stuck on the same issue. I am a bit late to the party here, but for me this is a really good solution. Hopefully it will be of help to someone else. You need to import findDOMNode from react-dom

import ReactDOM from 'react-dom';
// ... ✂

componentDidMount() {
    document.addEventListener('click', this.handleClickOutside, true);
}

componentWillUnmount() {
    document.removeEventListener('click', this.handleClickOutside, true);
}

handleClickOutside = event => {
    const domNode = ReactDOM.findDOMNode(this);

    if (!domNode || !domNode.contains(event.target)) {
        this.setState({
            visible: false
        });
    }
}

React Hooks Approach (16.8 +)

You can create a reusable hook called useComponentVisible.

import { useState, useEffect, useRef } from 'react';

export default function useComponentVisible(initialIsVisible) {
    const [isComponentVisible, setIsComponentVisible] = useState(initialIsVisible);
    const ref = useRef(null);

    const handleClickOutside = (event) => {
        if (ref.current && !ref.current.contains(event.target)) {
            setIsComponentVisible(false);
        }
    };

    useEffect(() => {
        document.addEventListener('click', handleClickOutside, true);
        return () => {
            document.removeEventListener('click', handleClickOutside, true);
        };
    }, []);

    return { ref, isComponentVisible, setIsComponentVisible };
}

Then in the component you wish to add the functionality to do the following:

const DropDown = () => {
    const { ref, isComponentVisible } = useComponentVisible(true);
    return (
       <div ref={ref}>
          {isComponentVisible && (<p>Dropdown Component</p>)}
       </div>
    );
 
}

Find a codesandbox example here.

2021 Update:

It has bee a while since I added this response, and since it still seems to garner some interest, I thought I would update it to a more current React version. On 2021, this is how I would write this component:

import React, { useState } from "react";
import "./DropDown.css";

export function DropDown({ options, callback }) {
    const [selected, setSelected] = useState("");
    const [expanded, setExpanded] = useState(false);

    function expand() {
        setExpanded(true);
    }

    function close() {
        setExpanded(false);
    }

    function select(event) {
        const value = event.target.textContent;
        callback(value);
        close();
        setSelected(value);
    }

    return (
        <div className="dropdown" tabIndex={0} onFocus={expand} onBlur={close} >
            <div>{selected}</div>
            {expanded ? (
                <div className={"dropdown-options-list"}>
                    {options.map((O) => (
                        <div className={"dropdown-option"} onClick={select}>
                            {O}
                        </div>
                    ))}
                </div>
            ) : null}
        </div>
    );
}

Original Answer (2016):

Here is the solution that best worked for me without attaching events to the container:

Certain HTML elements can have what is known as "focus", for example input elements. Those elements will also respond to the blur event, when they lose that focus.

To give any element the capacity to have focus, just make sure its tabindex attribute is set to anything other than -1. In regular HTML that would be by setting the tabindex attribute, but in React you have to use tabIndex (note the capital I).

You can also do it via JavaScript with element.setAttribute('tabindex',0)

This is what I was using it for, to make a custom DropDown menu.

var DropDownMenu = React.createClass({
    getInitialState: function(){
        return {
            expanded: false
        }
    },
    expand: function(){
        this.setState({expanded: true});
    },
    collapse: function(){
        this.setState({expanded: false});
    },
    render: function(){
        if(this.state.expanded){
            var dropdown = ...; //the dropdown content
        } else {
            var dropdown = undefined;
        }
        
        return (
            <div className="dropDownMenu" tabIndex="0" onBlur={ this.collapse } >
                <div className="currentValue" onClick={this.expand}>
                    {this.props.displayValue}
                </div>
                {dropdown}
            </div>
        );
    }
});

Hook implementation based on Tanner Linsley's excellent talk at JSConf Hawaii 2020:

useOuterClick API

const Client = () => {
  const innerRef = useOuterClick(ev => {/*event handler code on outer click*/});
  return <div ref={innerRef}> Inside </div> 
};

Implementation

function useOuterClick(callback) {
  const callbackRef = useRef(); // initialize mutable ref, which stores callback
  const innerRef = useRef(); // returned to client, who marks "border" element

  // update cb on each render, so second useEffect has access to current value 
  useEffect(() => { callbackRef.current = callback; });
  
  useEffect(() => {
    document.addEventListener("click", handleClick);
    return () => document.removeEventListener("click", handleClick);
    function handleClick(e) {
      if (innerRef.current && callbackRef.current && 
        !innerRef.current.contains(e.target)
      ) callbackRef.current(e);
    }
  }, []); // no dependencies -> stable click listener
      
  return innerRef; // convenience for client (doesn't need to init ref himself) 
}

Here is a working example:

/*
  Custom Hook
*/
function useOuterClick(callback) {
  const innerRef = useRef();
  const callbackRef = useRef();

  // set current callback in ref, before second useEffect uses it
  useEffect(() => { // useEffect wrapper to be safe for concurrent mode
    callbackRef.current = callback;
  });

  useEffect(() => {
    document.addEventListener("click", handleClick);
    return () => document.removeEventListener("click", handleClick);

    // read most recent callback and innerRef dom node from refs
    function handleClick(e) {
      if (
        innerRef.current && 
        callbackRef.current &&
        !innerRef.current.contains(e.target)
      ) {
        callbackRef.current(e);
      }
    }
  }, []); // no need for callback + innerRef dep
  
  return innerRef; // return ref; client can omit `useRef`
}

/*
  Usage 
*/
const Client = () => {
  const [counter, setCounter] = useState(0);
  const innerRef = useOuterClick(e => {
    // counter state is up-to-date, when handler is called
    alert(`Clicked outside! Increment counter to ${counter + 1}`);
    setCounter(c => c + 1);
  });
  return (
    <div>
      <p>Click outside!</p>
      <div id="container" ref={innerRef}>
        Inside, counter: {counter}
      </div>
    </div>
  );
};

ReactDOM.render(<Client />, document.getElementById("root"));
#container { border: 1px solid red; padding: 20px; }
<script src="https://cdnjs.cloudflare.com/ajax/libs/react/16.12.0/umd/react.production.min.js" integrity="sha256-Ef0vObdWpkMAnxp39TYSLVS/vVUokDE8CDFnx7tjY6U=" crossorigin="anonymous"></script>
<script src="https://cdnjs.cloudflare.com/ajax/libs/react-dom/16.12.0/umd/react-dom.production.min.js" integrity="sha256-p2yuFdE8hNZsQ31Qk+s8N+Me2fL5cc6NKXOC0U9uGww=" crossorigin="anonymous"></script>
<script> var {useRef, useEffect, useCallback, useState} = React</script>
<div id="root"></div>

Key points

  • useOuterClick makes use of mutable refs to provide lean Client API
  • stable click listener for lifetime of containing component ([] deps)
  • Client can set callback without needing to memoize it by useCallback
  • callback body has access to the most recent props and state - no stale closure values

(Side note for iOS)

iOS in general treats only certain elements as clickable. To make outer clicks work, choose a different click listener than document - nothing upwards including body. E.g. add a listener on the React root div and expand its height, like height: 100vh, to catch all outside clicks. Source: quirksmode.org

After trying many methods here, I decided to use github.com/Pomax/react-onclickoutside because of how complete it is.

I installed the module via npm and imported it into my component:

import onClickOutside from 'react-onclickoutside'

Then, in my component class I defined the handleClickOutside method:

handleClickOutside = () => {
  console.log('onClickOutside() method called')
}

And when exporting my component I wrapped it in onClickOutside():

export default onClickOutside(NameOfComponent)

That's it.

[Update] Solution with React ^16.8 using Hooks

CodeSandbox

import React, { useEffect, useRef, useState } from 'react';

const SampleComponent = () => {
    const [clickedOutside, setClickedOutside] = useState(false);
    const myRef = useRef();

    const handleClickOutside = e => {
        if (!myRef.current.contains(e.target)) {
            setClickedOutside(true);
        }
    };

    const handleClickInside = () => setClickedOutside(false);

    useEffect(() => {
        document.addEventListener('mousedown', handleClickOutside);
        return () => document.removeEventListener('mousedown', handleClickOutside);
    });

    return (
        <button ref={myRef} onClick={handleClickInside}>
            {clickedOutside ? 'Bye!' : 'Hello!'}
        </button>
    );
};

export default SampleComponent;

Solution with React ^16.3:

CodeSandbox

import React, { Component } from "react";

class SampleComponent extends Component {
  state = {
    clickedOutside: false
  };

  componentDidMount() {
    document.addEventListener("mousedown", this.handleClickOutside);
  }

  componentWillUnmount() {
    document.removeEventListener("mousedown", this.handleClickOutside);
  }

  myRef = React.createRef();

  handleClickOutside = e => {
    if (!this.myRef.current.contains(e.target)) {
      this.setState({ clickedOutside: true });
    }
  };

  handleClickInside = () => this.setState({ clickedOutside: false });

  render() {
    return (
      <button ref={this.myRef} onClick={this.handleClickInside}>
        {this.state.clickedOutside ? "Bye!" : "Hello!"}
      </button>
    );
  }
}

export default SampleComponent;

None of the other answers here worked for me. I was trying to hide a popup on blur, but since the contents were absolutely positioned, the onBlur was firing even on the click of inner contents too.

Here is an approach that did work for me:

// Inside the component:
onBlur(event) {
    // currentTarget refers to this component.
    // relatedTarget refers to the element where the user clicked (or focused) which
    // triggered this event.
    // So in effect, this condition checks if the user clicked outside the component.
    if (!event.currentTarget.contains(event.relatedTarget)) {
        // do your thing.
    }
},

Hope this helps.

The Ez way... (UPDATED 2023)

  • Create a hook: useOutsideClick.ts
export function useOutsideClick(ref: any, onClickOut: () => void, deps = []){
    useEffect(() => {
        const onClick = ({target}: any) => !ref?.contains(target) && onClickOut?.()
        document.addEventListener("click", onClick);
        return () => document.removeEventListener("click", onClick);
    }, deps);
}
  • Add componentRef to your component and call useOutsideClick
export function Example(){

  const ref: any = useRef();

  useOutsideClick(ref.current, () => {
    // do something here
  });

  return ( 
    <div ref={ref}> My Component </div>
  )
}

I found a solution thanks to Ben Alpert on discuss.reactjs.org. The suggested approach attaches a handler to the document but that turned out to be problematic. Clicking on one of the components in my tree resulted in a rerender which removed the clicked element on update. Because the rerender from React happens before the document body handler is called, the element was not detected as "inside" the tree.

The solution to this was to add the handler on the application root element.

main:

window.__myapp_container = document.getElementById('app')
React.render(<App/>, window.__myapp_container)

component:

import { Component, PropTypes } from 'react';
import ReactDOM from 'react-dom';

export default class ClickListener extends Component {

  static propTypes = {
    children: PropTypes.node.isRequired,
    onClickOutside: PropTypes.func.isRequired
  }

  componentDidMount () {
    window.__myapp_container.addEventListener('click', this.handleDocumentClick)
  }

  componentWillUnmount () {
    window.__myapp_container.removeEventListener('click', this.handleDocumentClick)
  }

  /* using fat arrow to bind to instance */
  handleDocumentClick = (evt) => {
    const area = ReactDOM.findDOMNode(this.refs.area);

    if (!area.contains(evt.target)) {
      this.props.onClickOutside(evt)
    }
  }

  render () {
    return (
      <div ref='area'>
       {this.props.children}
      </div>
    )
  }
}

MUI has a small component to solve this problem: https://mui.com/base/react-click-away-listener/ that you can cherry-pick it. It weights below 1 kB gzipped, it supports mobile, IE 11, and portals.

Alternatively:

const onClickOutsideListener = () => {
    alert("click outside")
    document.removeEventListener("click", onClickOutsideListener)
  }

...

return (
  <div
    onMouseLeave={() => {
          document.addEventListener("click", onClickOutsideListener)
        }}
  >
   ...
  </div>

with typescript

function Tooltip(): ReactElement {
  const [show, setShow] = useState(false);
  const ref = useRef<HTMLDivElement>(null);

  useEffect(() => {
    function handleClickOutside(event: MouseEvent): void {
      if (ref.current && !ref.current.contains(event.target as Node)) {
        setShow(false);
      }
    }
    // Bind the event listener
    document.addEventListener('mousedown', handleClickOutside);
    return () => {
      // Unbind the event listener on clean up
      document.removeEventListener('mousedown', handleClickOutside);
    };
  });

  return (
    <div ref={ref}></div>
  ) 
 }

For those who need absolute positioning, a simple option I opted for is to add a wrapper component that is styled to cover the whole page with a transparent background. Then you can add an onClick on this element to close your inside component.

<div style={{
        position: 'fixed',
        top: '0', right: '0', bottom: '0', left: '0',
        zIndex: '1000',
      }} onClick={() => handleOutsideClick()} >
    <Content style={{position: 'absolute'}}/>
</div>

As it is right now if you add a click handler on content, the event will also be propagated to the upper div and therefore trigger the handlerOutsideClick. If this is not your desired behavior, simply stop the event progation on your handler.

<Content style={{position: 'absolute'}} onClick={e => {
                                          e.stopPropagation();
                                          desiredFunctionCall();
                                        }}/>

`

import { useClickAway } from "react-use";

useClickAway(ref, () => console.log('OUTSIDE CLICKED'));
import { RefObject, useEffect } from 'react';

const useClickOutside = <T extends HTMLElement>(ref: RefObject<T>, fn: () => void) => {
    useEffect(() => {
        const element = ref?.current;
        function handleClickOutside(event: Event) {
            if (element && !element.contains(event.target as Node | null)) {
                fn();
            }
        }
        document.addEventListener('mousedown', handleClickOutside);
        return () => {
            document.removeEventListener('mousedown', handleClickOutside);
        };
    }, [ref, fn]);
};

export default useClickOutside;

Here is my approach (demo - https://jsfiddle.net/agymay93/4/):

I've created special component called WatchClickOutside and it can be used like (I assume JSX syntax):

<WatchClickOutside onClickOutside={this.handleClose}>
  <SomeDropdownEtc>
</WatchClickOutside>

Here is code of WatchClickOutside component:

import React, { Component } from 'react';

export default class WatchClickOutside extends Component {
  constructor(props) {
    super(props);
    this.handleClick = this.handleClick.bind(this);
  }

  componentWillMount() {
    document.body.addEventListener('click', this.handleClick);
  }

  componentWillUnmount() {
    // remember to remove all events to avoid memory leaks
    document.body.removeEventListener('click', this.handleClick);
  }

  handleClick(event) {
    const {container} = this.refs; // get container that we'll wait to be clicked outside
    const {onClickOutside} = this.props; // get click outside callback
    const {target} = event; // get direct click event target

    // if there is no proper callback - no point of checking
    if (typeof onClickOutside !== 'function') {
      return;
    }

    // if target is container - container was not clicked outside
    // if container contains clicked target - click was not outside of it
    if (target !== container && !container.contains(target)) {
      onClickOutside(event); // clicked outside - fire callback
    }
  }

  render() {
    return (
      <div ref="container">
        {this.props.children}
      </div>
    );
  }
}

Typescript + simplified version of @ford04's proposal:

useOuterClick API

const Client = () => {
  const ref = useOuterClick<HTMLDivElement>(e => { /* Custom-event-handler */ });
  return <div ref={ref}> Inside </div> 
};

Implementation

export default function useOuterClick<T extends HTMLElement>(callback: Function) {
  const callbackRef = useRef<Function>(); // initialize mutable ref, which stores callback
  const innerRef = useRef<T>(null); // returned to client, who marks "border" element

  // update cb on each render, so second useEffect has access to current value
  useEffect(() => { callbackRef.current = callback; });

  useEffect(() => {
    document.addEventListener("click", _onClick);
    return () => document.removeEventListener("click", _onClick);
    function _onClick(e: any): void {
      const clickedOutside = !(innerRef.current?.contains(e.target));
      if (clickedOutside)
        callbackRef.current?.(e);
    }
  }, []); // no dependencies -> stable click listener

  return innerRef; // convenience for client (doesn't need to init ref himself)
}

Simply with ClickAwayListener from mui (material-ui):

<ClickAwayListener onClickAway={handleClickAway}>
    {children}
<ClickAwayListener >

for more info you can check:https://mui.com/base/react-click-away-listener/

This already has many answers but they don't address e.stopPropagation() and preventing clicking on react links outside of the element you wish to close.

Due to the fact that React has it's own artificial event handler you aren't able to use document as the base for event listeners. You need to e.stopPropagation() before this as React uses document itself. If you use for example document.querySelector('body') instead. You are able to prevent the click from the React link. Following is an example of how I implement click outside and close.
This uses ES6 and React 16.3.

import React, { Component } from 'react';

class App extends Component {
  constructor(props) {
    super(props);

    this.state = {
      isOpen: false,
    };

    this.insideContainer = React.createRef();
  }

  componentWillMount() {
    document.querySelector('body').addEventListener("click", this.handleClick, false);
  }

  componentWillUnmount() {
    document.querySelector('body').removeEventListener("click", this.handleClick, false);
  }

  handleClick(e) {
    /* Check that we've clicked outside of the container and that it is open */
    if (!this.insideContainer.current.contains(e.target) && this.state.isOpen === true) {
      e.preventDefault();
      e.stopPropagation();
      this.setState({
        isOpen: false,
      })
    }
  };

  togggleOpenHandler(e) {
    e.preventDefault();

    this.setState({
      isOpen: !this.state.isOpen,
    })
  }

  render(){
    return(
      <div>
        <span ref={this.insideContainer}>
          <a href="#open-container" onClick={(e) => this.togggleOpenHandler(e)}>Open me</a>
        </span>
        <a href="/" onClick({/* clickHandler */})>
          Will not trigger a click when inside is open.
        </a>
      </div>
    );
  }
}

export default App;

I did this partly by following this and by following the React official docs on handling refs which requires react ^16.3. This is the only thing that worked for me after trying some of the other suggestions here...

class App extends Component {
  constructor(props) {
    super(props);
    this.inputRef = React.createRef();
  }
  componentWillMount() {
    document.addEventListener("mousedown", this.handleClick, false);
  }
  componentWillUnmount() {
    document.removeEventListener("mousedown", this.handleClick, false);
  }
  handleClick = e => {
    /*Validating click is made inside a component*/
    if ( this.inputRef.current === e.target ) {
      return;
    }
    this.handleclickOutside();
  };
  handleClickOutside(){
    /*code to handle what to do when clicked outside*/
  }
  render(){
    return(
      <div>
        <span ref={this.inputRef} />
      </div>
    )
  }
}

Typescript with Hooks

Note: I'm using React version 16.3, with React.createRef. For other versions use the ref callback.

Dropdown component:

interface DropdownProps {
 ...
};

export const Dropdown: React.FC<DropdownProps> () {
  const ref: React.RefObject<HTMLDivElement> = React.createRef();
  
  const handleClickOutside = (event: MouseEvent) => {
    if (ref && ref !== null) {
      const cur = ref.current;
      if (cur && !cur.contains(event.target as Node)) {
        // close all dropdowns
      }
    }
  }

  useEffect(() => {
    // Bind the event listener
    document.addEventListener("mousedown", handleClickOutside);
    return () => {
      // Unbind the event listener on clean up
      document.removeEventListener("mousedown", handleClickOutside);
    };
  });

  return (
    <div ref={ref}>
        ...
    </div>
  );
}

To extend on the accepted answer made by Ben Bud, if you are using styled-components, passing refs that way will give you an error such as "this.wrapperRef.contains is not a function".

The suggested fix, in the comments, to wrap the styled component with a div and pass the ref there, works. Having said that, in their docs they already explain the reason for this and the proper use of refs within styled-components:

Passing a ref prop to a styled component will give you an instance of the StyledComponent wrapper, but not to the underlying DOM node. This is due to how refs work. It's not possible to call DOM methods, like focus, on our wrappers directly. To get a ref to the actual, wrapped DOM node, pass the callback to the innerRef prop instead.

Like so:

<StyledDiv innerRef={el => { this.el = el }} />

Then you can access it directly within the "handleClickOutside" function:

handleClickOutside = e => {
    if (this.el && !this.el.contains(e.target)) {
        console.log('clicked outside')
    }
}

This also applies for the "onBlur" approach:

componentDidMount(){
    this.el.focus()
}
blurHandler = () => {
    console.log('clicked outside')
}
render(){
    return(
        <StyledDiv
            onBlur={this.blurHandler}
            tabIndex="0"
            innerRef={el => { this.el = el }}
        />
    )
}

So I faced a similar problem but in my case the selected answer here wasn't working because I had a button for the dropdown which is, well, a part of the document. So clicking the button also triggered the handleClickOutside function. To stop that from triggering, I had to add a new ref to the button and this !menuBtnRef.current.contains(e.target) to the conditional. I'm leaving it here if someone is facing the same issue like me.

Here's how the component looks like now:


const Component = () => {

    const [isDropdownOpen, setIsDropdownOpen] = useState(false);
    const menuRef     = useRef(null);
    const menuBtnRef  = useRef(null);

    const handleDropdown = (e) => {
        setIsDropdownOpen(!isDropdownOpen);
    }

    const handleClickOutside = (e) => {
        if (menuRef.current && !menuRef.current.contains(e.target) && !menuBtnRef.current.contains(e.target)) {
            setIsDropdownOpen(false);
        }
    }

    useEffect(() => {
        document.addEventListener('mousedown', handleClickOutside, true);
        return () => {
            document.removeEventListener('mousedown', handleClickOutside, true);
        };
    }, []);

    return (

           <button ref={menuBtnRef} onClick={handleDropdown}></button>

           <div ref={menuRef} className={`${isDropdownOpen ? styles.dropdownMenuOpen : ''}`}>
                // ...dropdown items
           </div>
    )
}

This is my way of solving the problem

I return a boolean value from my custom hook, and when this value changes (true if the click was outside of the ref that I passed as an arg), this way i can catch this change with an useEffect hook, i hope it's clear for you.

Here's a live example: Live Example on codesandbox

import { useEffect, useRef, useState } from "react";

const useOutsideClick = (ref) => {
  const [outsieClick, setOutsideClick] = useState(null);

  useEffect(() => {
    const handleClickOutside = (e) => {
      if (!ref.current.contains(e.target)) {
        setOutsideClick(true);
      } else {
        setOutsideClick(false);
      }

      setOutsideClick(null);
    };

    document.addEventListener("mousedown", handleClickOutside);

    return () => {
      document.removeEventListener("mousedown", handleClickOutside);
    };
  }, [ref]);

  return outsieClick;
};

export const App = () => {
  const buttonRef = useRef(null);
  const buttonClickedOutside = useOutsideClick(buttonRef);

  useEffect(() => {
    // if the the click was outside of the button
    // do whatever you want
    if (buttonClickedOutside) {
      alert("hey you clicked outside of the button");
    }
  }, [buttonClickedOutside]);

  return (
    <div className="App">
      <button ref={buttonRef}>click outside me</button>
    </div>
  );
}

If you need typescript version:

import React, { useRef, useEffect } from "react";

interface Props {
  ref: React.MutableRefObject<any>;

}

export const useOutsideAlerter = ({ ref }: Props) => {
  useEffect(() => {
    const handleClickOutside = (event: MouseEvent) => {
      if (ref.current && !ref.current.contains(event.target as Node)) {
       //do what ever you want
      }
    };
    // Bind the event listener
    document.addEventListener("mousedown", handleClickOutside);
    return () => {
      // Unbind the event listener on clean up
      document.removeEventListener("mousedown", handleClickOutside);
    };
  }, [ref]);
};
export default useOutsideAlerter;

If you want to extend this to close a modal or hide something you can also do:

import React, { useRef, useEffect } from "react";

interface Props {
  ref: React.MutableRefObject<any>;
  setter: React.Dispatch<React.SetStateAction<boolean>>;
}

export const useOutsideAlerter = ({ ref, setter }: Props) => {
  useEffect(() => {
    const handleClickOutside = (event: MouseEvent) => {
      if (ref.current && !ref.current.contains(event.target as Node)) {
        setter(false);
      }
    };
    // Bind the event listener
    document.addEventListener("mousedown", handleClickOutside);
    return () => {
      // Unbind the event listener on clean up
      document.removeEventListener("mousedown", handleClickOutside);
    };
  }, [ref, setter]);
};
export default useOutsideAlerter;

There is an npm module which will make your life easier to handle the clicks outside a specific component. For Example: You make states as true and false. On dropdown a menu list your state is true and on clicking on close button your state converts to false and dropdown menu component gets disappear. But you want to close this drop down menu also clicking on outside of the drop down menu on the window. To deal with such scenario follow the below steps:

 npm i react-outside-click-handler

Now Import this module in your React File:

import OutsideClickHandler from 'react-outside-click-handler';

Now You have imported a component from this module. This component takes a component outside of which you want to detect a click event

function MyComponent() {
  return (
    <OutsideClickHandler
      onOutsideClick={() => {
        alert("You clicked outside of this component!!!");
        //Or any logic you want
      }} >
      <yourComponent />
    </OutsideClickHandler>
  );
}

Now Simply replace you Own component with . I hope this find you helpful :)

UseOnClickOutside Hook - React 16.8 +

Create a general useOnOutsideClick function

export const useOnOutsideClick = handleOutsideClick => {
  const innerBorderRef = useRef();

  const onClick = event => {
    if (
      innerBorderRef.current &&
      !innerBorderRef.current.contains(event.target)
    ) {
      handleOutsideClick();
    }
  };

  useMountEffect(() => {
    document.addEventListener("click", onClick, true);
    return () => {
      document.removeEventListener("click", onClick, true);
    };
  });

  return { innerBorderRef };
};

const useMountEffect = fun => useEffect(fun, []);

Then use the hook in any functional component.

const OutsideClickDemo = ({ currentMode, changeContactAppMode }) => {

  const [open, setOpen] = useState(false);
  const { innerBorderRef } = useOnOutsideClick(() => setOpen(false));

  return (
    <div>
      <button onClick={() => setOpen(true)}>open</button>
      {open && (
        <div ref={innerBorderRef}>
           <SomeChild/>
        </div>
      )}
    </div>
  );

};

Link to demo

Partially inspired by @pau1fitzgerald answer.

I had a similar use case where I had to develop a custom dropdown menu. it should close automatically when the user clicks outside. here is the recent React Hooks implementation-

import { useEffect, useRef, useState } from "react";

export const  App = () => {
  
  const ref = useRef();

  const [isMenuOpen, setIsMenuOpen] = useState(false);

  useEffect(() => {
    const checkIfClickedOutside = (e) => {
      // If the menu is open and the clicked target is not within the menu,
      // then close the menu
      if (isMenuOpen && ref.current && !ref.current.contains(e.target)) {
        setIsMenuOpen(false);
      }
    };

    document.addEventListener("mousedown", checkIfClickedOutside);

    return () => {
      // Cleanup the event listener
      document.removeEventListener("mousedown", checkIfClickedOutside);
    };
  }, [isMenuOpen]);

  return (
    <div className="wrapper" ref={ref}>
      <button
        className="button"
        onClick={() => setIsMenuOpen((oldState) => !oldState)}
      >
        Click Me
      </button>
      {isMenuOpen && (
        <ul className="list">
          <li className="list-item">dropdown option 1</li>
          <li className="list-item">dropdown option 2</li>
          <li className="list-item">dropdown option 3</li>
          <li className="list-item">dropdown option 4</li>
        </ul>
      )}
    </div>
  );
}

Since for me the !ref.current.contains(e.target) wasn't working because the DOM elements contained inside the ref were changing, I came up with a slightly different solution:

function useClickOutside<T extends HTMLElement>(
  element: T | null,
  onClickOutside: () => void,
) {
  useEffect(() => {
    function handleClickOutside(event: MouseEvent) {
      const xCoord = event.clientX;
      const yCoord = event.clientY;

      if (element) {
        const { right, x, bottom, y } = element.getBoundingClientRect();
        if (xCoord < right && xCoord > x && yCoord < bottom && yCoord > y) {
          return;
        }

        onClickOutside();
      }
    }

    document.addEventListener('click', handleClickOutside);
    return () => {
      document.removeEventListener('click', handleClickOutside);
    };
  }, [element, onClickOutside]);

Try this it works perfectly

import React, { useState, useRef, useEffect } from "react";

const Dropdown = () => {

  const [state, setState] = useState(true);
  const dropdownRef = useRef(null);

  const handleToggleDropdown = () => {
    if (state) setState(false);
    else setState(true);
  }

  const handleClickOutside = (event) => {
    if (dropdownRef.current && !dropdownRef.current.contains(event.target)) {
      setState(true);
    }
  }

  useEffect(() => {
    document.addEventListener('mousedown', handleClickOutside);
    return () => {
      document.removeEventListener('mousedown', handleClickOutside);
    }
  }, []);

  return (
    <React.Fragment>
      <div className="dropdown" ref={dropdownRef}>
        <button onClick={() => handleToggleDropdown()}>
          Options
        </button>
        <div className="dropdown-content" hidden={state}>


        </div>
      </div>
    </React.Fragment>
  );
}


export default Dropdown;

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