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BVLinearGradient | ||
BVLinearGradient.xcodeproj | ||
Examples/AnimatedGradient | ||
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.flowconfig | ||
.gitignore | ||
BVLinearGradient.podspec | ||
LICENSE | ||
README.md | ||
index.android.js | ||
index.ios.js | ||
package.json |
README.md
react-native-linear-gradient
A <LinearGradient>
component for react-native, as seen in
react-native-login.
Version 2.0 supports react-native >= 0.40.0
Add it to your project
You can try linking the project automatically:
$ react-native link
or do it manually as described below:
iOS
- Run
npm install react-native-linear-gradient --save
Then either:
Cocoapods
add the following line to your Podfile:
pod 'React', :path => '../node_modules/react-native'
pod 'BVLinearGradient', :path => '../node_modules/react-native-linear-gradient'
or:
Manually
- Open your project in XCode, right click on
Libraries
and clickAdd Files to "Your Project Name"
Look undernode_modules/react-native-linear-gradient
and addBVLinearGradient.xcodeproj
. (Screenshot). - Add
libBVLinearGradient.a
toBuild Phases -> Link Binary With Libraries
(Screenshot). - Click on
BVLinearGradient.xcodeproj
inLibraries
and go theBuild Settings
tab. Double click the text to the right ofHeader Search Paths
and verify that it has$(SRCROOT)/../react-native/React
- if it isn't, then add it. This is so XCode is able to find the headers that theBVLinearGradient
source files are referring to by pointing to the header files installed within thereact-native
node_modules
directory. (Screenshot).
Then:
- Whenever you want to use it within React code now you can:
import LinearGradient from 'react-native-linear-gradient';
If you're having trouble, you can point your package.json
at github to see if the issue has been fixed. Simply change the dependency
"react-native-linear-gradient": "react-native-community/react-native-linear-gradient",
to get the data right from github instead of npm and then npm install
For instance the podspec file does not contain the right data (author attributes etc..) in npm while it does in the github repo.
Android
- in
android/settings.gradle
...
include ':react-native-linear-gradient'
project(':react-native-linear-gradient').projectDir = new File(rootProject.projectDir, '../node_modules/react-native-linear-gradient/android')
- in
android/app/build.gradle
add:
dependencies {
...
compile project(':react-native-linear-gradient')
}
- and finally, in
android/src/main/java/com/{YOUR_APP_NAME}/MainActivity.java
for react-native < 0.29, orandroid/src/main/java/com/{YOUR_APP_NAME}/MainApplication.java
for react-native >= 0.29 add:
//...
import com.BV.LinearGradient.LinearGradientPackage; // <--- This!
//...
@Override
protected List<ReactPackage> getPackages() {
return Arrays.<ReactPackage>asList(
new MainReactPackage(),
new LinearGradientPackage() // <---- and This!
);
}
Examples
Simple
The following code will produce something like this:
import LinearGradient from 'react-native-linear-gradient';
// Within your render function
<LinearGradient colors={['#4c669f', '#3b5998', '#192f6a']} style={styles.linearGradient}>
<Text style={styles.buttonText}>
Sign in with Facebook
</Text>
</LinearGradient>
// Later on in your styles..
var styles = StyleSheet.create({
linearGradient: {
flex: 1,
paddingLeft: 15,
paddingRight: 15,
borderRadius: 5
},
buttonText: {
fontSize: 18,
fontFamily: 'Gill Sans',
textAlign: 'center',
margin: 10,
color: '#ffffff',
backgroundColor: 'transparent',
},
});
Additional props
You can also use start and end points, as well as specify the locations
for the gradient color changes with the start
, end
, colors
and locations
props:
colors
An array of colors that represent stops in the gradient. At least two colors are required (otherwise it's not a gradient, it's just a fill!).
start
An array of [x, y] where x and y are floats. They represent the position that the gradient starts at, as a fraction of the overall size of the gradient. For example, [0.1, 0.1] means that the gradient will start 10% from the top and 10% from the left.
end
Same as start but for the end of the gradient.
locations
An array of the same lenth as colors, where each element is a float with the same meaning as the start and end values, but instead they indicate where the color at that index should be.
<LinearGradient
start={{x: 0.0, y: 0.25}} end={{x: 0.5, y: 1.0}}
locations={[0,0.5,0.6]}
colors={['#4c669f', '#3b5998', '#192f6a']}
style={styles.linearGradient}>
<Text style={styles.buttonText}>
Sign in with Facebook
</Text>
</LinearGradient>
Updating the values for fun
Check out Examples/AnimatedGradient (git clone
this project, cd into it, npm install, open in XCode and run) to see how this is done:
This gif was created using licecap - a great piece of free OSS
An example app
You can see this component in action in brentvatne/react-native-login.
License
License is MIT