Show
<Show>
provides us a layout for displaying the page. It does not contain any logic but adds extra functionalities like a refresh button or giving title to the page.
We will show what <Show>
does using properties with examples.
You can swizzle this component to customize it with the refine CLI
Properties
title
It allows adding title inside the <Show>
component. if you don't pass title props it uses the "Show" prefix and the singular resource name by default. For example, for the "posts" resource, it will be "Show post".
resource
The <Show>
component reads the resource
information from the route by default. If you want to use a custom resource for the <Show>
component, you can use the resource
prop.
canDelete
and canEdit
canDelete
and canEdit
allows us to add the delete and edit buttons inside the <Show>
component. If the resource has canDelete
or canEdit
property refine adds the buttons by default.
When clicked on, delete button executes the useDelete
method provided by the dataProvider
and the edit button redirects the user to the record edit page.
Refer to the <DeleteButton>
and the <EditButton>
documentation for detailed usage.
Refer to the usePermission
documentation for detailed usage. →
recordItemId
<Show>
component reads the id
information from the route by default. recordItemId
is used when it cannot read from the URL (when used on a custom page, modal or drawer).
<Show>
component needs the id
information for <RefreshButton>
to work properly.
The <Show>
component needs the id
information for work properly, so if you use the <Show>
component in custom pages, you should pass the recordItemId
property.
dataProviderName
If not specified, Refine will use the default data provider. If you have multiple data providers and want to use a different one, you can use the dataProviderName
property.
import { Refine } from "@refinedev/core";
import dataProvider from "@refinedev/simple-rest";
import { Show } from "@refinedev/mui";
const PostShow = () => {
return <Show dataProviderName="other">...</Show>;
};
export const App: React.FC = () => {
return (
<Refine
dataProvider={{
default: dataProvider("https://api.fake-rest.refine.dev/"),
other: dataProvider("https://other-api.fake-rest.refine.dev/"),
}}
>
{/* ... */}
</Refine>
);
};
goBack
To customize the back button or to disable it, you can use the goBack
property.
isLoading
To toggle the loading state of the <Show/>
component, you can use the isLoading
property.
breadcrumb
To customize or disable the breadcrumb, you can use the breadcrumb
property. By default it uses the Breadcrumb
component from @refinedev/mui
package.
Refer to the Breadcrumb
documentation for detailed usage. →
This feature can be managed globally via the <Refine>
component's options
wrapperProps
If you want to customize the wrapper of the <Show/>
component, you can use the wrapperProps
property.
Refer to the Card
documentation from Material UI for detailed usage. →
headerProps
If you want to customize the header of the <Show/>
component, you can use the headerProps
property.
Refer to the CardHeader
documentation from Material UI for detailed usage. →
contentProps
If you want to customize the content of the <Show/>
component, you can use the contentProps
property.
Refer to the CardContent
documentation from Material UI for detailed usage. →
headerButtons
You can customize the buttons at the header by using the headerButtons
property. It accepts React.ReactNode
or a render function ({ defaultButtons }) => React.ReactNode
which you can use to keep the existing buttons and add your own.
headerButtonProps
You can customize the wrapper element of the buttons at the header by using the headerButtonProps
property.
Refer to the Box
documentation from Material UI for detailed usage. →
footerButtons
You can customize the buttons at the footer by using the footerButtons
property. It accepts React.ReactNode
or a render function ({ defaultButtons }) => React.ReactNode
which you can use to keep the existing buttons and add your own.
footerButtonProps
You can customize the wrapper element of the buttons at the footer by using the footerButtonProps
property.
Refer to the CardActions
documentation from Material UI for detailed usage. →