Aspect Ratio
The Aspect Ratio component resizes its contents to match the desired ratio.
Introduction
Aspect Ratio is a wrapper component for quickly resizing content to conform to your preferred ratio of width to height.
Media content like images can be stretched, resized, and cropped based on the CSS object-fit
property.
Usage
After installation, you can start building with this component using the following basic elements:
import AspectRatio from '@mui/joy/AspectRatio';
export default function MyApp() {
return <AspectRatio />;
}
Basics
The Aspect Ratio component wraps around the content that it resizes.
The element to be resized must be the first direct child.
The default ratio is 16/9
.
Anatomy
The Aspect Ratio component is composed of a root <div>
with a content <div>
nested inside; the child component is given a data-first-child
attribute for styling purposes:
<div class="JoyAspectRatio-root">
<div class="JoyAspectRatio-content">
<some-element data-first-child>
This is how an Aspect Ratio component renders in the DOM.
</some-element>
</div>
</div>
Overriding the root slot
Use the component
prop to override the root slot with a custom element.
For example, the following code snippet replaces the default <div>
with a <section>
:
<AspectRatio component="section" />
Overriding interior slots
Use the components
prop to override any interior slots in addition to the root:
<AspectRatio components={{ Content: 'article' }} />
Use the componentsProps
prop to pass custom props to internal slots.
The following code snippet applies a CSS class called my-content
to the content slot:
<AspectRatio componentsProps={{ content: { className: 'my-content' } }} />
Customization
Variants
The Aspect Ratio component supports the four global variants: solid
, soft
(default), outlined
, and plain
.
Solid
Soft
Outlined
Plain
Ratio
Use the ratio
prop to change the aspect ratio, following the pattern height/width
.
For example, the demo below uses a ratio of 4/3
, which is a common alternative to the default 16/9
:
Object fit
When the content inside the Aspect Ratio component is an image or a video, you can use the objectFit
prop to control how it's resized.
This prop gives you access to all of the values associated with the CSS object-fit
property: cover
(default), contain
, fill
, scaleDown
, initial
, inherit
, and none
.
Media placeholder
Use a <div>
, or a Box component paired with an icon, as a fallback when there is no media content provided:
Title
Description of the card.
Minimum and maximum height
Use the minHeight
and maxHeight
props to set the lower and upper bound for the height of the content.
This is useful when the Aspect Ratio component wraps dynamic-width content, as shown in the demo below:
Usage inside a flex row
When the Aspect Ratio component is a child of a flexbox row
container, use flex-basis
to set the ideal width of the content:
Yosemite National Park
California, USA
Usage with Next.js Image component
The Aspect Ratio component can be used with a Next.js Image component as a child.
The Image should always include the layout="fill"
property—otherwise it requires height
and width
values, which would defeat the purpose of the Aspect Ratio component.
import Image from 'next/image';
import AspectRatio from '@mui/joy/AspectRatio';
import mountains from '../public/mountains.jpg';
function App() {
return (
<AspectRatio variant="outlined" ratio="1" objectFit="cover">
{/* only layout="fill" makes sense for using with AspectRatio */}
<Image alt="Mountains" src={mountains} layout="fill" placeholder="blur" />
</AspectRatio>
);
}
Common examples
Mobile carousel
Night view
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Lake view
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Mountain view
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Night view
4.21M views
Lake view
4.74M views
Mountain view
3.98M views