Text Field
Text Fields let users enter and edit text.
Text fields allow users to enter text into a UI. They typically appear in forms and dialogs.
Basic TextField
The TextField
wrapper component is a complete form control including a label, input, and help text.
It comes with three variants: outlined (default), filled, and standard.
Form props
Standard form attributes are supported, for example required
, disabled
, type
, etc. as well as a helperText
which is used to give context about a field's input, such as how the input will be used.
Validation
The error
prop toggles the error state.
The helperText
prop can then be used to provide feedback to the user about the error.
Multiline
The multiline
prop transforms the text field into a TextareaAutosize element.
Unless the rows
prop is set, the height of the text field dynamically matches its content (using TextareaAutosize).
You can use the minRows
and maxRows
props to bound it.
Icons
There are multiple ways to display an icon with a text field.
Input Adornments
The main way is with an InputAdornment
.
This can be used to add a prefix, a suffix, or an action to an input.
For instance, you can use an icon button to hide or reveal the password.
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Weight
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Sizes
Fancy smaller inputs? Use the size
prop.
The filled
variant input height can be further reduced by rendering the label outside of it.
Margin
The margin
prop can be used to alter the vertical spacing of the text field.
Using none
(default) doesn't apply margins to the FormControl
whereas dense
and normal
do.
Full width
fullWidth
can be used to make the input take up the full width of its container.
Uncontrolled vs. Controlled
The component can be controlled or uncontrolled.
Components
TextField
is composed of smaller components (
FormControl
,
Input
,
FilledInput
,
InputLabel
,
OutlinedInput
,
and FormHelperText
) that you can leverage directly to significantly customize your form inputs.
You might also have noticed that some native HTML input properties are missing from the TextField
component.
This is on purpose.
The component takes care of the most used properties.
Then, it's up to the user to use the underlying component shown in the following demo. Still, you can use inputProps
(and InputProps
, InputLabelProps
properties) if you want to avoid some boilerplate.
Color
The color
prop changes the highlight color of the text field when focused.
Customization
Here are some examples of customizing the component. You can learn more about this in the overrides documentation page.
Using the styled API
Using the theme style overrides API
Use the styleOverrides
key to change any style injected by Material UI into the DOM.
See the theme style overrides documentation for further details.
Customization does not stop at CSS.
You can use composition to build custom components and give your app a unique feel.
Below is an example using the InputBase
component, inspired by Google Maps.
🎨 If you are looking for inspiration, you can check MUI Treasury's customization examples.
useFormControl
For advanced customization use cases, a useFormControl()
hook is exposed.
This hook returns the context value of the parent FormControl
component.
API
import { useFormControl } from '@mui/material/FormControl';
Returns
value
(object):
value.adornedStart
(bool): Indicate whether the childInput
orSelect
component has a start adornment.value.setAdornedStart
(func): Setter function foradornedStart
state value.value.color
(string): The theme color is being used, inherited fromFormControl
color
prop .value.disabled
(bool): Indicate whether the component is being displayed in a disabled state, inherited fromFormControl
disabled
prop.value.error
(bool): Indicate whether the component is being displayed in an error state, inherited fromFormControl
error
propvalue.filled
(bool): Indicate whether input is filledvalue.focused
(bool): Indicate whether the component and its children are being displayed in a focused statevalue.fullWidth
(bool): Indicate whether the component is taking up the full width of its container, inherited fromFormControl
fullWidth
propvalue.hiddenLabel
(bool): Indicate whether the label is being hidden, inherited fromFormControl
hiddenLabel
propvalue.required
(bool): Indicate whether the label is indicating that the input is required input, inherited from theFormControl
required
propvalue.size
(string): The size of the component, inherited from theFormControl
size
propvalue.variant
(string): The variant is being used by theFormControl
component and its children, inherited fromFormControl
variant
propvalue.onBlur
(func): Should be called when the input is blurredvalue.onFocus
(func): Should be called when the input is focusedvalue.onEmpty
(func): Should be called when the input is emptiedvalue.onFilled
(func): Should be called when the input is filled
Example
Performance
Global styles for the auto-fill keyframes are injected and removed on each mount and unmount, respectively.
If you are loading a large number of Text Field components at once, it might be a good idea to change this default behavior by enabling disableInjectingGlobalStyles
in MuiInputBase
.
Make sure to inject GlobalStyles
for the auto-fill keyframes at the top of your application.
import { GlobalStyles, createTheme, ThemeProvider } from '@mui/material';
const theme = createTheme({
components: {
MuiInputBase: {
defaultProps: {
disableInjectingGlobalStyles: true,
},
},
},
});
export default function App() {
return (
<ThemeProvider theme={theme}>
<GlobalStyles
styles={{
'@keyframes mui-auto-fill': { from: { display: 'block' } },
'@keyframes mui-auto-fill-cancel': { from: { display: 'block' } },
}}
/>
...
</ThemeProvider>
);
}
Limitations
Shrink
The input label "shrink" state isn't always correct. The input label is supposed to shrink as soon as the input is displaying something. In some circumstances, we can't determine the "shrink" state (number input, datetime input, Stripe input). You might notice an overlap.
To workaround the issue, you can force the "shrink" state of the label.
<TextField InputLabelProps={{ shrink: true }} />
or
<InputLabel shrink>Count</InputLabel>
Floating label
The floating label is absolutely positioned. It won't impact the layout of the page. Make sure that the input is larger than the label to display correctly.
type="number"
If you need a text field with number validation, you can use Base UI's Number Input instead.
You can follow this GitHub issue to track the progress of introducing the Number Input component to Material UI.
Helper text
The helper text prop affects the height of the text field. If two text fields are placed side by side, one with a helper text and one without, they will have different heights. For example:
Please enter your name
This can be fixed by passing a space character to the helperText
prop:
Please enter your name
Integration with 3rd party input libraries
You can use third-party libraries to format an input.
You have to provide a custom implementation of the <input>
element with the inputComponent
property.
The following demo uses the react-imask and react-number-format libraries. The same concept could be applied to, for example react-stripe-element.
The provided input component should expose a ref with a value that implements the following interface:
interface InputElement {
focus(): void;
value?: string;
}
const MyInputComponent = React.forwardRef((props, ref) => {
const { component: Component, ...other } = props;
// implement `InputElement` interface
React.useImperativeHandle(ref, () => ({
focus: () => {
// logic to focus the rendered component from 3rd party belongs here
},
// hiding the value e.g. react-stripe-elements
}));
// `Component` will be your `SomeThirdPartyComponent` from below
return <Component {...other} />;
});
// usage
<TextField
InputProps={{
inputComponent: MyInputComponent,
inputProps: {
component: SomeThirdPartyComponent,
},
}}
/>;
Accessibility
In order for the text field to be accessible, the input should be linked to the label and the helper text. The underlying DOM nodes should have this structure:
<div class="form-control">
<label for="my-input">Email address</label>
<input id="my-input" aria-describedby="my-helper-text" />
<span id="my-helper-text">We'll never share your email.</span>
</div>
- If you are using the
TextField
component, you just have to provide a uniqueid
unless you're using theTextField
only client-side. Until the UI is hydratedTextField
without an explicitid
will not have associated labels. - If you are composing the component:
<FormControl>
<InputLabel htmlFor="my-input">Email address</InputLabel>
<Input id="my-input" aria-describedby="my-helper-text" />
<FormHelperText id="my-helper-text">We'll never share your email.</FormHelperText>
</FormControl>
Complementary projects
For more advanced use cases, you might be able to take advantage of:
- react-hook-form: React hook for form validation.
- react-hook-form-mui: Material UI and react-hook-form combined.
- formik-material-ui: Bindings for using Material UI with formik.
- redux-form-material-ui: Bindings for using Material UI with Redux Form.
- mui-rff: Bindings for using Material UI with React Final Form.
- @ui-schema/ds-material Bindings for using Material UI with UI Schema. JSON Schema compatible.
- @data-driven-forms/mui-component-mapper: Bindings for using Material UI with Data Driven Forms.
Unstyled
Use the Base UI Text Field for complete ownership of the component's design, with no Material UI or Joy UI styles to override. This unstyled version of the component is the ideal choice for heavy customization with a smaller bundle size.
API
See the documentation below for a complete reference to all of the props and classes available to the components mentioned here.