Summary:
After animation has been finished using Native driver there is no final value passed from the native to JS side. This causes a bug from https://github.com/facebook/react-native/issues/28114.
This PR solves this problem in the same way as `react-native-reanimated` library. When detaching it is calling native side to get the last value from Animated node and stores it on the JS side.
Preserving animated value even if animation was using `useNativeDriver: true`
Fixes https://github.com/facebook/react-native/issues/28114
## Changelog
<!-- Help reviewers and the release process by writing your own changelog entry. For an example, see:
https://github.com/facebook/react-native/wiki/Changelog
-->
[Internal] [Fixed] - Save native Animated node value on JS side in detach phase
Pull Request resolved: https://github.com/facebook/react-native/pull/28841
Test Plan: Unit tests for added getValue method passed. Green CI
Reviewed By: mdvacca
Differential Revision: D22211499
Pulled By: JoshuaGross
fbshipit-source-id: 9a3a98a9f9a8536fe2c8764f667cdabe1f6ba82a
Summary:
Switch between "Fabric" and "Non-Fabric" modes based on which types of native Views are being attached to animations. Don't allow non-Fabric to drive Fabric animations and vice-versa.
Changelog: [Internal]
Reviewed By: mdvacca
Differential Revision: D21985411
fbshipit-source-id: fb9bef1e38375b384430b4e0275e7b6d62eda7a4
Summary:
There are some cases where restoring default values on component unmount is not desirable. For example in react-native-screens we want to keep the native view displayed after react has unmounted them. Restoring default values causes an issue there because it will change props controlled my native animated back to their default value instead of keeping whatever value they had been animated to.
Restoring default values is only needed for updates anyway, where removing a prop controlled by native animated need to be reset to its default value since react no longer tracks its value.
This splits restoring default values and disconnecting from views in 2 separate native methods, this way we can restore default values only on component update and not on unmount. This takes care of being backwards compatible for JS running with the older native code.
## Changelog
[General] [Fixed] - NativeAnimated - Don't restore default values when components unmount
Pull Request resolved: https://github.com/facebook/react-native/pull/26978
Test Plan:
- Tested in an app using react-native-screens to make sure native views that are kept after their underlying component has been unmount don't change. Also tested in RNTester animated example.
- Tested that new JS works with old native code
Reviewed By: mmmulani
Differential Revision: D18197735
Pulled By: JoshuaGross
fbshipit-source-id: 20fa0f31a3edf1bc57ccb03df9d1486aba83edc4
Summary:
This diff formats the Java class files inside xplat/js/react-native-github. Since google-java-format was enabled in D16071401 we want to codemode the existing code so that users don't have to deal with formatter lint noise at diff-time.
```arc f --paths-cmd 'hg files -I "**/*.java"'```
drop-conflicts
Reviewed By: cpojer
Differential Revision: D16071725
fbshipit-source-id: fc6e3852e45742c109f0c5ac4065d64201c74204
Summary:
androidx files were not being instrumented properly which meant we would have exceptions thrown by powermock
Robolectric Instrumentation config was changed by hand, the remainder is a codemod using abgs + xargs + sed
Differential Revision: D14323745
fbshipit-source-id: 56aa97dad5d7197f4eb0ba1fdd80b1583bcad6ac
Summary: This change drops the year from the copyright headers and the LICENSE file.
Reviewed By: yungsters
Differential Revision: D9727774
fbshipit-source-id: df4fc1e4390733fe774b1a160dd41b4a3d83302a
Summary:
Includes React Native and its dependencies Fresco, Metro, and Yoga. Excludes samples/examples/docs.
find: ^(?:( *)|( *(?:[\*~#]|::))( )? *)?Copyright (?:\(c\) )?(\d{4})\b.+Facebook[\s\S]+?BSD[\s\S]+?(?:this source tree|the same directory)\.$
replace: $1$2$3Copyright (c) $4-present, Facebook, Inc.\n$2\n$1$2$3This source code is licensed under the MIT license found in the\n$1$2$3LICENSE file in the root directory of this source tree.
Reviewed By: TheSavior, yungsters
Differential Revision: D7007050
fbshipit-source-id: 37dd6bf0ffec0923bfc99c260bb330683f35553e
Summary:
This PR adds support for Animated tracking to Animated Native Driver implementation on Android and iOS.
Animated tracking allows for animation to be started with a "dynamic" end value. Instead of passing a fixed number as end value we can pass a reference to another Animated.Value. Then when that value changes, the animation will be reconfigured to drive the animation to the new destination point. What is important is that animation will keep its state in the process of updating "toValue". That is if it is a spring animation and the end value changes while the previous animation still hasn't settled the new animation will start from the current position and will inherit current velocity. This makes end value transitions very smooth.
Animated tracking is available in JS implementation of Animated library but not in the native implementation. Therefore until now, it wasn't possible to utilize native driver when using animated tracking. Offloading animation from JS thread turns out to be crucial for gesture driven animations. This PR is a step forward towards feature parity between JS and native implementations of Animated.
Here is a link to example video that shows how tracking can be used to implement chat heads effect: https://twitter.com/kzzzf/status/958362032650244101
In addition this PR fixes an issue with frames animation driver on Android that because of rounding issues was taking one extra frame to start. Because of that change I had to update a number of Android unit tests that were relying on that behavior and running that one additional animation step prior to performing checks.
As a part of this PR I'm adding three unit tests for each of the platforms that verifies most important aspects of this implementation. Please refer to the code and look at the test cases top level comments to learn what they do.
I'm also adding a section to "Native Animated Example" screen in RNTester app that provides a test case for tracking. In the example we have blue square that fallows the red line drawn on screen. Line uses Animated.Value for it's position while square is connected via tracking spring animation to that value. So it is ought to follow the line. When user taps in the area surrounding the button new position for the red line is selected at random and the value updates. Then we can watch blue screen animate to that position.
You can also refer to this video that I use to demonstrate how tracking can be linked with native gesture events using react-native-gesture-handler lib: https://twitter.com/kzzzf/status/958362032650244101
[GENERAL][FEATURE][Native Animated] - Added support for animated tracking to native driver. Now you can use `useNativeDriver` flag with animations that track other Animated.Values
Closes https://github.com/facebook/react-native/pull/17896
Differential Revision: D6974170
Pulled By: hramos
fbshipit-source-id: 50e918b36ee10f80c1deb866c955661d4cc2619b
Summary:
Rebased version of #12842 that was reverted because of failing fb internal tests.
Closes https://github.com/facebook/react-native/pull/15919
Differential Revision: D5823956
Pulled By: hramos
fbshipit-source-id: 4ece19a403f5ebbe4829c4c26696ea0575ab1d0e
Summary:
As I was working on mimicking iOS animations for my ongoing work with `react-navigation`, one task I had was to match the "push from right" animation that is common in UINavigationController.
I was able to grab the exact animation values for this animation with some LLDB magic, and found that the screen is animated using a `CASpringAnimation` with the parameters:
- stiffness: 1000
- damping: 500
- mass: 3
After spending a considerable amount of time attempting to replicate the spring created with these values by CASpringAnimation by specifying values for tension and friction in the current `Animated.spring` implementation, I was unable to come up with mathematically equivalent values that could replicate the spring _exactly_.
After doing some research, I ended up disassembling the QuartzCore framework, reading the assembly, and determined that Apple's implementation of `CASpringAnimation` does not use an integrated, numerical animation model as we do in Animated.spring, but instead solved for the closed form of the equations that govern damped harmonic oscillation (the differential equations themselves are [here](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Harmonic_oscillator#Damped_harmonic_oscillator), and a paper describing the math to arrive at the closed-form solution to the second-order ODE that describes the DHO is [here](http://planetmath.org/sites/default/files/texpdf/39745.pdf)).
Though we can get the currently implemented RK4 integration close by tweaking some values, it is, the current model is at it's core, an approximation. It seemed that if I wanted to implement the `CASpringAnimation` behavior _exactly_, I needed to implement the analytical model (as is implemented in `CASpringAnimation`) in `Animated`.
We add three new optional parameters to `Animated.spring` (to both the JS and native implementations):
- `stiffness`, a value describing the spring's stiffness coefficient
- `damping`, a value defining how the spring's motion should be damped due to the forces of friction (technically called the _viscous damping coefficient_).
- `mass`, a value describing the mass of the object attached to the end of the simulated spring
Just like if a developer were to specify `bounciness`/`speed` and `tension`/`friction` in the same config, specifying any of these new parameters while also specifying the aforementioned config values will cause an error to be thrown.
~Defaults for `Animated.spring` across all three implementations (JS/iOS/Android) stay the same, so this is intended to be *a non-breaking change*.~
~If `stiffness`, `damping`, or `mass` are provided in the config, we switch to animating the spring with the new damped harmonic oscillator model (`DHO` as described in the code).~
We replace the old RK4 integration implementation with our new analytic implementation. Tension/friction nicely correspond directly to stiffness/damping with the mass of the spring locked at 1. This is intended to be *a non-breaking change*, but there may be very slight differences in people's springs (maybe not even noticeable to the naked eye), given the fact that this implementation is more accurate.
The DHO animation algorithm will calculate the _position_ of the spring at time _t_ explicitly and in an analytical fashion, and use this calculation to update the animation's value. It will also analytically calculate the velocity at time _t_, so as to allow animated value tracking to continue to work as expected.
Also, docs have been updated to cover the new configuration options (and also I added docs for Animated configuration options that were missing, such as `restDisplacementThreshold`, etc).
Run tests. Run "Animated Gratuitous App" and "NativeAnimation" example in RNTester.
Closes https://github.com/facebook/react-native/pull/15322
Differential Revision: D5794791
Pulled By: hramos
fbshipit-source-id: 58ed9e134a097e321c85c417a142576f6a8952f8
Summary:
* Any animation can be looped on the javascript thread
* Only basic animations supported natively at this stage, loops run
using the native driver cannot contain animations of type sequence,
parallel, stagger, or loop
Motivation: We need a spinner in our app that is displayed and animated while the javascript thread is tied up with other tasks. This means it needs to be offloaded from the javascript thread, so that it will continue to run while those tasks are churning away.
I originally submitted PR #9513, which has served our needs, but brentvatne pointed out a better way to do it. Had hoped his suggestion would be implemented by janicduplessis or another fb employee, but after 5 months I thought I'd give it another push.
I've put together an implementation that basically matches the suggested API. Let me know what you think, and whether others can pick it up from here and get it in to core.
Personal Motivation: I am leaving my current organisation on Feb 10th, so am trying to clean thing
Closes https://github.com/facebook/react-native/pull/11973
Differential Revision: D4704381
fbshipit-source-id: 42a2cdf5d53a7c0d08f86a58485f7f38739e6cd9
Summary:
This diff implements NativeAnimation offsets on Android. Running the examples should show no change; however, calling `setOffset()` should offset the final value for any value node by that amount. This brings Android up to date with JS and iOS animation APIs.
Closes https://github.com/facebook/react-native/pull/10680
Differential Revision: D4119609
fbshipit-source-id: 96dccdf25f67c64c6787fd9ac762ec841cefc46a
Summary:
This adds support for `Animated.event` driven natively. This is WIP and would like feedback on how this is implemented.
At the moment, it works by providing a mapping between a view tag, an event name, an event path and an animated value when a view has a prop with a `AnimatedEvent` object. Then we can hook into `EventDispatcher`, check for events that target our view + event name and update the animated value using the event path.
For now it works with the onScroll event but it should be generic enough to work with anything.
Closes https://github.com/facebook/react-native/pull/9253
Differential Revision: D3759844
Pulled By: foghina
fbshipit-source-id: 86989c705847955bd65e6cf5a7d572ec7ccd3eb4
Summary:
Adds support for the `extrapolate` parameter on the native interpolation node. This is pretty much a 1 to 1 port of the JS implementation.
**Test plan**
Tested by adding the `extrapolate` parameter in the native animated UIExplorer example.
Closes https://github.com/facebook/react-native/pull/9366
Differential Revision: D3824154
fbshipit-source-id: 2ef593af827a8bd3d7b8ab2d53abbdc9516c6022
Summary: Add support for `useNativeDriver: true` to `Animated.decay`. Add example in Native Animated Example UIExplorer app.
Reviewed By: ritzau
Differential Revision: D3690127
fbshipit-source-id: eaa5e61293ed174191cec72255ea2677dbaa1757
Summary:
This change adds support for spring animations to be run off the JS thread on android. The implementation is based on the android spring implementation from Rebound (http://facebook.github.io/rebound/) but since only a small subset of the library is used the relevant parts are copied instead of making RN to import the whole library.
**Test Plan**
Run java tests: `buck test ReactAndroid/src/test/java/com/facebook/react/animated`
Add `useNativeDriver: true` to spring animation in animated example app, run it on android
Closes https://github.com/facebook/react-native/pull/8860
Differential Revision: D3676436
fbshipit-source-id: 3a4b1b006725a938562712989b93dd4090577c48
Summary:
Adds support for `Animated.Value#addListener` for native driven nodes on Android. This is based on work by skevy in the exponent RN fork. Also adds a UIExplorer example.
** Test plan **
Run unit tests
Tested that by adding a listener to a native driven animated node and checked that the listener callback is called properly.
Also tested that it doesn't crash on iOS that doesn't support this yet.
Closes https://github.com/facebook/react-native/pull/8844
Differential Revision: D3670906
fbshipit-source-id: 15700ed7b93db140d907ce80af4dae6be3102135
Summary:This change adds native animated support for Animated.interpolate
Animated.interpolate allows for defining nodes that outputs an interpolated value of their input node based on the interpolation node configuration. For now native animated implementation only supports a linear interpolation for a given input and output ranges (ranges can consists of multiple segments). Native interpolation node is compatible with the JS implementation with the exception that not all attributes that can be used in JS are supported. Before we migrate interpolation node from JS->native we verify that only supported props are used.
**Test Plan**
Run JS tests: `npm test Libraries/Animated/src/__tests__/AnimatedNative-test.js`
Run java tests: `buck test ReactAndroid/src/test/java/com/facebook/react/animated`
Closes https://github.com/facebook/react-native/pull/7141
Differential Revision: D3216546
fb-gh-sync-id: 29876e33956615c6370ca4d332abe048f8dba5b8
fbshipit-source-id: 29876e33956615c6370ca4d332abe048f8dba5b8
Summary:This change extends animated native module API with `stopAnimation` method that is responsible for interrupting actively running animation as a reslut of a JS call. In order for the `stopAnimation` to understand `animationId` argument I also had to add `animationId` to `startAnimation` method. As JS thread runs in parallel to the thread which executes the animation there is a chance that JS may call `stopAnimation` after the animation has finished. Because of that we are not doing any checks on the `animationId` parameter passed to `stopAnimation` in native and if the animation does not exists in the registry we ignore that call.
**Test Plan**
Run JS tests: `npm test Libraries/Animated/src/__tests__/AnimatedNative-test.js`
Run java tests: `buck test ReactAndroid/src/test/java/com/facebook/react/animated`
Closes https://github.com/facebook/react-native/pull/7058
Differential Revision: D3211906
fb-gh-sync-id: 3761509651de36a550b00d33e2a631c379d3900f
fbshipit-source-id: 3761509651de36a550b00d33e2a631c379d3900f
Summary:This change adds native animated support for Animated.multiply nodes.
Animated.multiply allows for defining nodes that would output a product of values of the input nodes.
**Test Plan**
Run JS tests: `npm test Libraries/Animated/src/__tests__/AnimatedNative-test.js`
Run java tests: `buck test ReactAndroid/src/test/java/com/facebook/react/animated`
Closes https://github.com/facebook/react-native/pull/7071
Differential Revision: D3197663
fb-gh-sync-id: 35f64244a2482c487a81e5e7cd08f3c0e56d9b78
fbshipit-source-id: 35f64244a2482c487a81e5e7cd08f3c0e56d9b78
Summary:This change adds suport native animated support for Animated.add.
Animated.add lets you declare node that outputs a sum of it input nodes.
**Test Plan**
Play with the following playground app: https://gist.github.com/39de37faf07480fcd7d1
Run JS tests: `npm test Libraries/Animated/src/__tests__/AnimatedNative-test.js`
Run java tests: `buck test ReactAndroid/src/test/java/com/facebook/react/animated`
Closes https://github.com/facebook/react-native/pull/6641
Differential Revision: D3195963
fb-gh-sync-id: bb1e1a36821a0e071ad0e7d0fa99ce0d6b088b0a
fbshipit-source-id: bb1e1a36821a0e071ad0e7d0fa99ce0d6b088b0a
Summary:This change adds some basic unit tests for native animated traversal algorithm. The following tests are added:
1) Build simple animated nodes graph, verify that frame-based animation execute updates and when it runs out of the frames we no longer schedule updates for the native view
2) Build simple animated nodes graph and start short timing animation, verify that animation JS callback gets called.
As a part of this change I'm fixing an issue that tests allowed me to discover, where I forgot to clear updates queue at the end of `runUpdates` method. It was causing the view to be updated even if there was no active animation for it (actually it was mitigated by another bug in `hasActiveAnimations` I'm fixing here too).
I'm also adding Nullable annotation in a bunch of places. To lazy to send it as a separate change - sorry.
Going forward I'm planning on adding more tests. Currently the number of nodes is pretty limited so it's difficult to construct more complex graphs, but once I land Add/Multiply
Closes https://github.com/facebook/react-native/pull/6858
Differential Revision: D3168549
Pulled By: astreet
fb-gh-sync-id: 5295c75f3c7817775b5154bb808888650ff74e12
fbshipit-source-id: 5295c75f3c7817775b5154bb808888650ff74e12