Summary:
The current implementation of `AccessibilityInfo.announceForAccessibility` will immediately interrupt any existing in progress speech with the announcement. Sometimes this is desirable behaviour, but often you will want to wait until existing speech is finished before reading the new announcement. This change gives us that option.
My personal use case for this feature is a custom text input. When typing on iOS with voiceover enabled, each character is read out after being selected. I wanted to add some additional information after each character to help with the context of what has changed in the input, but I didn't want to override the reading of the character itself.
This feature is supported natively on iOS by constructing an `NSAttributedString` with the property [`accessibilitySpeechQueueAnnouncement`](https://developer.apple.com/documentation/foundation/nsattributedstring/key/2865770-accessibilityspeechqueueannounce), so this change just adds an extra parameter to `AccessibilityInfo.announceForAccessibility` which controls the value of that property on the native side. Adding this as an extra optional parameter with false as the default ensures that existing uses of the function won't be affected.
Unfortunately, this feature doesn't appear to be supported on Android, so the new second property will be iOS only.
## Changelog
[iOS] [Added] - add new argument to announceForAccessibility to allow queueing on iOS
Pull Request resolved: https://github.com/facebook/react-native/pull/32637
Test Plan:
I've updated the `announceForAccessibility` section in RNTester with multiple buttons to demonstrate the difference between `queue: false` (default) and `queue: true` and show they work as intended.
Here's the expectation for each button:
- "Announce for Accessibility Immediately": on press, should start reading the button label, then be interrupted by the announcement
- "Announce for Accessibility Queued": on press, should read the button label then read the announcement afterwards
- "Announce for Accessibility Queue Multiple": on press, should read the button label, then read three announcements sequentially, no interruptions
You can see the realisation of those expectations in the following video recorded on an iPhone 12 running iOS 15.0.2:
https://user-images.githubusercontent.com/14826539/142770536-d57bfd69-eba5-444d-9c89-4bf4851ea062.mov
I've also tested the same way on an iPhone 8 running iOS 13.4 and it works exactly the same.
Reviewed By: yungsters
Differential Revision: D32637989
Pulled By: philIip
fbshipit-source-id: 3e90add523f11eb0eb34ea623211249263f257e2
Summary:
ES Modules implicitly enable strict mode. Adding the "use strict" directive is, therefore, not required.
This diff removes all "use strict" directives from ES modules.
Changelog:
[Internal]
Reviewed By: motiz88
Differential Revision: D26172715
fbshipit-source-id: 57957bcbb672c4c3e62b1db633cf425c1c9d6430
Summary:
Changelog: [Internal]
Reverting the import to the previous local module style since importing from react-native seems to introduce some perf regression. We'll revisit this later in the future.
Reviewed By: yungsters
Differential Revision: D18383893
fbshipit-source-id: f11d46a4545768f39199fd6fd22fcf14905d0a74
Summary:
Changelog: [Internal]
Moved the imports for `TurboModuleRegistry` and `TurboModule` from `react-native`. This was a jscodeshift with the script: P120688078
Reviewed By: yungsters
Differential Revision: D18262538
fbshipit-source-id: 48fac15229c897408928511c5ecbb42f17ec7b42
Summary:
Move RCTAccessibilityManager to CoreModules (since that's the only dir that supports TM).
Fixup some variable names to match spec.
Reviewed By: RSNara
Differential Revision: D16861739
fbshipit-source-id: a0a53b221dcc172979d1f2c83851ab92e23f2333
Summary: We introduced NativeAccessibilityManager a while back. This diff makes sure that there are no usages of NativeModules.AccessibilityManager in our codebase.
Reviewed By: ejanzer
Differential Revision: D16714424
fbshipit-source-id: edebf0f7a0fab615aa1722406f9d538696bd65a0
Summary:
This is an ESLint plugin that infers whether an import looks like a Haste module name. To keep the linter fast and simple, it does not look in the Haste map. Instead, it looks for uppercase characters in single-name import paths, since npm has disallowed uppercase letters in package names for a long time. There are some false negatives (e.g. "merge" is a Haste module and this linter rule would not pick it up) but those are about 1.1% of the module names in the RN repo, and unit tests and integration tests will fail anyway once Haste is turned off.
You can disable the lint rule on varying granular levels with ESLint's normal disabling/enabling mechanisms.
Also rewrote more Haste imports so that the linter passes (i.e. fixed lint errors as part of this PR).
## Changelog
[General] [Changed] - Add a lint rule to disallow Haste imports
Pull Request resolved: https://github.com/facebook/react-native/pull/25058
Differential Revision: D15515826
Pulled By: cpojer
fbshipit-source-id: d58a3c30dfe0887f8a530e3393af4af5a1ec1cac