diff --git a/releases/next/css/react-native.css b/releases/next/css/react-native.css index fded8255784..b657d2ab80f 100644 --- a/releases/next/css/react-native.css +++ b/releases/next/css/react-native.css @@ -1256,12 +1256,48 @@ div[data-twttr-id] iframe { background-color: hsl(198, 100%, 94%); } +.survey { + padding: 10px; + padding-top: 0; + background-color: rgba(5, 165, 209, 0.05); + border: 2px solid #05A5D1; + position: relative; +} + +.survey-image { + position: absolute; + top: 10px; + height: 83px; + width: 120px; + background-image: url('../img/survey.png'); + background-size: 272px 198px; + background-position: -8px -8px; +} + +.survey p { + margin-left: 130px; +} + +.survey .button { + font-size: 24px; + background: #05A5D1; + color: #fafafa; +} + @media only screen and (max-device-width: 1024px) { #content { display: inline; } + .survey-image { + position: static; + margin: 10px auto; + } + .survey p { + margin-left: 0px; + } + .container { min-width: 0; overflow: auto; diff --git a/releases/next/docs/accessibility.html b/releases/next/docs/accessibility.html index d7bd8b17855..2821b060800 100644 --- a/releases/next/docs/accessibility.html +++ b/releases/next/docs/accessibility.html @@ -38,7 +38,7 @@ <CustomRadioButton accessibleComponentType={this.state.radioButton} - onPress={this._onPress}/>

In the above example we've created a custom radio button that now behaves like a native one. More specifically, TalkBack now correctly announces changes to the radio button selection.

Testing VoiceOver Support (iOS) #

To enable VoiceOver, go to the Settings app on your iOS device. Tap General, then Accessibility. There you will find many tools that people use to use to make their devices more usable, such as bolder text, increased contrast, and VoiceOver.

To enable VoiceOver, tap on VoiceOver under "Vision" and toggle the switch that appears at the top.

At the very bottom of the Accessibility settings, there is an "Accessibility Shortcut". You can use this to toggle VoiceOver by triple clicking the Home button.

Next →

Profiling Android UI Performance #

Edit on GitHub

We try our best to deliver buttery-smooth UI performance by default, but sometimes that just isn't possible. Remember, Android supports 10k+ different phones and is generalized to support software rendering: the framework architecture and need to generalize across many hardware targets unfortunately means you get less for free relative to iOS. But sometimes, there are things you can improve (and many times it's not native code's fault at all!).

The first step for debugging this jank is to answer the fundamental question of where your time is being spent during each 16ms frame. For that, we'll be using a standard Android profiling tool called systrace. But first...

Make sure that JS dev mode is OFF!

You should see __DEV__ === false, development-level warning are OFF, performance optimizations are ON in your application logs (which you can view using adb logcat)

Profiling with Systrace #

Systrace is a standard Android marker-based profiling tool (and is installed when you install the Android platform-tools package). Profiled code blocks are surrounded by markers start/end markers which are then visualized in a colorful chart format. Both the Android SDK and React Native framework provide standard markers that you can visualize.

Collecting a trace #

NOTE:

Systrace support was added in react-native v0.15. You will need to build with that version to collect a trace.

First, connect a device that exhibits the stuttering you want to investigate to your computer via USB and get it to the point right before the navigation/animation you want to profile. Run systrace as follows

$ <path_to_android_sdk>/platform-tools/systrace/systrace.py --time=10 -o trace.html sched gfx view -a <your_package_name>

A quick breakdown of this command:

  • time is the length of time the trace will be collected in seconds
  • sched, gfx, and view are the android SDK tags (collections of markers) we care about: sched gives you information about what's running on each core of your phone, gfx gives you graphics info such as frame boundaries, and view gives you information about measure, layout, and draw passes
  • -a <your_package_name> enables app-specific markers, specifically the ones built into the React Native framework. your_package_name can be found in the AndroidManifest.xml of your app and looks like com.example.app

Once the trace starts collecting, perform the animation or interaction you care about. At the end of the trace, systrace will give you a link to the trace which you can open in your browser.

Reading the trace #

After opening the trace in your browser (preferably Chrome), you should see something like this:

Example

HINT: Use the WASD keys to strafe and zoom

Enable VSync highlighting #

The first thing you should do is highlight the 16ms frame boundaries if you haven't already done that. Check this checkbox at the top right of the screen:

Enable VSync Highlighting

You should see zebra stripes as in the screenshot above. If you don't, try profiling on a different device: Samsung has been known to have issues displaying vsyncs while the Nexus series is generally pretty reliable.

Find your process #

Scroll until you see (part of) the name of your package. In this case, I was profiling com.facebook.adsmanager, which shows up as book.adsmanager because of silly thread name limits in the kernel.

On the left side, you'll see a set of threads which correspond to the timeline rows on the right. There are three/four threads we care about for our purposes: the UI thread (which has your package name or the name UI Thread), mqt_js and mqt_native_modules. If you're running on Android 5+, we also care about the Render Thread.

UI Thread #

This is where standard android measure/layout/draw happens. The thread name on the right will be your package name (in my case book.adsmanager) or UI Thread. The events that you see on this thread should look something like this and have to do with Choreographer, traversals, and DispatchUI:

UI Thread Example

JS Thread #

This is where JS is executed. The thread name will be either mqt_js or <...> depending on how cooperative the kernel on your device is being. To identify it if it doesn't have a name, look for things like JSCall, Bridge.executeJSCall, etc:

JS Thread Example

Native Modules Thread #

This is where native module calls (e.g. the UIManager) are executed. The thread name will be either mqt_native_modules or <...>. To identify it in the latter case, look for things like NativeCall, callJavaModuleMethod, and onBatchComplete:

Native Modules Thread Example

Bonus: Render Thread #

If you're using Android L (5.0) and up, you will also have a render thread in your application. This thread generates the actual OpenGL commands used to draw your UI. The thread name will be either RenderThread or <...>. To identify it in the latter case, look for things like DrawFrame and queueBuffer:

Render Thread Example

Identifying a culprit #

A smooth animation should look something like the following:

Smooth Animation

Each change in color is a frame -- remember that in order to display a frame, all our UI work needs to be done by the end of that 16ms period. Notice that no thread is working close to the frame boundary. An application rendering like this is rendering at 60FPS.

If you noticed chop, however, you might see something like this:

Choppy Animation from JS

Notice that the JS thread is executing basically all the time, and across frame boundaries! This app is not rendering at 60FPS. In this case, the problem lies in JS.

You might also see something like this:

Choppy Animation from UI

In this case, the UI and render threads are the ones that have work crossing frame boundaries. The UI that we're trying to render on each frame is requiring too much work to be done. In this case, the problem lies in the native views being rendered.

At this point, you'll have some very helpful information to inform your next steps.

JS Issues #

If you identified a JS problem, look for clues in the specific JS that you're executing. In the scenario above, we see RCTEventEmitter being called multiple times per frame. Here's a zoom-in of the JS thread from the trace above:

Too much JS

This doesn't seem right. Why is it being called so often? Are they actually different events? The answers to these questions will probably depend on your product code. And many times, you'll want to look into shouldComponentUpdate.

TODO: Add more tools for profiling JS

Native UI Issues #

If you identified a native UI problem, there are usually two scenarios:

  1. the UI you're trying to draw each frame involves to much work on the GPU, or
  2. You're constructing new UI during the animation/interaction (e.g. loading in new content during a scroll).

Too much GPU work #

In the first scenario, you'll see a trace that has the UI thread and/or Render Thread looking like this:

Overloaded GPU

Notice the long amount of time spent in DrawFrame that crosses frame boundaries. This is time spent waiting for the GPU to drain its command buffer from the previous frame.

To mitigate this, you should:

  • investigate using renderToHardwareTextureAndroid for complex, static content that is being animated/transformed (e.g. the Navigator slide/alpha animations)
  • make sure that you are not using needsOffscreenAlphaCompositing, which is disabled by default, as it greatly increases the per-frame load on the GPU in most cases.

If these don't help and you want to dig deeper into what the GPU is actually doing, you can check out Tracer for OpenGL ES.

Creating new views on the UI thread #

In the second scenario, you'll see something more like this:

Creating Views

Notice that first the JS thread thinks for a bit, then you see some work done on the native modules thread, followed by an expensive traversal on the UI thread.

There isn't an easy way to mitigate this unless you're able to postpone creating new UI until after the interaction, or you are able to simplify the UI you're creating. The react native team is working on a infrastructure level solution for this that will allow new UI to be created and configured off the main thread, allowing the interaction to continue smoothly.

Still stuck? #

If you are confused or stuck, please post ask on Stack Overflow with the react-native tag. If you are unable to get a response there, or find an issue with a core component, please File a Github issue.

Profiling Android UI Performance #

Edit on GitHub

We try our best to deliver buttery-smooth UI performance by default, but sometimes that just isn't possible. Remember, Android supports 10k+ different phones and is generalized to support software rendering: the framework architecture and need to generalize across many hardware targets unfortunately means you get less for free relative to iOS. But sometimes, there are things you can improve (and many times it's not native code's fault at all!).

The first step for debugging this jank is to answer the fundamental question of where your time is being spent during each 16ms frame. For that, we'll be using a standard Android profiling tool called systrace. But first...

Make sure that JS dev mode is OFF!

You should see __DEV__ === false, development-level warning are OFF, performance optimizations are ON in your application logs (which you can view using adb logcat)

Profiling with Systrace #

Systrace is a standard Android marker-based profiling tool (and is installed when you install the Android platform-tools package). Profiled code blocks are surrounded by markers start/end markers which are then visualized in a colorful chart format. Both the Android SDK and React Native framework provide standard markers that you can visualize.

Collecting a trace #

NOTE:

Systrace support was added in react-native v0.15. You will need to build with that version to collect a trace.

First, connect a device that exhibits the stuttering you want to investigate to your computer via USB and get it to the point right before the navigation/animation you want to profile. Run systrace as follows

$ <path_to_android_sdk>/platform-tools/systrace/systrace.py --time=10 -o trace.html sched gfx view -a <your_package_name>

A quick breakdown of this command:

  • time is the length of time the trace will be collected in seconds
  • sched, gfx, and view are the android SDK tags (collections of markers) we care about: sched gives you information about what's running on each core of your phone, gfx gives you graphics info such as frame boundaries, and view gives you information about measure, layout, and draw passes
  • -a <your_package_name> enables app-specific markers, specifically the ones built into the React Native framework. your_package_name can be found in the AndroidManifest.xml of your app and looks like com.example.app

Once the trace starts collecting, perform the animation or interaction you care about. At the end of the trace, systrace will give you a link to the trace which you can open in your browser.

Reading the trace #

After opening the trace in your browser (preferably Chrome), you should see something like this:

Example

HINT: Use the WASD keys to strafe and zoom

Enable VSync highlighting #

The first thing you should do is highlight the 16ms frame boundaries if you haven't already done that. Check this checkbox at the top right of the screen:

Enable VSync Highlighting

You should see zebra stripes as in the screenshot above. If you don't, try profiling on a different device: Samsung has been known to have issues displaying vsyncs while the Nexus series is generally pretty reliable.

Find your process #

Scroll until you see (part of) the name of your package. In this case, I was profiling com.facebook.adsmanager, which shows up as book.adsmanager because of silly thread name limits in the kernel.

On the left side, you'll see a set of threads which correspond to the timeline rows on the right. There are three/four threads we care about for our purposes: the UI thread (which has your package name or the name UI Thread), mqt_js and mqt_native_modules. If you're running on Android 5+, we also care about the Render Thread.

UI Thread #

This is where standard android measure/layout/draw happens. The thread name on the right will be your package name (in my case book.adsmanager) or UI Thread. The events that you see on this thread should look something like this and have to do with Choreographer, traversals, and DispatchUI:

UI Thread Example

JS Thread #

This is where JS is executed. The thread name will be either mqt_js or <...> depending on how cooperative the kernel on your device is being. To identify it if it doesn't have a name, look for things like JSCall, Bridge.executeJSCall, etc:

JS Thread Example

Native Modules Thread #

This is where native module calls (e.g. the UIManager) are executed. The thread name will be either mqt_native_modules or <...>. To identify it in the latter case, look for things like NativeCall, callJavaModuleMethod, and onBatchComplete:

Native Modules Thread Example

Bonus: Render Thread #

If you're using Android L (5.0) and up, you will also have a render thread in your application. This thread generates the actual OpenGL commands used to draw your UI. The thread name will be either RenderThread or <...>. To identify it in the latter case, look for things like DrawFrame and queueBuffer:

Render Thread Example

Identifying a culprit #

A smooth animation should look something like the following:

Smooth Animation

Each change in color is a frame -- remember that in order to display a frame, all our UI work needs to be done by the end of that 16ms period. Notice that no thread is working close to the frame boundary. An application rendering like this is rendering at 60FPS.

If you noticed chop, however, you might see something like this:

Choppy Animation from JS

Notice that the JS thread is executing basically all the time, and across frame boundaries! This app is not rendering at 60FPS. In this case, the problem lies in JS.

You might also see something like this:

Choppy Animation from UI

In this case, the UI and render threads are the ones that have work crossing frame boundaries. The UI that we're trying to render on each frame is requiring too much work to be done. In this case, the problem lies in the native views being rendered.

At this point, you'll have some very helpful information to inform your next steps.

JS Issues #

If you identified a JS problem, look for clues in the specific JS that you're executing. In the scenario above, we see RCTEventEmitter being called multiple times per frame. Here's a zoom-in of the JS thread from the trace above:

Too much JS

This doesn't seem right. Why is it being called so often? Are they actually different events? The answers to these questions will probably depend on your product code. And many times, you'll want to look into shouldComponentUpdate.

TODO: Add more tools for profiling JS

Native UI Issues #

If you identified a native UI problem, there are usually two scenarios:

  1. the UI you're trying to draw each frame involves to much work on the GPU, or
  2. You're constructing new UI during the animation/interaction (e.g. loading in new content during a scroll).

Too much GPU work #

In the first scenario, you'll see a trace that has the UI thread and/or Render Thread looking like this:

Overloaded GPU

Notice the long amount of time spent in DrawFrame that crosses frame boundaries. This is time spent waiting for the GPU to drain its command buffer from the previous frame.

To mitigate this, you should:

  • investigate using renderToHardwareTextureAndroid for complex, static content that is being animated/transformed (e.g. the Navigator slide/alpha animations)
  • make sure that you are not using needsOffscreenAlphaCompositing, which is disabled by default, as it greatly increases the per-frame load on the GPU in most cases.

If these don't help and you want to dig deeper into what the GPU is actually doing, you can check out Tracer for OpenGL ES.

Creating new views on the UI thread #

In the second scenario, you'll see something more like this:

Creating Views

Notice that first the JS thread thinks for a bit, then you see some work done on the native modules thread, followed by an expensive traversal on the UI thread.

There isn't an easy way to mitigate this unless you're able to postpone creating new UI until after the interaction, or you are able to simplify the UI you're creating. The react native team is working on a infrastructure level solution for this that will allow new UI to be created and configured off the main thread, allowing the interaction to continue smoothly.

Still stuck? #

If you are confused or stuck, please post ask on Stack Overflow with the react-native tag. If you are unable to get a response there, or find an issue with a core component, please File a Github issue.

We are planning improvements to the React Native documentation. Your responses to this short survey will go a long way in helping us provide valuable content. Thank you!

Take Survey

Colors #

Edit on GitHub

The following formats are supported:

  • '#f0f' (#rgb)
  • '#f0fc' (#rgba)
  • '#ff00ff' (#rrggbb)
  • '#ff00ff00' (#rrggbbaa)
  • 'rgb(255, 255, 255)'
  • 'rgba(255, 255, 255, 1.0)'
  • 'hsl(360, 100%, 100%)'
  • 'hsla(360, 100%, 100%, 1.0)'
  • 'transparent'
  • 'red'
  • 0xff00ff00 (0xrrggbbaa)

For the named colors, React Native follows the CSS3 specification:

  • aliceblue (#f0f8ff)
  • antiquewhite (#faebd7)
  • aqua (#00ffff)
  • aquamarine (#7fffd4)
  • azure (#f0ffff)
  • beige (#f5f5dc)
  • bisque (#ffe4c4)
  • black (#000000)
  • blanchedalmond (#ffebcd)
  • blue (#0000ff)
  • blueviolet (#8a2be2)
  • brown (#a52a2a)
  • burlywood (#deb887)
  • cadetblue (#5f9ea0)
  • chartreuse (#7fff00)
  • chocolate (#d2691e)
  • coral (#ff7f50)
  • cornflowerblue (#6495ed)
  • cornsilk (#fff8dc)
  • crimson (#dc143c)
  • cyan (#00ffff)
  • darkblue (#00008b)
  • darkcyan (#008b8b)
  • darkgoldenrod (#b8860b)
  • darkgray (#a9a9a9)
  • darkgreen (#006400)
  • darkgrey (#a9a9a9)
  • darkkhaki (#bdb76b)
  • darkmagenta (#8b008b)
  • darkolivegreen (#556b2f)
  • darkorange (#ff8c00)
  • darkorchid (#9932cc)
  • darkred (#8b0000)
  • darksalmon (#e9967a)
  • darkseagreen (#8fbc8f)
  • darkslateblue (#483d8b)
  • darkslategray (#2f4f4f)
  • darkslategrey (#2f4f4f)
  • darkturquoise (#00ced1)
  • darkviolet (#9400d3)
  • deeppink (#ff1493)
  • deepskyblue (#00bfff)
  • dimgray (#696969)
  • dimgrey (#696969)
  • dodgerblue (#1e90ff)
  • firebrick (#b22222)
  • floralwhite (#fffaf0)
  • forestgreen (#228b22)
  • fuchsia (#ff00ff)
  • gainsboro (#dcdcdc)
  • ghostwhite (#f8f8ff)
  • gold (#ffd700)
  • goldenrod (#daa520)
  • gray (#808080)
  • green (#008000)
  • greenyellow (#adff2f)
  • grey (#808080)
  • honeydew (#f0fff0)
  • hotpink (#ff69b4)
  • indianred (#cd5c5c)
  • indigo (#4b0082)
  • ivory (#fffff0)
  • khaki (#f0e68c)
  • lavender (#e6e6fa)
  • lavenderblush (#fff0f5)
  • lawngreen (#7cfc00)
  • lemonchiffon (#fffacd)
  • lightblue (#add8e6)
  • lightcoral (#f08080)
  • lightcyan (#e0ffff)
  • lightgoldenrodyellow (#fafad2)
  • lightgray (#d3d3d3)
  • lightgreen (#90ee90)
  • lightgrey (#d3d3d3)
  • lightpink (#ffb6c1)
  • lightsalmon (#ffa07a)
  • lightseagreen (#20b2aa)
  • lightskyblue (#87cefa)
  • lightslategray (#778899)
  • lightslategrey (#778899)
  • lightsteelblue (#b0c4de)
  • lightyellow (#ffffe0)
  • lime (#00ff00)
  • limegreen (#32cd32)
  • linen (#faf0e6)
  • magenta (#ff00ff)
  • maroon (#800000)
  • mediumaquamarine (#66cdaa)
  • mediumblue (#0000cd)
  • mediumorchid (#ba55d3)
  • mediumpurple (#9370db)
  • mediumseagreen (#3cb371)
  • mediumslateblue (#7b68ee)
  • mediumspringgreen (#00fa9a)
  • mediumturquoise (#48d1cc)
  • mediumvioletred (#c71585)
  • midnightblue (#191970)
  • mintcream (#f5fffa)
  • mistyrose (#ffe4e1)
  • moccasin (#ffe4b5)
  • navajowhite (#ffdead)
  • navy (#000080)
  • oldlace (#fdf5e6)
  • olive (#808000)
  • olivedrab (#6b8e23)
  • orange (#ffa500)
  • orangered (#ff4500)
  • orchid (#da70d6)
  • palegoldenrod (#eee8aa)
  • palegreen (#98fb98)
  • paleturquoise (#afeeee)
  • palevioletred (#db7093)
  • papayawhip (#ffefd5)
  • peachpuff (#ffdab9)
  • peru (#cd853f)
  • pink (#ffc0cb)
  • plum (#dda0dd)
  • powderblue (#b0e0e6)
  • purple (#800080)
  • rebeccapurple (#663399)
  • red (#ff0000)
  • rosybrown (#bc8f8f)
  • royalblue (#4169e1)
  • saddlebrown (#8b4513)
  • salmon (#fa8072)
  • sandybrown (#f4a460)
  • seagreen (#2e8b57)
  • seashell (#fff5ee)
  • sienna (#a0522d)
  • silver (#c0c0c0)
  • skyblue (#87ceeb)
  • slateblue (#6a5acd)
  • slategray (#708090)
  • slategrey (#708090)
  • snow (#fffafa)
  • springgreen (#00ff7f)
  • steelblue (#4682b4)
  • tan (#d2b48c)
  • teal (#008080)
  • thistle (#d8bfd8)
  • tomato (#ff6347)
  • turquoise (#40e0d0)
  • violet (#ee82ee)
  • wheat (#f5deb3)
  • white (#ffffff)
  • whitesmoke (#f5f5f5)
  • yellow (#ffff00)
  • yellowgreen (#9acd32)

Colors #

Edit on GitHub

The following formats are supported:

  • '#f0f' (#rgb)
  • '#f0fc' (#rgba)
  • '#ff00ff' (#rrggbb)
  • '#ff00ff00' (#rrggbbaa)
  • 'rgb(255, 255, 255)'
  • 'rgba(255, 255, 255, 1.0)'
  • 'hsl(360, 100%, 100%)'
  • 'hsla(360, 100%, 100%, 1.0)'
  • 'transparent'
  • 'red'
  • 0xff00ff00 (0xrrggbbaa)

For the named colors, React Native follows the CSS3 specification:

  • aliceblue (#f0f8ff)
  • antiquewhite (#faebd7)
  • aqua (#00ffff)
  • aquamarine (#7fffd4)
  • azure (#f0ffff)
  • beige (#f5f5dc)
  • bisque (#ffe4c4)
  • black (#000000)
  • blanchedalmond (#ffebcd)
  • blue (#0000ff)
  • blueviolet (#8a2be2)
  • brown (#a52a2a)
  • burlywood (#deb887)
  • cadetblue (#5f9ea0)
  • chartreuse (#7fff00)
  • chocolate (#d2691e)
  • coral (#ff7f50)
  • cornflowerblue (#6495ed)
  • cornsilk (#fff8dc)
  • crimson (#dc143c)
  • cyan (#00ffff)
  • darkblue (#00008b)
  • darkcyan (#008b8b)
  • darkgoldenrod (#b8860b)
  • darkgray (#a9a9a9)
  • darkgreen (#006400)
  • darkgrey (#a9a9a9)
  • darkkhaki (#bdb76b)
  • darkmagenta (#8b008b)
  • darkolivegreen (#556b2f)
  • darkorange (#ff8c00)
  • darkorchid (#9932cc)
  • darkred (#8b0000)
  • darksalmon (#e9967a)
  • darkseagreen (#8fbc8f)
  • darkslateblue (#483d8b)
  • darkslategray (#2f4f4f)
  • darkslategrey (#2f4f4f)
  • darkturquoise (#00ced1)
  • darkviolet (#9400d3)
  • deeppink (#ff1493)
  • deepskyblue (#00bfff)
  • dimgray (#696969)
  • dimgrey (#696969)
  • dodgerblue (#1e90ff)
  • firebrick (#b22222)
  • floralwhite (#fffaf0)
  • forestgreen (#228b22)
  • fuchsia (#ff00ff)
  • gainsboro (#dcdcdc)
  • ghostwhite (#f8f8ff)
  • gold (#ffd700)
  • goldenrod (#daa520)
  • gray (#808080)
  • green (#008000)
  • greenyellow (#adff2f)
  • grey (#808080)
  • honeydew (#f0fff0)
  • hotpink (#ff69b4)
  • indianred (#cd5c5c)
  • indigo (#4b0082)
  • ivory (#fffff0)
  • khaki (#f0e68c)
  • lavender (#e6e6fa)
  • lavenderblush (#fff0f5)
  • lawngreen (#7cfc00)
  • lemonchiffon (#fffacd)
  • lightblue (#add8e6)
  • lightcoral (#f08080)
  • lightcyan (#e0ffff)
  • lightgoldenrodyellow (#fafad2)
  • lightgray (#d3d3d3)
  • lightgreen (#90ee90)
  • lightgrey (#d3d3d3)
  • lightpink (#ffb6c1)
  • lightsalmon (#ffa07a)
  • lightseagreen (#20b2aa)
  • lightskyblue (#87cefa)
  • lightslategray (#778899)
  • lightslategrey (#778899)
  • lightsteelblue (#b0c4de)
  • lightyellow (#ffffe0)
  • lime (#00ff00)
  • limegreen (#32cd32)
  • linen (#faf0e6)
  • magenta (#ff00ff)
  • maroon (#800000)
  • mediumaquamarine (#66cdaa)
  • mediumblue (#0000cd)
  • mediumorchid (#ba55d3)
  • mediumpurple (#9370db)
  • mediumseagreen (#3cb371)
  • mediumslateblue (#7b68ee)
  • mediumspringgreen (#00fa9a)
  • mediumturquoise (#48d1cc)
  • mediumvioletred (#c71585)
  • midnightblue (#191970)
  • mintcream (#f5fffa)
  • mistyrose (#ffe4e1)
  • moccasin (#ffe4b5)
  • navajowhite (#ffdead)
  • navy (#000080)
  • oldlace (#fdf5e6)
  • olive (#808000)
  • olivedrab (#6b8e23)
  • orange (#ffa500)
  • orangered (#ff4500)
  • orchid (#da70d6)
  • palegoldenrod (#eee8aa)
  • palegreen (#98fb98)
  • paleturquoise (#afeeee)
  • palevioletred (#db7093)
  • papayawhip (#ffefd5)
  • peachpuff (#ffdab9)
  • peru (#cd853f)
  • pink (#ffc0cb)
  • plum (#dda0dd)
  • powderblue (#b0e0e6)
  • purple (#800080)
  • rebeccapurple (#663399)
  • red (#ff0000)
  • rosybrown (#bc8f8f)
  • royalblue (#4169e1)
  • saddlebrown (#8b4513)
  • salmon (#fa8072)
  • sandybrown (#f4a460)
  • seagreen (#2e8b57)
  • seashell (#fff5ee)
  • sienna (#a0522d)
  • silver (#c0c0c0)
  • skyblue (#87ceeb)
  • slateblue (#6a5acd)
  • slategray (#708090)
  • slategrey (#708090)
  • snow (#fffafa)
  • springgreen (#00ff7f)
  • steelblue (#4682b4)
  • tan (#d2b48c)
  • teal (#008080)
  • thistle (#d8bfd8)
  • tomato (#ff6347)
  • turquoise (#40e0d0)
  • violet (#ee82ee)
  • wheat (#f5deb3)
  • white (#ffffff)
  • whitesmoke (#f5f5f5)
  • yellow (#ffff00)
  • yellowgreen (#9acd32)

We are planning improvements to the React Native documentation. Your responses to this short survey will go a long way in helping us provide valuable content. Thank you!

Take Survey

Debugging #

Edit on GitHub

Debugging React Native Apps #

To access the in-app developer menu:

  1. On iOS shake the device or press control + ⌘ + z in the simulator.
  2. On Android shake the device or press hardware menu button (available on older devices and in most of the emulators, e.g. in genymotion you can press ⌘ + m or F2 to simulate hardware menu button click). You can also install Frappé, a tool for OS X, which allows you to emulate shaking of devices remotely. You can use ⌘ + Shift + R as a shortcut to trigger a shake from Frappé.

Hint

To disable the developer menu for production builds:

  1. For iOS open your project in Xcode and select ProductSchemeEdit Scheme... (or press ⌘ + <). Next, select Run from the menu on the left and change the Build Configuration to Release.
  2. For Android, by default, developer menu will be disabled in release builds done by gradle (e.g with gradle assembleRelease task). Although this behavior can be customized by passing proper value to ReactInstanceManager#setUseDeveloperSupport.

Android logging #

Run adb logcat *:S ReactNative:V ReactNativeJS:V in a terminal to see your Android app's logs.

Reload #

Selecting Reload (or pressing ⌘ + r in the iOS simulator) will reload the JavaScript that powers your application. If you have added new resources (such as an image to Images.xcassets on iOS or to res/drawable folder on Android) or modified any native code (Objective-C/Swift code on iOS or Java/C++ code on Android), you will need to re-build the app for the changes to take effect.

YellowBox/RedBox #

Using console.warn will display an on-screen log on a yellow background. Click on this warning to show more information about it full screen and/or dismiss the warning.

You can use console.error to display a full screen error on a red background.

By default, the warning box is enabled in __DEV__. Set the following flag to disable it:

console.disableYellowBox = true; -console.warn('YellowBox is disabled.');

Specific warnings can be ignored programmatically by setting the array:

console.ignoredYellowBox = ['Warning: ...'];

Strings in console.ignoredYellowBox can be a prefix of the warning that should be ignored.

Chrome Developer Tools #

To debug the JavaScript code in Chrome, select Debug JS Remotely from the developer menu. This will open a new tab at http://localhost:8081/debugger-ui.

In Chrome, press ⌘ + option + i or select ViewDeveloperDeveloper Tools to toggle the developer tools console. Enable Pause On Caught Exceptions for a better debugging experience.

To debug on a real device:

  1. On iOS - open the file RCTWebSocketExecutor.m and change localhost to the IP address of your computer. Shake the device to open the development menu with the option to start debugging.
  2. On Android, if you're running Android 5.0+ device connected via USB you can use adb command line tool to setup port forwarding from the device to your computer. For that run: adb reverse tcp:8081 tcp:8081 (see this link for help on adb command). Alternatively, you can open dev menu on the device and select Dev Settings, then update Debug server host for device setting to the IP address of your computer.

Custom JavaScript debugger #

To use a custom JavaScript debugger define the REACT_DEBUGGER environment variable to a command that will start your custom debugger. That variable will be read from the Packager process. If that environment variable is set, selecting Debug JS Remotely from the developer menu will execute that command instead of opening Chrome. The exact command to be executed is the contents of the REACT_DEBUGGER environment variable followed by the space separated paths of all project roots (e.g. If you set REACT_DEBUGGER="node /path/to/launchDebugger.js --port 2345 --type ReactNative" then the command "node /path/to/launchDebugger.js --port 2345 --type ReactNative /path/to/reactNative/app" will end up being executed). Custom debugger commands executed this way should be short-lived processes, and they shouldn't produce more than 200 kilobytes of output.

Live Reload #

This option allows for your JS changes to trigger automatic reload on the connected device/emulator. To enable this option:

  1. On iOS, select Enable Live Reload via the developer menu to have the application automatically reload when changes are made to the JavaScript.
  2. On Android, launch dev menu, go to Dev Settings and select Auto reload on JS change option

FPS (Frames per Second) Monitor #

On 0.5.0-rc and higher versions, you can enable a FPS graph overlay in the developers menu in order to help you debug performance problems.

Gesture Responder System #

Edit on GitHub

Gesture recognition on mobile devices is much more complicated than web. A touch can go through several phases as the app determines what the user's intention is. For example, the app needs to determine if the touch is scrolling, sliding on a widget, or tapping. This can even change during the duration of a touch. There can also be multiple simultaneous touches.

The touch responder system is needed to allow components to negotiate these touch interactions without any additional knowledge about their parent or child components. This system is implemented in ResponderEventPlugin.js, which contains further details and documentation.

Best Practices #

Users can feel huge differences in the usability of web apps vs. native, and this is one of the big causes. Every action should have the following attributes:

  • Feedback/highlighting- show the user what is handling their touch, and what will happen when they release the gesture
  • Cancel-ability- when making an action, the user should be able to abort it mid-touch by dragging their finger away

These features make users more comfortable while using an app, because it allows people to experiment and interact without fear of making mistakes.

TouchableHighlight and Touchable* #

The responder system can be complicated to use. So we have provided an abstract Touchable implementation for things that should be "tappable". This uses the responder system and allows you to easily configure tap interactions declaratively. Use TouchableHighlight anywhere where you would use a button or link on web.

Responder Lifecycle #

A view can become the touch responder by implementing the correct negotiation methods. There are two methods to ask the view if it wants to become responder:

  • View.props.onStartShouldSetResponder: (evt) => true, - Does this view want to become responder on the start of a touch?
  • View.props.onMoveShouldSetResponder: (evt) => true, - Called for every touch move on the View when it is not the responder: does this view want to "claim" touch responsiveness?

If the View returns true and attempts to become the responder, one of the following will happen:

  • View.props.onResponderGrant: (evt) => {} - The View is now responding for touch events. This is the time to highlight and show the user what is happening
  • View.props.onResponderReject: (evt) => {} - Something else is the responder right now and will not release it

If the view is responding, the following handlers can be called:

  • View.props.onResponderMove: (evt) => {} - The user is moving their finger
  • View.props.onResponderRelease: (evt) => {} - Fired at the end of the touch, ie "touchUp"
  • View.props.onResponderTerminationRequest: (evt) => true - Something else wants to become responder. Should this view release the responder? Returning true allows release
  • View.props.onResponderTerminate: (evt) => {} - The responder has been taken from the View. Might be taken by other views after a call to onResponderTerminationRequest, or might be taken by the OS without asking (happens with control center/ notification center on iOS)

evt is a synthetic touch event with the following form:

  • nativeEvent
    • changedTouches - Array of all touch events that have changed since the last event
    • identifier - The ID of the touch
    • locationX - The X position of the touch, relative to the element
    • locationY - The Y position of the touch, relative to the element
    • pageX - The X position of the touch, relative to the root element
    • pageY - The Y position of the touch, relative to the root element
    • target - The node id of the element receiving the touch event
    • timestamp - A time identifier for the touch, useful for velocity calculation
    • touches - Array of all current touches on the screen

Capture ShouldSet Handlers #

onStartShouldSetResponder and onMoveShouldSetResponder are called with a bubbling pattern, where the deepest node is called first. That means that the deepest component will become responder when multiple Views return true for *ShouldSetResponder handlers. This is desirable in most cases, because it makes sure all controls and buttons are usable.

However, sometimes a parent will want to make sure that it becomes responder. This can be handled by using the capture phase. Before the responder system bubbles up from the deepest component, it will do a capture phase, firing on*ShouldSetResponderCapture. So if a parent View wants to prevent the child from becoming responder on a touch start, it should have a onStartShouldSetResponderCapture handler which returns true.

  • View.props.onStartShouldSetResponderCapture: (evt) => true,
  • View.props.onMoveShouldSetResponderCapture: (evt) => true,

PanResponder #

For higher-level gesture interpretation, check out PanResponder.

Gesture Responder System #

Edit on GitHub

Gesture recognition on mobile devices is much more complicated than web. A touch can go through several phases as the app determines what the user's intention is. For example, the app needs to determine if the touch is scrolling, sliding on a widget, or tapping. This can even change during the duration of a touch. There can also be multiple simultaneous touches.

The touch responder system is needed to allow components to negotiate these touch interactions without any additional knowledge about their parent or child components. This system is implemented in ResponderEventPlugin.js, which contains further details and documentation.

Best Practices #

Users can feel huge differences in the usability of web apps vs. native, and this is one of the big causes. Every action should have the following attributes:

  • Feedback/highlighting- show the user what is handling their touch, and what will happen when they release the gesture
  • Cancel-ability- when making an action, the user should be able to abort it mid-touch by dragging their finger away

These features make users more comfortable while using an app, because it allows people to experiment and interact without fear of making mistakes.

TouchableHighlight and Touchable* #

The responder system can be complicated to use. So we have provided an abstract Touchable implementation for things that should be "tappable". This uses the responder system and allows you to easily configure tap interactions declaratively. Use TouchableHighlight anywhere where you would use a button or link on web.

Responder Lifecycle #

A view can become the touch responder by implementing the correct negotiation methods. There are two methods to ask the view if it wants to become responder:

  • View.props.onStartShouldSetResponder: (evt) => true, - Does this view want to become responder on the start of a touch?
  • View.props.onMoveShouldSetResponder: (evt) => true, - Called for every touch move on the View when it is not the responder: does this view want to "claim" touch responsiveness?

If the View returns true and attempts to become the responder, one of the following will happen:

  • View.props.onResponderGrant: (evt) => {} - The View is now responding for touch events. This is the time to highlight and show the user what is happening
  • View.props.onResponderReject: (evt) => {} - Something else is the responder right now and will not release it

If the view is responding, the following handlers can be called:

  • View.props.onResponderMove: (evt) => {} - The user is moving their finger
  • View.props.onResponderRelease: (evt) => {} - Fired at the end of the touch, ie "touchUp"
  • View.props.onResponderTerminationRequest: (evt) => true - Something else wants to become responder. Should this view release the responder? Returning true allows release
  • View.props.onResponderTerminate: (evt) => {} - The responder has been taken from the View. Might be taken by other views after a call to onResponderTerminationRequest, or might be taken by the OS without asking (happens with control center/ notification center on iOS)

evt is a synthetic touch event with the following form:

  • nativeEvent
    • changedTouches - Array of all touch events that have changed since the last event
    • identifier - The ID of the touch
    • locationX - The X position of the touch, relative to the element
    • locationY - The Y position of the touch, relative to the element
    • pageX - The X position of the touch, relative to the root element
    • pageY - The Y position of the touch, relative to the root element
    • target - The node id of the element receiving the touch event
    • timestamp - A time identifier for the touch, useful for velocity calculation
    • touches - Array of all current touches on the screen

Capture ShouldSet Handlers #

onStartShouldSetResponder and onMoveShouldSetResponder are called with a bubbling pattern, where the deepest node is called first. That means that the deepest component will become responder when multiple Views return true for *ShouldSetResponder handlers. This is desirable in most cases, because it makes sure all controls and buttons are usable.

However, sometimes a parent will want to make sure that it becomes responder. This can be handled by using the capture phase. Before the responder system bubbles up from the deepest component, it will do a capture phase, firing on*ShouldSetResponderCapture. So if a parent View wants to prevent the child from becoming responder on a touch start, it should have a onStartShouldSetResponderCapture handler which returns true.

  • View.props.onStartShouldSetResponderCapture: (evt) => true,
  • View.props.onMoveShouldSetResponderCapture: (evt) => true,

PanResponder #

For higher-level gesture interpretation, check out PanResponder.

We are planning improvements to the React Native documentation. Your responses to this short survey will go a long way in helping us provide valuable content. Thank you!

Take Survey
-
Next →

JavaScript Environment #

Edit on GitHub

JavaScript Runtime #

When using React Native, you're going to be running your JavaScript code in two environments:

  • On iOS simulators and devices, Android emulators and devices React Native uses JavaScriptCore which is the JavaScript engine that powers Safari. On iOS JSC doesn't use JIT due to the absence of writable executable memory in iOS apps.
  • When using Chrome debugging, it runs all the JavaScript code within Chrome itself and communicates with native code via WebSocket. So you are using V8.

While both environments are very similar, you may end up hitting some inconsistencies. We're likely going to experiment with other JS engines in the future, so it's best to avoid relying on specifics of any runtime.

JavaScript Syntax Transformers #

Syntax transformers make writing code more enjoyable by allowing you to use new JavaScript syntax without having to wait for support on all interpreters.

As of version 0.5.0, React Native ships with the Babel JavaScript compiler. Check Babel documentation on its supported transformations for more details.

Here's a full list of React Native's enabled transformations.

ES5

  • Reserved Words: promise.catch(function() { });

ES6

ES7

Specific

  • JSX: <View style={{color: 'red'}} />
  • Flow: function foo(x: ?number): string {}

Polyfills #

Many standards functions are also available on all the supported JavaScript runtimes.

Browser

ES6

ES7

Specific

  • __DEV__

JavaScript Environment #

Edit on GitHub

JavaScript Runtime #

When using React Native, you're going to be running your JavaScript code in two environments:

  • On iOS simulators and devices, Android emulators and devices React Native uses JavaScriptCore which is the JavaScript engine that powers Safari. On iOS JSC doesn't use JIT due to the absence of writable executable memory in iOS apps.
  • When using Chrome debugging, it runs all the JavaScript code within Chrome itself and communicates with native code via WebSocket. So you are using V8.

While both environments are very similar, you may end up hitting some inconsistencies. We're likely going to experiment with other JS engines in the future, so it's best to avoid relying on specifics of any runtime.

JavaScript Syntax Transformers #

Syntax transformers make writing code more enjoyable by allowing you to use new JavaScript syntax without having to wait for support on all interpreters.

As of version 0.5.0, React Native ships with the Babel JavaScript compiler. Check Babel documentation on its supported transformations for more details.

Here's a full list of React Native's enabled transformations.

ES5

  • Reserved Words: promise.catch(function() { });

ES6

ES7

Specific

  • JSX: <View style={{color: 'red'}} />
  • Flow: function foo(x: ?number): string {}

Polyfills #

Many standards functions are also available on all the supported JavaScript runtimes.

Browser

ES6

ES7

Specific

  • __DEV__

We are planning improvements to the React Native documentation. Your responses to this short survey will go a long way in helping us provide valuable content. Thank you!

Take Survey

Known Issues #

Edit on GitHub

Devtools "React" Tab Does Not Work #

It's currently not possible to use the "React" tab in the devtools to inspect app widgets. This is due to a change in how the application scripts are evaluated in the devtools plugin; they are now run inside a Web Worker, and the plugin is unaware of this and so unable to communicate properly with React Native.

However, you can still use the Console feature of the devtools, and debugging JavaScript with breakpoints works too. To use the console, make sure to select the ⚙debuggerWorker.js entry in the devtools dropdown that by default is set to <top frame>.

Missing Android Modules and Views #

The work on React Native for Android started later than React Native for iOS. Most views and modules are now available on Android, with the following exceptions:

Views #

  • Maps - Please use Leland Richardson's react-native-maps as it is more feature-complete than our internal implementation.

Modules #

Some props are only supported on one platform #

There are properties that work on one platform only, either because they can inherently only be supported on that platform or because they haven't been implemented on the other platforms yet. All of these are annotated with @platform in JS docs and have a small badge next to them on the website. See e.g. Image.

Platform parity #

There are known cases where the APIs could be made more consistent across iOS and Android:

  • <ViewPagerAndroid> and <ScrollView pagingEnabled={true}> on iOS do a similar thing. We might want to unify them to <ViewPager>.
  • ActivityIndicator could render a native spinning indicator on both platforms (currently this is done using ActivityIndicatorIOS on iOS and ProgressBarAndroid on Android).
  • ProgressBar could render a horizontal progress bar on both platforms (on iOS this is ProgressViewIOS, on Android it's ProgressBarAndroid).

The overflow style property defaults to hidden and cannot be changed on Android #

This is a result of how Android rendering works. This feature is not being worked on as it would be a significant undertaking and there are many more important tasks.

Another issue with overflow: 'hidden' on Android: a view is not clipped by the parent's borderRadius even if the parent has overflow: 'hidden' enabled – the corners of the inner view will be visible outside of the rounded corners. This is only on Android; it works as expected on iOS. See a demo of the bug and the corresponding issue.

View shadows #

The shadow* view styles apply on iOS, and the elevation view prop is available on Android. Setting elevation on Android is equivalent to using the native elevation API, and has the same limitations (most significantly, it only works on Android 5.0+). Setting elevation on Android also affects the z-order for overlapping views.

Android M permissions #

The open source version of React Native doesn't yet support the Android M permission model.

Layout-only nodes on Android #

An optimization feature of the Android version of React Native is for views which only contribute to the layout to not have a native view, only their layout properties are propagated to their children views. This optimization is to provide stability in deep view hierarchies for React Native and is therefore enabled by default. Should you depend on a view being present or internal tests incorrectly detect a view is layout only it will be necessary to turn off this behavior. To do this, set collapsable to false as in this example:

<View collapsable={false}> ... -</View>

Memory issues with PNG images #

React Native Android depends on Fresco for loading and displaying images. Currently we have disabled downsampling because it is experimental, so you may run into memory issues when loading large PNG images.

react-native init hangs #

Try running react-native init with --verbose and see #2797 for common causes.

Text Input Border #

The text input has by default a border at the bottom of its view. This border has its padding set by the background image provided by the system, and it cannot be changed. Solutions to avoid this is to either not set height explicitly, case in which the system will take care of displaying the border in the correct position, or to not display the border by setting underlineColorAndroid to transparent.

Running On Device #

Edit on GitHub

Note that running on device requires Apple Developer account and provisioning your iPhone. This guide covers only React Native specific topic.

Accessing development server from device #

You can iterate quickly on device using development server. To do that, your laptop and your phone have to be on the same wifi network.

  1. Open AwesomeApp/ios/AwesomeApp/AppDelegate.m
  2. Change the IP in the URL from localhost to your laptop's IP. On Mac, you can find the IP address in System Preferences / Network.
  3. In Xcode select your phone as build target and press "Build and run"

Hint

Shake the device to open development menu (reload, debug, etc.)

Using offline bundle #

When you run your app on device, we pack all the JavaScript code and the images used into the app's resources. This way you can test it without development server running and submit the app to the AppStore.

  1. Open AwesomeApp/ios/AwesomeApp/AppDelegate.m
  2. Uncomment jsCodeLocation = [[NSBundle mainBundle] ...
  3. The JS bundle will be built for dev or prod depending on your app's scheme (Debug = development build with warnings, Release = minified prod build with perf optimizations). To change the scheme navigate to Product > Scheme > Edit Scheme... in xcode and change Build Configuration between Debug and Release.

Disabling in-app developer menu #

When building your app for production, your app's scheme should be set to Release as detailed in the debugging documentation in order to disable the in-app developer menu.

Troubleshooting #

If curl command fails make sure the packager is running. Also try adding --ipv4 flag to the end of it.

Note that since v0.14 JS and images are automatically packaged into the iOS app using Bundle React Native code and images Xcode build phase.

Running On Device #

Edit on GitHub

Note that running on device requires Apple Developer account and provisioning your iPhone. This guide covers only React Native specific topic.

Accessing development server from device #

You can iterate quickly on device using development server. To do that, your laptop and your phone have to be on the same wifi network.

  1. Open AwesomeApp/ios/AwesomeApp/AppDelegate.m
  2. Change the IP in the URL from localhost to your laptop's IP. On Mac, you can find the IP address in System Preferences / Network.
  3. In Xcode select your phone as build target and press "Build and run"

Hint

Shake the device to open development menu (reload, debug, etc.)

Using offline bundle #

When you run your app on device, we pack all the JavaScript code and the images used into the app's resources. This way you can test it without development server running and submit the app to the AppStore.

  1. Open AwesomeApp/ios/AwesomeApp/AppDelegate.m
  2. Uncomment jsCodeLocation = [[NSBundle mainBundle] ...
  3. The JS bundle will be built for dev or prod depending on your app's scheme (Debug = development build with warnings, Release = minified prod build with perf optimizations). To change the scheme navigate to Product > Scheme > Edit Scheme... in xcode and change Build Configuration between Debug and Release.

Disabling in-app developer menu #

When building your app for production, your app's scheme should be set to Release as detailed in the debugging documentation in order to disable the in-app developer menu.

Troubleshooting #

If curl command fails make sure the packager is running. Also try adding --ipv4 flag to the end of it.

Note that since v0.14 JS and images are automatically packaged into the iOS app using Bundle React Native code and images Xcode build phase.

We are planning improvements to the React Native documentation. Your responses to this short survey will go a long way in helping us provide valuable content. Thank you!

Take Survey