<ReferenceInput>

Use <ReferenceInput> for foreign-key values, for instance, to edit the company_id of a contact resource.

Usage

For instance, a contact record has a company_id field, which is a foreign key to a company record.

┌──────────────┐       ┌────────────┐
│ contacts     │       │ companies  │
│--------------│       │------------│
│ id           │   ┌───│ id         │
│ first_name   │   │   │ name       │
│ last_name    │   │   │ address    │
│ company_id   │───┘   └────────────┘
└──────────────┘             

To make the company_id for a contact editable, use the following syntax:

import { Edit, SimpleForm, TextInput, ReferenceInput } from 'react-admin';

const ContactEdit = () => (
    <Edit>
        <SimpleForm>
            <TextInput source="first_name" />
            <TextInput source="last_name" />
            <ReferenceInput source="company_id" reference="companies" />
        </SimpleForm>
    </Edit>
);

<ReferenceInput> requires a source and a reference prop.

<ReferenceInput> uses the foreign key value to fetch the related record. It also grabs the list of possible choices for the field. For instance, if the ContactEdit component above is used to edit the following contact:

{
    id: 123,
    first_name: 'John',
    last_name: 'Doe',
    company_id: 456
}

Then <ReferenceInput> will issue the following queries:

dataProvider.getMany('companies', { ids: [456] });
dataProvider.getList('companies', { 
    filter: {},
    sort: { field: 'id', order: 'DESC' },
    pagination: { page: 1, perPage: 25 }
});

<ReferenceInput> renders an <AutocompleteInput> to let the user select the related record. Users can narrow down the choices by typing a search term in the input. This modifies the query sent to the dataProvider as follows:

dataProvider.getList('companies', { 
    filter: { q: ['search term'] },
    sort: { field: 'id', order: 'DESC' },
    pagination: { page: 1, perPage: 25 }
});

See Customizing the filter query below for more information about how to change filter prop based on the <AutocompleteInput> search term.

You can tweak how <ReferenceInput> fetches the possible values using the page, perPage, sort, and filter props.

You can replace the default <AutocompleteInput> by another choice input. To do so, pass the choice input component as <ReferenceInput> child. For instance, to use a <SelectInput>:

import { ReferenceInput, SelectInput } from 'react-admin';

<ReferenceInput source="company_id" reference="companies">
    <SelectInput />
</ReferenceInput>

See the children section for more details.

Props

Prop Required Type Default Description
source Required string - Name of the entity property to use for the input value
reference Required string ’’ Name of the reference resource, e.g. ‘companies’.
children Optional ReactNode <Autocomplete Input/> The actual selection component
enableGet Choices Optional ({q: string}) => boolean () => true Function taking the filterValues and returning a boolean to enable the getList call.
filter Optional Object {} Permanent filters to use for getting the suggestion list
label Optional string - Useful only when ReferenceInput is in a Filter array, the label is used as the Filter label.
page Optional number 1 The current page number
perPage Optional number 25 Number of suggestions to show
queryOptions Optional UseQueryOptions {} react-query client options
sort Optional { field: String, order: 'ASC' or 'DESC' } { field:'id', order:'DESC' } How to order the list of suggestions

Note: <ReferenceInput> doesn’t accept the common input props (like label) ; it is the responsibility of the child component to apply them.

children

By default, <ReferenceInput> renders an <AutocompleteInput> to let end users select the reference record.

You can pass a child component to customize the way the reference selector is displayed.

For instance, to customize the input label, set the label prop on the child component:

import { ReferenceInput, AutocompleteInput } from 'react-admin';

<ReferenceInput source="company_id" reference="companies">
    <AutocompleteInput label="Employer" />
</ReferenceInput>

You can also use <SelectInput> or <RadioButtonGroupInput> instead of <AutocompleteInput>.

import { ReferenceInput, SelectInput } from 'react-admin';

<ReferenceInput source="company_id" reference="companies">
    <SelectInput />
</ReferenceInput>

You can even use a component of your own as child, provided it detects a ChoicesContext is available and gets their choices from it.

The choices context value can be accessed with the useChoicesContext hook.

enableGetChoices

You can make the getList() call lazy by using the enableGetChoices prop. This prop should be a function that receives the filterValues as parameter and return a boolean. This can be useful when using an AutocompleteInput on a resource with a lot of data. The following example only starts fetching the options when the query has at least 2 characters:

<ReferenceInput
     source="company_id"
     reference="companies"
     enableGetChoices={({ q }) => q && q.length >= 2}
/>

filter

You can filter the query used to populate the possible values. Use the filter prop for that.

<ReferenceInput source="company_id" reference="companies" filter={{ is_published: true }} />

Note: When users type a search term in the <AutocompleteInput>, this doesn’t affect the filter prop. Check the Customizing the filter query section below for details on how that filter works.

format

By default, children of <ReferenceInput> transform null values from the dataProvider into empty strings.

If you want to change this behavior, you have to pass a custom format prop to the <ReferenceInput> child component, because <ReferenceInput> doesn’t have a format prop. It is the responsibility of the child component to format the input value.

For instance, if you want to transform an option value before rendering, and the selection control is an <AutocompleteInput> (the default), set the <AutocompleteInput format> prop as follows:

import { ReferenceInput, AutocompleteInput } from 'react-admin';

<ReferenceInput source="company_id" reference="companies">
    <AutocompleteInput format={value => value == null ? 'not defined' : value} />
</ReferenceInput>

The same goes if the child is a <SelectInput>:

import { ReferenceInput, SelectInput } from 'react-admin';

<ReferenceInput source="company_id" reference="companies">
    <SelectInput format={value => value === undefined ? 'not defined' : null} />
</ReferenceInput>

label

In an <Edit> or <Create> view, the label prop has no effect. <ReferenceInput> has no label, it simply renders its child (an <AutocompleteInput> by default). If you need to customize the label, set the label prop on the child element:

import { ReferenceInput, AutocompleteInput } from 'react-admin';

<ReferenceInput source="company_id" reference="companies">
    <AutocompleteInput label="Employer" />
</ReferenceInput>

In a Filter form, react-admin uses the label prop to set the Filter label. So in this case, the label prop is not ignored, but you also have to set it on the child input.

const filters = [
    <ReferenceInput label="Employer" source="company_id" reference="companies">
        <AutocompleteInput label="Employer" />
    </ReferenceInput>,
];

parse

By default, children of <ReferenceInput> transform the empty form value (an empty string) into null before passing it to the dataProvider.

If you want to change this behavior, you have to pass a custom parse prop to the <ReferenceInput> child component, because <ReferenceInput> doesn’t have a parse prop. It is the responsibility of the child component to parse the input value.

For instance, if you want to transform an option value before submission, and the selection control is an <AutocompleteInput> (the default), set the <AutocompleteInput parse> prop as follows:

import { ReferenceInput, AutocompleteInput } from 'react-admin';

<ReferenceInput source="company_id" reference="companies">
    <AutocompleteInput parse={value => value === 'not defined' ? null : value} />
</ReferenceInput>

The same goes if the child is a <SelectInput>:

import { ReferenceInput, SelectInput } from 'react-admin';

<ReferenceInput source="company_id" reference="companies">
    <SelectInput parse={value => value === 'not defined' ? undefined : null} />
</ReferenceInput>

perPage

By default, <ReferenceInput> fetches only the first 25 values. You can extend this limit by setting the perPage prop.

<ReferenceInput source="company_id" reference="companies" perPage={100} />

This prop is mostly useful when using <SelectInput> or <RadioButtonGroupInput> as child, as the default <AutocompleteInput> child allows to filter the possible choices with a search input.

reference

The name of the reference resource. For instance, in a contact form, if you want to edit the contact employer, the reference should be “companies”.

<ReferenceInput source="company_id" reference="companies" />

<ReferenceInput> will use the reference resource recordRepresentation to display the selected record and the list of possible records. So for instance, if the companies resource is defined as follow:

<Resource name="companies" recordRepresentation="name" />

Then <ReferenceInput> will display the company name in the input and in the list of possible values.

You can override this default by specifying the optionText prop in the child component. For instance, for an <AutocompleteInput>:

<ReferenceInput source="company_id" reference="companies">
    <AutocompleteInput optionText="reference" />
</ReferenceInput>

queryOptions

Use the queryOptions prop to pass options to the dataProvider.getList() query that fetches the possible choices.

For instance, to pass a custom meta:

<ReferenceInput 
    source="company_id"
    reference="companies"
    queryOptions={{ meta: { foo: 'bar' } }}
/>

sort

By default, <ReferenceInput> orders the possible values by id desc.

You can change this order by setting the sort prop (an object with field and order properties).

<ReferenceInput
    source="company"
    reference="companies"
    sort={{ field: 'name', order: 'ASC' }}
/>

source

The name of the property in the record that contains the identifier of the selected record.

For instance, if a contact contains a reference to a company via a company_id property:

{
    id: 456,
    firstName: "John",
    lastName: "Doe",
    company_id: 12,
}

Then to display a selector for the contact company, you should call <ReferenceInput> as follows:

<ReferenceInput source="company_id" reference="companies" />

Customizing The Filter Query

By default, <ReferenceInput> renders an <AutocompleteInput>, which lets users type a search term to filter the possible values. <ReferenceInput> calls dataProvider.getList() using the search term as filter, using the format filter: { q: [search term] }.

If you want to customize the conversion between the search term and the query filter to match the filtering capabilities of your API, use the <AutocompleteInput filterToQuery> prop.

const filterToQuery = searchText => ({ name_ilike: `%${searchText}%` });

<ReferenceInput source="company_id" reference="companies">
    <AutocompleteInput filterToQuery={filterToQuery} />
</ReferenceInput>

Tree Structure

If the reference resource is a tree, use <ReferenceNodeInput> instead of <ReferenceInput>.

For instance, to edit the category of a product and let the user choose the category in a tree:

import { Edit, SimpleForm, TextInput } from 'react-admin';
import { ReferenceNodeInput } from '@react-admin/ra-tree';

const ProductEdit = () => (
    <Edit>
        <SimpleForm>
            <TextInput source="id" disabled />
            <TextInput source="name" />
            <ReferenceNodeInput
                source="category_id"
                reference="categories"
            />
        </SimpleForm>
    </Edit>
);

Performance

Why does <ReferenceInput> use the dataProvider.getMany() method with a single value [id] instead of dataProvider.getOne() to fetch the record for the current value?

Because when there may be many <ReferenceInput> for the same resource in a form (for instance when inside an <ArrayInput>), react-admin aggregates the calls to dataProvider.getMany() into a single one with [id1, id2, ...].

This speeds up the UI and avoids hitting the API too much.