Most of the design systems, such as Material UI and Ant Design have drawer-like elements that allow you to create animated sliding sidebars, but many, myself included, find these design systems to be limiting. They also introduce a ton of overhead in dependency code base.
During any web development project, I am always looking for places where layers of abstraction and dependencies can be eliminated, especially when the underlying task that the layer of abstraction is producing is relatively simple. Well, good news: a responsive sidebar is one of those things! π€
In this tutorial, I'll show you how to leverage the power of Tailwind CSS and Next.js to create a simple yet elegant mobile-responsive sidebar using no other dependencies. (I am using react-icons
for this example, but you can use whatever you like.)
The first thing we'll want to do is create a folder called Layout in our components folder. This folder will house all the components required to render our sidebar, mobile menu bar and the main layout component.
Next, let's create our sidebar component:
// @/components/Layout/Sidebar.js
import React, { useState, useEffect } from 'react'
import Link from 'next/link'
import { useRouter } from 'next/router'
import { SlHome } from 'react-icons/sl'
import { BsInfoSquare, BsEnvelopeAt } from 'react-icons/bs'
import { FaTshirt, FaRedhat } from 'react-icons/fa'
import logo from '@/img/logo.svg'
export default function Sidebar({ show, setter }) {
const router = useRouter();
// Define our base class
const className = "bg-black w-[250px] transition-[margin-left] ease-in-out duration-500 fixed md:static top-0 bottom-0 left-0 z-40";
// Append class based on state of sidebar visiblity
const appendClass = show ? " ml-0" : " ml-[-250px] md:ml-0";
// Clickable menu items
const MenuItem = ({ icon, name, route }) => {
// Highlight menu item based on currently displayed route
const colorClass = router.pathname === route ? "text-white" : "text-white/50 hover:text-white";
return (
<Link
href={route}
onClick={() => {
setter(oldVal => !oldVal);
}}
className={`flex gap-1 [&>*]:my-auto text-md pl-6 py-3 border-b-[1px] border-b-white/10 ${colorClass}`}
>
<div className="text-xl flex [&>*]:mx-auto w-[30px]">
{icon}
</div>
<div>{name}</div>
</Link>
)
}
// Overlay to prevent clicks in background, also serves as our close button
const ModalOverlay = () => (
<div
className={`flex md:hidden fixed top-0 right-0 bottom-0 left-0 bg-black/50 z-30`}
onClick={() => {
setter(oldVal => !oldVal);
}}
/>
)
return (
<>
<div className={`${className}${appendClass}`}>
<div className="p-2 flex">
<Link href="/">
{/*eslint-disable-next-line*/}
<img src={logo.src} alt="Company Logo" width={300} height={300} />
</Link>
</div>
<div className="flex flex-col">
<MenuItem
name="Home"
route="/"
icon={<SlHome />}
/>
<MenuItem
name="T-Shirts"
route="/t-shirts"
icon={<FaTshirt />}
/>
<MenuItem
name="Hats"
route="/hats"
icon={<FaRedhat />}
/>
<MenuItem
name="About Us"
route="/about"
icon={<BsInfoSquare />}
/>
<MenuItem
name="Contact"
route="/contact"
icon={<BsEnvelopeAt />}
/>
</div>
</div>
{show ? <ModalOverlay /> : <></>}
</>
)
}
Ok, let's break this down. This component receives two props: show
and setter
. These are passed from the HOC Layout
, which we will define later. The show
prop is a boolean variable that toggles the state of the sidebar's visibility. The setter
prop is the function to set that state.
Next we define our base class and another variable called appendClass
, which will be conditionally rendered based on our show
state variable. When show
is false, we set the left margin to -250px but we set it to 0 on medium screens or larger. We also set the transition property in our base class to a custom value of [margin-left]
, which will cause the browser to automagically animate our sidebar as a slide animation! π
Then we define a subcomponent called <MenuItem>
which will be used for our links. We use next/router
to determine which link we should highlight as active. Also, we toggle the setter function when a menu item is clicked to the sidebar closes. This is required because this is a single-page app, and it would be annoying if the sidebar stayed open when you click a link.
Finally, we have <ModalOverlay>
, which serves two purposes: 1.) it prevents clicking of anything in the background while the sidebar is open, and 2.) it serves as the close button for the sidebar. You could also add an additional visible close button as well, but I think that touching in the outside bound areas of modals on mobile UIs is a very intuitive and natural function, so I opted not to include one.
Ok, now we'll create our mobile menu bar component that will only displayed on screens smaller than the medium breakpoint:
// @/components/Layout/MenuBarMobile.js
import React from 'react'
import Link from 'next/link'
import { FiMenu as Icon } from 'react-icons/fi'
import { FaUser } from 'react-icons/fa'
import logo from '@/img/logo.svg'
export default function MenuBarMobile({ setter }) {
return (
<nav className="md:hidden z-20 fixed top-0 left-0 right-0 h-[60px] bg-black flex [&>*]:my-auto px-2">
<button
className="text-4xl flex text-white"
onClick={() => {
setter(oldVal => !oldVal);
}}
>
<Icon />
</button>
<Link href="/" className="mx-auto">
{/*eslint-disable-next-line*/}
<img
src={logo.src}
alt="Company Logo"
width={50}
height={50}
/>
</Link>
<Link
className="text-3xl flex text-white"
href="/login"
>
<FaUser />
</Link>
</nav>
)
}
This component has a fixed position at the top of the screen on mobile devices only. It serves primarily as a vehicle for our sidebar opener button. I put the login button there simply for illustration and symmetry. We need only to pass the setter
function of our showSidebar
state to this component.
Lastly, let's create our Layout
component that will bring it all together:
// @/components/Layout/index.js
import React, { useState } from 'react'
import Head from 'next/head'
import Sidebar from './Sidebar';
import MenuBarMobile from './MenuBarMobile';
export default function Layout({ pageTitle, children }) {
// Concatenate page title (if exists) to site title
let titleConcat = "Responsive Sidebar Example";
if (pageTitle) titleConcat = pageTitle + " | " + titleConcat;
// Mobile sidebar visibility state
const [showSidebar, setShowSidebar] = useState(false);
return (
<>
<Head>
<title>{titleConcat}</title>
</Head>
<div className="min-h-screen">
<div className="flex">
<MenuBarMobile setter={setShowSidebar} />
<Sidebar show={showSidebar} setter={setShowSidebar} />
<div className="flex flex-col flex-grow w-screen md:w-full min-h-screen">
{children}
</div>
</div>
</div>
</>
)
}
As you can see, this is where we define our showSidebar
state variable. We then pass it to <MenuBarMobile>
and <Sidebar>
.
Thank you for taking the time to read my article and I hope you found it useful (or at the very least, mildly entertaining). For more great information about web dev, systems administration and cloud computing, please read the Designly Blog. Also, please leave your comments! I love to hear thoughts from my readers.
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Resources for this tutorial:
Top comments (5)
I needed exactly this! Thanks a lot π₯
Glad to be of service! π€
Really helpful, thanks.
Would be helpful to actually see the design before implementing. A screenshot of how it appears for example
Thanks for your feedback! Yes, that would have been a good idea. I do have a link to a demo page I did at the bottom of the article though:
nextjs13-sidebar-example.vercel.app/
And, in anycase, you should style the sidebar how you see fit! I used Tailwind CSS to do my styling. Cheers!