NextStep

Lightweight onboarding library for Next.js
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README

NextStep

NextStep

NextStep is a lightweight onboarding library for Next.js applications. It utilizes framer-motion for smooth animations.

Some of the use cases:

  • Easier Onboarding: Guide new users with step-by-step tours
  • Engagement Boost: Make help docs interactive, so users learn by doing.
  • Better Error Handling: Skip generic toasters—show users exactly what to fix with tailored tours.
  • Event-Based Tours: Trigger custom tours after key actions to keep users coming back.

Note NextStep now supports non-tailwindcss projects with v1.2 onwards.

The library allows users to use custom cards (tooltips) for easier integration.

If you like the project, please leave a star! ⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️

Getting Started

# npm
npm i nextstepjs framer-motion
# pnpm
pnpm add nextstepjs framer-motion
# yarn
yarn add nextstepjs framer-motion
# bun
bun add nextstepjs framer-motion

App Router: Global layout.tsx

Wrap your application in NextStepProvider and supply the steps array to NextStep.

<NextStepProvider>
  <NextStep steps={steps}>{children}</NextStep>
</NextStepProvider>

Pages Router: _app.tsx

Wrap your application in NextStepProvider and supply the steps array to NextStep.

<NextStepProvider>
  <NextStep steps={steps}>
    <Component {...pageProps} />
  </NextStep>
</NextStepProvider>

Troubleshooting

If you encounter an error related to module exports when using the Pages Router, it is likely due to a mismatch between ES modules (which use export statements) and CommonJS modules (which use module.exports). The nextstepjs package uses ES module syntax, but your Next.js project might be set up to use CommonJS.

To resolve this issue, ensure that your Next.js project is configured to support ES modules. You can do this by updating your next.config.js file to include the following configuration:

/** @type {import('next').NextConfig} */
const nextConfig = {
  reactStrictMode: true,
  experimental: {
    esmExternals: true,
  },
  transpilePackages: ['nextstepjs'],
};

export default nextConfig;

Custom Card

You can create a custom card component for greater control over the design:

Prop Type Description
step Object The current Step object from your steps array, including content, title, etc.
currentStep number The index of the current step in the steps array.
totalSteps number The total number of steps in the onboarding process.
nextStep A function to advance to the next step in the onboarding process.
prevStep A function to go back to the previous step in the onboarding process.
arrow Returns an SVG object, the orientation is controlled by the steps side prop
skipTour A function to skip the tour
'use client';
import type { CardComponentProps } from 'nextstepjs';

export const CustomCard = ({
  step,
  currentStep,
  totalSteps,
  nextStep,
  prevStep,
  skipTour,
  arrow,
}: CardComponentProps) => {
  return (
    <div>
      <h1>
        {step.icon} {step.title}
      </h1>
      <h2>
        {currentStep} of {totalSteps}
      </h2>
      <p>{step.content}</p>
      <button onClick={prevStep}>Previous</button>
      <button onClick={nextStep}>Next</button>
      <button onClick={skipTour}>Skip</button>
      {arrow}
    </div>
  );
};

Tours Array

NextStep supports multiple "tours", allowing you to create multiple product tours:

import { Tour } from 'nextstepjs';

const steps: Tour[] = [
  {
    tour: 'firstTour',
    steps: [
      // Step objects
    ],
  },
  {
    tour: 'secondTour',
    steps: [
      // Step objects
    ],
  },
];

Step Object

Prop Type Description
icon React.ReactNode, string, null An icon or element to display alongside the step title.
title string The title of your step
content React.ReactNode The main content or body of the step.
selector string Optional. A string used to target an id that this step refers to. If not provided, card will be displayed in the center top of the document body.
side "top", "bottom", "left", "right" Optional. Determines where the tooltip should appear relative to the selector.
showControls boolean Optional. Determines whether control buttons (next, prev) should be shown if using the default card.
showSkip boolean Optional. Determines whether skip button should be shown if using the default card.
blockKeyboardControl boolean Optional. Determines whether keyboard control should be blocked
pointerPadding number Optional. The padding around the pointer (keyhole) highlighting the target element.
pointerRadius number Optional. The border-radius of the pointer (keyhole) highlighting the target element.
nextRoute string Optional. The route to navigate to using next/navigation when moving to the next step.
prevRoute string Optional. The route to navigate to using next/navigation when moving to the previous step.
viewportID string Optional. The id of the viewport element to use for positioning. If not provided, the document body will be used. (Available after > v1.1.x)

Note NextStep handles card cutoff from screen sides. If side is right or left and card is out of the viewport, side would be switched to top. If side is top or bottom and card is out of the viewport, then side would be flipped between top and bottom.

Target Anything

Target anything in your app using the element's id attribute.

<div id="nextstep-step1">Onboard Step</div>

Routing During a Tour

NextStep allows you to navigate between different routes during a tour using the nextRoute and prevRoute properties in the step object. These properties enable seamless transitions between different pages or sections of your application.

  • nextRoute: Specifies the route to navigate to when the "Next" button is clicked.
  • prevRoute: Specifies the route to navigate to when the "Previous" button is clicked.

When nextRoute or prevRoute is provided, NextStep will use Next.js's next/navigation to navigate to the specified route.

Using NextStepViewport and viewportID

Only available after > v1.1.x When a selector is in a scrollable area, it is best to wrap the content of the scrollable area with NextStepViewport. This component takes children and an id as prop. By providing the viewportID to the step, NextStep will target this element within the viewport. This ensures that the step is anchored to the element even if the container is scrollable.

Here's an example of how to use NextStepViewport:

<div className="relative overflow-auto h-64">
  <NextStepViewport id="scrollable-viewport">{children}</NextStepViewport>
</div>

Example steps

[
  {
    tour: 'firsttour',
    steps: [
      {
        icon: <>👋</>,
        title: 'Tour 1, Step 1',
        content: <>First tour, first step</>,
        selector: '#tour1-step1',
        side: 'top',
        showControls: true,
        showSkip: true,
        pointerPadding: 10,
        pointerRadius: 10,
        nextRoute: '/foo',
        prevRoute: '/bar',
      },
      {
        icon: <>🎉</>,
        title: 'Tour 1, Step 2',
        content: <>First tour, second step</>,
        selector: '#tour1-step2',
        side: 'top',
        showControls: true,
        showSkip: true,
        pointerPadding: 10,
        pointerRadius: 10,
        viewportID: 'scrollable-viewport',
      },
    ],
  },
  {
    tour: 'secondtour',
    steps: [
      {
        icon: <>🚀</>,
        title: 'Second tour, Step 1',
        content: <>Second tour, first step!</>,
        selector: '#nextstep-step1',
        side: 'top',
        showControls: true,
        showSkip: true,
        pointerPadding: 10,
        pointerRadius: 10,
        nextRoute: '/foo',
        prevRoute: '/bar',
      },
    ],
  },
];

NextStep Props

Property Type Description
children React.ReactNode Your website or application content
steps Array[] Array of Tour objects defining each step of the onboarding
showNextStep boolean Controls visibility of the onboarding overlay
shadowRgb string RGB values for the shadow color surrounding the target area
shadowOpacity string Opacity value for the shadow surrounding the target area
cardComponent React.ComponentType Custom card component to replace the default one
cardTransition Transition Framer Motion transition object for step transitions
onStepChange (step: number) => void Callback function triggered when the step changes
onComplete () => void Callback function triggered when the tour completes
onSkip () => void Callback function triggered when the user skips the tour
clickThroughOverlay boolean Optional. If true, overlay background is clickable, default is false
<NextStep
  steps={steps}
  showNextStep={true}
  shadowRgb="55,48,163"
  shadowOpacity="0.8"
  cardComponent={CustomCard}
  cardTransition={{ duration: 0.5, type: 'spring' }}
  onStepChange={(step) => console.log(`Step changed to ${step}`)}
  onComplete={() => console.log('Tour completed')}
  onSkip={() => console.log('Tour skipped')}
  clickThroughOverlay={false}
>
  {children}
</NextStep>

useNextStep Hook

useNextStep hook allows you to control the tour from anywhere in your app.

import { useNextStep } from 'nextstepjs';
....

const { startNextStep, closeNextStep } = useNextStep();

const onClickHandler = (tourName: string) => {
  startNextStep(tourName);
};

Keyboard Navigation

NextStep supports keyboard navigation:

  • Right Arrow: Next step
  • Left Arrow: Previous step
  • Escape: Skip tour

Localization

NextStep is a lightweight library and does not come with localization support. However, you can easily switch between languages by supplying the steps array based on locale.

Contributing

Contributions are welcome! Please feel free to submit a Pull Request.

License

This project is licensed under the MIT License.

Credits

  • Onborda for the inspiration and some code snippets.