# React Helmet
[](https://www.npmjs.org/package/react-helmet)
[](https://codecov.io/github/nfl/react-helmet?branch=master)
[](https://travis-ci.org/nfl/react-helmet)
[](https://david-dm.org/nfl/react-helmet)
[](CONTRIBUTING.md#pull-requests)
This reusable React component will manage all of your changes to the document head.
Helmet _takes_ plain HTML tags and _outputs_ plain HTML tags. It's dead simple, and React beginner friendly.
## [6.0.0 Breaking Changes](https://github.com/nfl/react-helmet/releases/tag/6.0.0)
## Example
```javascript
import React from "react";
import {Helmet} from "react-helmet";
class Application extends React.Component {
render () {
return (
My Title
...
);
}
};
```
Nested or latter components will override duplicate changes:
```javascript
My TitleNested Title
```
outputs:
```html
Nested Title
```
See below for a full reference guide.
## Features
- Supports all valid head tags: `title`, `base`, `meta`, `link`, `script`, `noscript`, and `style` tags.
- Supports attributes for `body`, `html` and `title` tags.
- Supports server-side rendering.
- Nested components override duplicate head changes.
- Duplicate head changes are preserved when specified in the same component (support for tags like "apple-touch-icon").
- Callback for tracking DOM changes.
## Compatibility
Helmet 5 is fully backward-compatible with previous Helmet releases, so you can upgrade at any time without fear of breaking changes. We encourage you to update your code to our more semantic API, but please feel free to do so at your own pace.
## Installation
Yarn:
```bash
yarn add react-helmet
```
npm:
```bash
npm install --save react-helmet
```
## Server Usage
To use on the server, call `Helmet.renderStatic()` after `ReactDOMServer.renderToString` or `ReactDOMServer.renderToStaticMarkup` to get the head data for use in your prerender.
Because this component keeps track of mounted instances, **you have to make sure to call `renderStatic` on server**, or you'll get a memory leak.
```javascript
ReactDOMServer.renderToString();
const helmet = Helmet.renderStatic();
```
This `helmet` instance contains the following properties:
- `base`
- `bodyAttributes`
- `htmlAttributes`
- `link`
- `meta`
- `noscript`
- `script`
- `style`
- `title`
Each property contains `toComponent()` and `toString()` methods. Use whichever is appropriate for your environment. For attributes, use the JSX spread operator on the object returned by `toComponent()`. E.g:
### As string output
```javascript
const html = `
${helmet.title.toString()}
${helmet.meta.toString()}
${helmet.link.toString()}
// React stuff here
`;
```
### As React components
```javascript
function HTML () {
const htmlAttrs = helmet.htmlAttributes.toComponent();
const bodyAttrs = helmet.bodyAttributes.toComponent();
return (
{helmet.title.toComponent()}
{helmet.meta.toComponent()}
{helmet.link.toComponent()}
// React stuff here
);
}
```
### Note: Use the same instance
If you are using a prebuilt compilation of your app with webpack in the server be sure to include this in the `webpack file` so that the same instance of `react-helmet` is used.
```
externals: ["react-helmet"],
```
Or to import the *react-helmet* instance from the app on the server.
### Reference Guide
```javascript
Nested Title
outputs:
Nested Title | MyAwesomeWebsite.com
*/}
titleTemplate="MySite.com - %s"
{/*
(optional) used as a fallback when a template exists but a title is not defined
outputs:
My Site
*/}
defaultTitle="My Default Title"
{/* (optional) callback that tracks DOM changes */}
onChangeClientState={(newState, addedTags, removedTags) => console.log(newState, addedTags, removedTags)}
>
{/* html attributes */}