<link>
The built-in browser <link>
component lets you use external resources such as stylesheets or annotate the document with link metadata.
<link rel="icon" href="favicon.ico" />
Reference
<link>
To link to external resources such as stylesheets, fonts, and icons, or to annotate the document with link metadata, render the built-in browser <link>
component. You can render <link>
from any component and React will in most cases place the corresponding DOM element in the document head.
<link rel="icon" href="favicon.ico" />
Props
<link>
supports all common element props.
rel
: a string, required. Specifies the relationship to the resource. React treats links withrel="stylesheet"
differently from other links.
These props apply when rel="stylesheet"
:
precedence
: a string. Tells React where to rank the<link>
DOM node relative to others in the document<head>
, which determines which stylesheet can override the other. React will infer that precedence values it discovers first are “lower” and precedence values it discovers later are “higher”. Many style systems can work fine using a single precedence value because style rules are atomic. Stylesheets with the same precedence go together whether they are<link>
or inline<style>
tags or loaded usingpreinit
functions.media
: a string. Restricts the stylesheet to a certain media query.title
: a string. Specifies the name of an alternative stylesheet.
These props apply when rel="stylesheet"
but disable React’s special treatment of stylesheets:
disabled
: a boolean. Disables the stylesheet.onError
: a function. Called when the stylesheet fails to load.onLoad
: a function. Called when the stylesheet finishes being loaded.
These props apply when rel="preload"
or rel="modulepreload"
:
as
: a string. The type of resource. Its possible values areaudio
,document
,embed
,fetch
,font
,image
,object
,script
,style
,track
,video
,worker
.imageSrcSet
: a string. Applicable only whenas="image"
. Specifies the source set of the image.imageSizes
: a string. Applicable only whenas="image"
. Specifies the sizes of the image.
These props apply when rel="icon"
or rel="apple-touch-icon"
:
sizes
: a string. The sizes of the icon.
These props apply in all cases:
href
: a string. The URL of the linked resource.crossOrigin
: a string. The CORS policy to use. Its possible values areanonymous
anduse-credentials
. It is required whenas
is set to"fetch"
.referrerPolicy
: a string. The Referrer header to send when fetching. Its possible values areno-referrer-when-downgrade
(the default),no-referrer
,origin
,origin-when-cross-origin
, andunsafe-url
.fetchPriority
: a string. Suggests a relative priority for fetching the resource. The possible values areauto
(the default),high
, andlow
.hrefLang
: a string. The language of the linked resource.integrity
: a string. A cryptographic hash of the resource, to verify its authenticity.type
: a string. The MIME type of the linked resource.
Props that are not recommended for use with React:
blocking
: a string. If set to"render"
, instructs the browser not to render the page until the stylesheet is loaded. React provides more fine-grained control using Suspense.
Special rendering behavior
React will always place the DOM element corresponding to the <link>
component within the document’s <head>
, regardless of where in the React tree it is rendered. The <head>
is the only valid place for <link>
to exist within the DOM, yet it’s convenient and keeps things composable if a component representing a specific page can render <link>
components itself.
There are a few exceptions to this:
- If the
<link>
has arel="stylesheet"
prop, then it has to also have aprecedence
prop to get this special behavior. This is because the order of stylesheets within the document is significant, so React needs to know how to order this stylesheet relative to others, which you specify using theprecedence
prop. If theprecedence
prop is omitted, there is no special behavior. - If the
<link>
has anitemProp
prop, there is no special behavior, because in this case it doesn’t apply to the document but instead represents metadata about a specific part of the page. - If the
<link>
has anonLoad
oronError
prop, because in that case you are managing the loading of the linked resource manually within your React component.
Special behavior for stylesheets
In addition, if the <link>
is to a stylesheet (namely, it has rel="stylesheet"
in its props), React treats it specially in the following ways:
- The component that renders
<link>
will suspend while the stylesheet is loading. - If multiple components render links to the same stylesheet, React will de-duplicate them and only put a single link into the DOM. Two links are considered the same if they have the same
href
prop.
There are two exception to this special behavior:
- If the link doesn’t have a
precedence
prop, there is no special behavior, because the order of stylesheets within the document is significant, so React needs to know how to order this stylesheet relative to others, which you specify using theprecedence
prop. - If you supply any of the
onLoad
,onError
, ordisabled
props, there is no special behavior, because these props indicate that you are managing the loading of the stylesheet manually within your component.
This special treatment comes with two caveats:
- React will ignore changes to props after the link has been rendered. (React will issue a warning in development if this happens.)
- React may leave the link in the DOM even after the component that rendered it has been unmounted.
Usage
Linking to related resources
You can annotate the document with links to related resources such as an icon, canonical URL, or pingback. React will place this metadata within the document <head>
regardless of where in the React tree it is rendered.
import ShowRenderedHTML from './ShowRenderedHTML.js'; export default function BlogPage() { return ( <ShowRenderedHTML> <link rel="icon" href="favicon.ico" /> <link rel="pingback" href="http://www.example.com/xmlrpc.php" /> <h1>My Blog</h1> <p>...</p> </ShowRenderedHTML> ); }
Linking to a stylesheet
If a component depends on a certain stylesheet in order to be displayed correctly, you can render a link to that stylesheet within the component. Your component will suspend while the stylesheet is loading. You must supply the precedence
prop, which tells React where to place this stylesheet relative to others — stylesheets with higher precedence can override those with lower precedence.
import ShowRenderedHTML from './ShowRenderedHTML.js'; export default function SiteMapPage() { return ( <ShowRenderedHTML> <link rel="stylesheet" href="sitemap.css" precedence="medium" /> <p>...</p> </ShowRenderedHTML> ); }
Controlling stylesheet precedence
Stylesheets can conflict with each other, and when they do, the browser goes with the one that comes later in the document. React lets you control the order of stylesheets with the precedence
prop. In this example, three components render stylesheets, and the ones with the same precedence are grouped together in the <head>
.
import ShowRenderedHTML from './ShowRenderedHTML.js'; export default function HomePage() { return ( <ShowRenderedHTML> <FirstComponent /> <SecondComponent /> <ThirdComponent/> ... </ShowRenderedHTML> ); } function FirstComponent() { return <link rel="stylesheet" href="first.css" precedence="first" />; } function SecondComponent() { return <link rel="stylesheet" href="second.css" precedence="second" />; } function ThirdComponent() { return <link rel="stylesheet" href="third.css" precedence="first" />; }
Note the precedence
values themselves are arbitrary and their naming is up to you. React will infer that precedence values it discovers first are “lower” and precedence values it discovers later are “higher”.
Deduplicated stylesheet rendering
If you render the same stylesheet from multiple components, React will place only a single <link>
in the document head.
import ShowRenderedHTML from './ShowRenderedHTML.js'; export default function HomePage() { return ( <ShowRenderedHTML> <Component /> <Component /> ... </ShowRenderedHTML> ); } function Component() { return <link rel="stylesheet" href="styles.css" precedence="medium" />; }
Annotating specific items within the document with links
You can use the <link>
component with the itemProp
prop to annotate specific items within the document with links to related resources. In this case, React will not place these annotations within the document <head>
but will place them like any other React component.
<section itemScope>
<h3>Annotating specific items</h3>
<link itemProp="author" href="http://example.com/" />
<p>...</p>
</section>