You will need to build React Native from source if you want to work on a new feature/bug fix, try out the latest features which are not released yet, or maintain your own fork with patches that cannot be merged to the core.
## Prerequisites
Assuming you have the Android SDK installed, run `android` to open the Android SDK Manager.
Make sure you have the following installed:
1. Android SDK version 23 (compileSdkVersion in [`build.gradle`](https://github.com/facebook/react-native/blob/master/ReactAndroid/build.gradle))
2. SDK build tools version 23.0.1 (buildToolsVersion in [`build.gradle`](https://github.com/facebook/react-native/blob/master/ReactAndroid/build.gradle))
Point Gradle to your Android SDK: either have `$ANDROID_SDK` and `$ANDROID_NDK ` defined, or create a local.properties file in the root of your react-native checkout with the following contents:
Modify your `android/app/build.gradle` to use the `:ReactAndroid` project instead of the pre-compiled library, e.g. - replace `compile 'com.facebook.react:react-native:0.16.+'` with `compile project(':ReactAndroid')`:
If you use 3rd-party React Native modules, you need to override their dependencies so that they don't bundle the pre-compiled library. Otherwise you'll get an error while compiling - `Error: more than one library with package name 'com.facebook.react'`.
Modify your `android/app/build.gradle` and replace `compile project(':react-native-custom-module')` with:
Building from source can take a long time, especially for the first build, as it needs to download ~200 MB of artifacts and compile the native code. Every time you update the `react-native` version from your repo, the build directory may get deleted, and all the files are re-downloaded. To avoid this, you might want to change your build directory path by editing the `~/.gradle/init.gradle ` file: