Skip to content

Autocomplete

The autocomplete is a normal text input enhanced by a panel of suggested options.

The widget is useful for setting the value of a single-line textbox in one of two types of scenarios:

  1. The value for the textbox must be chosen from a predefined set of allowed values, e.g., a location field must contain a valid location name: combo box.
  2. The textbox may contain any arbitrary value, but it is advantageous to suggest possible values to the user, e.g., a search field may suggest similar or previous searches to save the user time: free solo.

It's meant to be an improved version of the "react-select" and "downshift" packages.

Combo box

The value must be chosen from a predefined set of allowed values.

<Autocomplete
  disablePortal
  id="combo-box-demo"
  options={top100Films}
  sx={{ width: 300 }}
  renderInput={(params) => <TextField {...params} label="Movie" />}
/>

Options structure

By default, the component accepts the following options structures:

interface AutocompleteOption {
  label: string;
}
// or
type AutocompleteOption = string;

for instance:

const options = [
  { label: 'The Godfather', id: 1 },
  { label: 'Pulp Fiction', id: 2 },
];
// or
const options = ['The Godfather', 'Pulp Fiction'];

However, you can use different structures by providing a getOptionLabel prop.

Playground

Each of the following examples demonstrates one feature of the Autocomplete component.

Country select

Choose one of the 248 countries.

Controlled states

The component has two states that can be controlled:

  1. the "value" state with the value/onChange props combination. This state represents the value selected by the user, for instance when pressing Enter.
  2. the "input value" state with the inputValue/onInputChange props combination. This state represents the value displayed in the textbox.

⚠️ These two states are isolated, they should be controlled independently.

value: 'Option 1'
inputValue: ''

Free solo

Set freeSolo to true so the textbox can contain any arbitrary value.

Search input

The prop is designed to cover the primary use case of a search input with suggestions, e.g. Google search or react-autowhatever.

Creatable

If you intend to use this mode for a combo box like experience (an enhanced version of a select element) we recommend setting:

  • selectOnFocus to helps the user clear the selected value.
  • clearOnBlur to helps the user to enter a new value.
  • handleHomeEndKeys to move focus inside the popup with the Home and End keys.
  • A last option, for instance Add "YOUR SEARCH".

You could also display a dialog when the user wants to add a new value.

Grouped

You can group the options with the groupBy prop. If you do so, make sure that the options are also sorted with the same dimension that they are grouped by, otherwise you will notice duplicate headers.

<Autocomplete
  id="grouped-demo"
  options={options.sort((a, b) => -b.firstLetter.localeCompare(a.firstLetter))}
  groupBy={(option) => option.firstLetter}
  getOptionLabel={(option) => option.title}
  sx={{ width: 300 }}
  renderInput={(params) => <TextField {...params} label="With categories" />}
/>

Disabled options

<Autocomplete
  id="disabled-options-demo"
  options={timeSlots}
  getOptionDisabled={(option) =>
    option === timeSlots[0] || option === timeSlots[2]
  }
  sx={{ width: 300 }}
  renderInput={(params) => <TextField {...params} label="Disabled options" />}
/>

useAutocomplete

For advanced customization use cases, a headless useAutocomplete() hook is exposed. It accepts almost the same options as the Autocomplete component minus all the props related to the rendering of JSX. The Autocomplete component is built on this hook.

import useAutocomplete from '@material-ui/core/useAutocomplete';

Customized hook

Head to the customization section for an example with the Autocomplete component instead of the hook.

Asynchronous requests

The component supports two different asynchronous use-cases:

Load on open

It displays a progress state as long as the network request is pending.

Search as you type

If your logic is fetching new options on each keystroke and using the current value of the textbox to filter on the server, you may want to consider throttling requests.

Additionally, you will need to disable the built-in filtering of the Autocomplete component by overriding the filterOptions prop:

<Autocomplete filterOptions={(x) => x} />

Google Maps place

A customized UI for Google Maps Places Autocomplete.

For this demo, we need to load the Google Maps JavaScript API.

⚠️ Before you can start using the Google Maps JavaScript API, you must sign up and create a billing account.

Multiple values

Also known as tags, the user is allowed to enter more than one value.

Fixed options

In the event that you need to lock certain tag so that they can't be removed in the interface, you can set the chips disabled.

Checkboxes

Limit tags

You can use the limitTags prop to limit the number of displayed options when not focused.

<Autocomplete
  multiple
  limitTags={2}
  id="multiple-limit-tags"
  options={top100Films}
  getOptionLabel={(option) => option.title}
  defaultValue={[top100Films[13], top100Films[12], top100Films[11]]}
  renderInput={(params) => (
    <TextField {...params} label="limitTags" placeholder="Favorites" />
  )}
/>

Sizes

Fancy smaller inputs? Use the size prop.

Customization

Custom input

The renderInput prop allows you to customize the rendered input. The first argument of this render prop contains props that you need to forward. Pay specific attention to the ref and inputProps keys.

GitHub's picker

This demo reproduces the GitHub's label picker:

help wanted
type: bug

Head to the Customized hook section for a customization example with the useAutocomplete hook instead of the component.

Highlights

The following demo relies on autosuggest-highlight, a small (1 kB) utility for highlighting text in autosuggest and autocomplete components.

Custom filter

The component exposes a factory to create a filter method that can provided to the filterOptions prop. You can use it to change the default option filter behavior.

import { createFilterOptions } from '@material-ui/core/Autocomplete';

createFilterOptions(config) => filterOptions

Arguments

  1. config (object [optional]):
  • config.ignoreAccents (bool [optional]): Defaults to true. Remove diacritics.
  • config.ignoreCase (bool [optional]): Defaults to true. Lowercase everything.
  • config.limit (number [optional]): Default to null. Limit the number of suggested options to be shown. For example, if config.limit is 100, only the first 100 matching options are shown. It can be useful if a lot of options match and virtualization wasn't set up.
  • config.matchFrom ('any' | 'start' [optional]): Defaults to 'any'.
  • config.stringify (func [optional]): Controls how an option is converted into a string so that it can be matched against the input text fragment.
  • config.trim (bool [optional]): Defaults to false. Remove trailing spaces.

Returns

filterOptions: the returned filter method can be provided directly to the filterOptions prop of the Autocomplete component, or the parameter of the same name for the hook.

In the following demo, the options need to start with the query prefix:

const filterOptions = createFilterOptions({
  matchFrom: 'start',
  stringify: (option) => option.title,
});

<Autocomplete filterOptions={filterOptions} />;

Advanced

For richer filtering mechanisms, like fuzzy matching, it's recommended to look at match-sorter. For instance:

import matchSorter from 'match-sorter';

const filterOptions = (options, { inputValue }) => matchSorter(options, inputValue);

<Autocomplete filterOptions={filterOptions} />;

Virtualization

Search within 10,000 randomly generated options. The list is virtualized thanks to react-window.

<Autocomplete
  id="virtualize-demo"
  sx={{ width: 300 }}
  disableListWrap
  PopperComponent={StyledPopper}
  ListboxComponent={ListboxComponent}
  renderGroup={renderGroup}
  options={OPTIONS}
  groupBy={(option) => option[0].toUpperCase()}
  renderInput={(params) => <TextField {...params} label="10,000 options" />}
  renderOption={(props, option) => (
    <li {...props}>
      <Typography noWrap>{option}</Typography>
    </li>
  )}
/>

Events

If you would like to prevent the default key handler behavior, you can set the event's defaultMuiPrevented property to true:

<Autocomplete
  onKeyDown={(event) => {
    if (event.key === 'Enter') {
      // Prevent's default 'Enter' behavior.
      event.defaultMuiPrevented = true;
      // your handler code
    }
  }}
/>

Limitations

autocomplete/autofill

The browsers have heuristics to help the users fill the form inputs. However, it can harm the UX of the component.

By default, the component disables the autocomplete feature (remembering what the user has typed for a given field in a previous session) with the autoComplete="off" attribute. Google Chrome does not currently support this attribute setting (Issue 587466). A possible workaround is to remove the id to have the component generate a random one.

In addition to remembering past entered values, the browser might also propose autofill suggestions (saved login, address, or payment details). In the event you want the avoid autofill, you can try the following:

  • Name the input without leaking any information the browser can use. e.g. id="field1" instead of id="country". If you leave the id empty, the component uses a random id.

  • Set autoComplete="new-password" (some browsers will suggest a strong password for inputs with this attribute setting):

    <TextField
      {...params}
      inputProps={{
        ...params.inputProps,
        autoComplete: 'new-password',
      }}
    />
    

Read the guide on MDN for more details.

iOS VoiceOver

VoiceOver on iOS Safari doesn't support the aria-owns attribute very well. You can work around the issue with the disablePortal prop.

ListboxComponent

If you provide a custom ListboxComponent prop, you need to make sure that the intended scroll container has the role attribute set to listbox. This ensures the correct behavior of the scroll, for example when using the keyboard to navigate.

Accessibility

(WAI-ARIA: https://www.w3.org/TR/wai-aria-practices/#combobox)

We encourage the usage of a label for the textbox. The component implements the WAI-ARIA authoring practices.