Summary:
This adds the accessibilityHint for View, Text and Touchable* on iOS.
The accessibilityHint provides some more information about an element
when the accessibilityLabel is not enough.
The accessibilityHint is a core accessibility property on iOS.
From https://developer.apple.com/documentation/objectivec/nsobject/1615093-accessibilityhint:
> An accessibility hint helps users understand what will happen when they perform an action on the accessibility element when that result is not obvious from the accessibility label.
Related issue: https://github.com/facebook/react-native/issues/14706
The npm scripts `test`, `flow`, `lint` and `prettier` are satisfied.
I added a couple of examples to the RNTester app. The Accessibility Inspector on Mac helps debugging accessibility stuff on a simulator, but it does not show the accessibilityHint. Therefore I tested the RNTester app on an iPhone 8 device using VoiceOver to verify the hint functionality. It works fine, and I've tested disabling and enabling "read hints" in the VoiceOver settings on the phone.
https://github.com/facebook/react-native-website/pull/222
[IOS][FEATURE][Accessibility] - Add accessibilityHint for View, Text, Touchable* on iOS
Closes https://github.com/facebook/react-native/pull/18093
Reviewed By: hramos
Differential Revision: D7230780
Pulled By: ziqichen6
fbshipit-source-id: 172ad28dc9ae2b67ea256100f6acb939f2466d0b
Summary:
Context:
After discussing with yungsters, `currentViewStates` is a very ambiguous name for a prop, especially because there are only two possible values. From a developer's perspective, it makes more sense to just call them `accessibilityStates` because the main use for them is to add states to Talkback and Voiceover.
Also, the actual implementation of what we're changing under the hood in Native Code is abstracted away from developers using React Native, so as long as behavior is as they would expect, it makes more sense to change the name into a clear one.
Changes in this Diff:
Renamed the view property exposed to native iOS code from `currentViewStates` to `accessibilityStates`
Also deleted setting the userInteractionEnabled view property, because we want to keep it as just an accessibility property.
Reviewed By: PeteTheHeat
Differential Revision: D8896821
fbshipit-source-id: 95674c9b7295f5b9e60994c297acdee83f6226d7
Summary:
Added Native iOS functionality for prop currentViewStates.
On iOS, this property modifies both the view property userInteractionEnabled and also adds corresponding UIAccessibilityTraits to the view.
If disabled is passed in, userInteractionEnabled of the view will be set to false.
The value that is passed into currentviewStates is converted to a UIAccessibilityTrait Enum and masked in with existing UIAccessibilityTraits on that native view.
The native implementation for accessibilityRole is also changed to also mask new UIAccessibilityTraits with existing ones.
Reviewed By: PeteTheHeat
Differential Revision: D8842691
fbshipit-source-id: 919267300c70efed93a7a92377a0178bd8885eb5
Summary:
Because we're now separating accessibilityTraits into accessibilityRole and accessibilityState, we're going to only allow one role to be set, and allow on preset combinations of roles that make sense.
This change adds iOS functionality to the role image button because a popular accessibilityTrait combination is image and button.
Reviewed By: ikenwoo
Differential Revision: D8847012
fbshipit-source-id: da386dbf82cb3854d14c228a1116da9f4067fe93
Summary: Removed Accessibility Trait TabBar for iOS compatibility Issues, since tabbar is only available on iOS 10+
Reviewed By: PeteTheHeat
Differential Revision: D8822469
fbshipit-source-id: 34bf00eb930f631a5a4effa0a4159da07c1573f6
Summary:
Added a new property to View for Accessibility called `accessibilityRole`. This property merges functionality of existing properties: `accessibilityTraits` (iOS) and `accessibilityComponentType` (android).
Currently, nine values are supported with equivalent behavior as `accessibilityTraits` (iOS) when `accessibilityRole` is set on iOS Voiceover and Android TalkBack
```
| 'none'
| 'button'
| 'link'
| 'search'
| 'image'
| 'keyboardkey'
| 'text'
| 'adjustable'
| 'tabbar'
```
They currently support similar behavior on talkback on Android and voice over on iOS
Does not break functionality of existing properties, but have not tested for behavior of setting both this one and the old one.
* iOS - I added a property accessibilityRoles, and basically remapped it to the same thing as accessibilityTraits. I also added in enum mappings for keyboardkey and tabbar.
* Android - Also added a property accessibilityRoles, from the Android side. For the underlying native functionality, I built a helper class that is based off of AccessibilityRolesUtil.java from the accessibility team. Biggest changes made are that I defined my own enums if needed, and also set some properties to match the functionality of iOS Accessibility Traits. I also handled the logic for switch/case statements of setting roles for the android side on this file. Also, I currently haven't localized strings for setRoleDescription, but plan to.
* Javascript - I added a view property accessibilityRoles in ViewPropTypes.
Reviewed By: blavalla
Differential Revision: D8756225
fbshipit-source-id: e03eec40cce86042551764f433e1defe7ee41b35
Summary:
Added Check for iOS 11 before setting property for `accessibilityIgnoreInvertColor`
Builds on top of
https://our.intern.facebook.com/intern/diff/D8549084/
Reviewed By: shergin
Differential Revision: D8599698
fbshipit-source-id: c5cc26b4c1c20fb9cca5bfe7143fa9dcb217a2d7
Summary:
@public
Added a property `accessibilityIgnoresInvertColors (boolean)` to Views which allows the Apple API `accessibilityIgnoresInvertColors` to be used in React Native.
Now, when a user has Display: Smart Invert enabled, you can set the property to be true, and things like photos and views with the property set to true will no longer be inverted when Smart Invert is enabled.
This property can also be applied to the Image Component.
Example Use Case:
```
<Image accessibilityIgnoresInvertColors={true} />
```
```
<View accessibilityIgnoresInvertColors={true} />
```
| Before | After |
| ------ | ----- |
| ![original](https://user-images.githubusercontent.com/165856/41738737-b62c6ebc-7547-11e8-8ea3-f82239998071.jpg) | ![feeditem](https://user-images.githubusercontent.com/165856/41738749-beef6de2-7547-11e8-9771-b44e513de0fd.jpg)
Reviewed By: PeteTheHeat
Differential Revision: D8549084
fbshipit-source-id: 82a3bc73c9e6d75d6b50ba013b88127f07692641
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 is a complete rewrite of RCTText, the part of React Native which manages Text and TextInput components.
Key points:
* It's understandable now. It follows a simple architectural pattern, and it's easy to debug and iterate. Text flow layout is a first-class citizen in React Native layout system now, not just a wired special case. It also brings entirely new possibilities such as nested interleaving <Text> and <View> components.
* All <Text>-specific APIs were removed from UIManager and co (it's about ~16 public methods which were used exclusively only by <Text>).
* It relies on new Yoga measurement/cloning API and on-dirty handler. So, it removes built-in dirty propagation subsystem from RN completely.
* It caches string fragments properly and granularly on a per-node basis which makes updating text-containing components more performant.
* It does not instantiate UIView for virtual components which reduces memory utilization.
* It drastically improves <TextInput> capabilities (e.g. rich text inside single line <TextInput> is now supported).
Screenshots:
https://cl.ly/2j3r1V0L0324https://cl.ly/3N2V3C3d3q3R
Reviewed By: mmmulani
Differential Revision: D6617326
fbshipit-source-id: 35d4d81b35c9870e9557d0211c0e934e6072a41e
Summary: As it was mentioned in previous diffs, we are removing this because it overcomplicates rendering layer and provides (almost) no benefits (and cannot be implemented 100% accurate way).
Reviewed By: mmmulani
Differential Revision: D6582560
fbshipit-source-id: 0778db96a45dd8e2520268d5d00792677cb01a20
Summary:
This was leftovers from old implementation of zIndex feature.
Janic janicduplessis refactored this and moved all logic to UIView layer, so we don't need this prop anymore in shadow realm.
More info: https://github.com/facebook/react-native/pull/14011
Reviewed By: mmmulani
Differential Revision: D6574414
fbshipit-source-id: 2cae19350765689784d7884ed875878d39b4e3f1
Summary:
This feature has been requested by customers. Our previous (pre-react) application had support for custom accessibility actions.
This feature allows UI elements to provide a list of custom actions that can be read when VoiceOver is enabled. UI elements expose one accessibility action by default. Some UI elements may support multiple actions though other mechanisms like tap and hold. To expose these actions in an accessible way iOS provides custom accessibility actions.
Feature was tested in the iOS simulator using the Accessibility Inspector. Custom actions were added to a button and observed in the tool. Custom actions were also invoked using the tool and then stepped through in the debugger.
The feature was also tested on an iPhone. VoiceOver was enabled on the device and custom actions were observed for controls that exposed them.
We have been using this feature in our app for some time as well.
[IOS] [ENHANCEMENT] [Accessibility] - Added support for custom accessibility actions
Eric Davison
Microsoft Corp.
Closes https://github.com/facebook/react-native/pull/17020
Differential Revision: D6472283
Pulled By: shergin
fbshipit-source-id: 4ac4697dca07028e87ffe71b70c00280e7f2043c
Summary: Because `RCTUIManager` is already overcomplicated and that stuff deserves separate file and header.
Reviewed By: javache
Differential Revision: D5856653
fbshipit-source-id: 7001bb8ba611976bf3b82d6a25f5619810a35b34
Summary:
Yes, `display: none;` did not work on iOS before this commit.
Now it "just works". It can be useful when some view needs to be hidden temporary and efficiently.
Reviewed By: javache
Differential Revision: D5173936
fbshipit-source-id: 83a03fff04dd3a872d7dd6bf673189f932906776
Summary:
Sometimes, when we implement some custom RN view, we have to proxy all accessible atributes directly to some subview which actually has accesible content. So, in other words, this allows bypass some axillary views in terms of accessibility.
Concreate example which this approach supposed to fix:
https://github.com/facebook/react-native/pull/14200/files#diff-e5f6b1386b7ba07fd887bca11ec828a4R208
Reviewed By: mmmulani
Differential Revision: D5143860
fbshipit-source-id: 6d7ce747f28e5a31d32c925b8ad8fd4b98ce1de1
Summary:
This diff adds display:none support to React Native. This enables hiding components which still calling their render method and keeping them within the state of your application. This enables preserving state in a component even though the component is not visible. Previously this was often implemented by rendering a component off screen as a work around. See below playground for usage.
```
class Playground extends React.Component {
render() {
return (
<View style={{width: '100%', height: '100%', flexDirection: 'row', backgroundColor: 'white'}}>
<View style={{width: 100, height: 100, display: 'none', backgroundColor: 'red'}}/>
<View style={{width: 100, height: 100, backgroundColor: 'blue'}}/>
</View>
);
}
}
```
Reviewed By: astreet
Differential Revision: D4611771
fbshipit-source-id: 0dbe0494d989df42994ab9ad5125d47f3233cc5a
Summary: We deprecated `transformMatrix` and `decomposedMatrix` in D3239960 10 months ago. This revision finally removes remains of this functionality from native code.
Reviewed By: mmmulani
Differential Revision: D4515760
fbshipit-source-id: b4d5b7e834ac4a775f4992b28270b4ff961889a6
Summary: Now layout direction (LTR or LTR) can be specified not only for whole app but also for view subtree via `direction` style property.
Reviewed By: mmmulani
Differential Revision: D4510206
fbshipit-source-id: 4e56c5886b6e42f2343165eb76be897e681c5ba4
Summary:
In theory, we should be able to animate any non-layout property, including custom ones. While there is still work to be done on the native side to fully enable this, we should start by dropping the prop whitelist.
Closes https://github.com/facebook/react-native/pull/10658
Differential Revision: D4379031
Pulled By: ericvicenti
fbshipit-source-id: fe9c30ea101e93a8b260d7d09a909fafbb82fee6
Summary:
To make React Native play nicely with our internal build infrastructure we need to properly namespace all of our header includes.
Where previously you could do `#import "RCTBridge.h"`, you must now write this as `#import <React/RCTBridge.h>`. If your xcode project still has a custom header include path, both variants will likely continue to work, but for new projects, we're defaulting the header include path to `$(BUILT_PRODUCTS_DIR)/usr/local/include`, where the React and CSSLayout targets will copy a subset of headers too. To make Xcode copy headers phase work properly, you may need to add React as an explicit dependency to your app's scheme and disable "parallelize build".
Reviewed By: mmmulani
Differential Revision: D4213120
fbshipit-source-id: 84a32a4b250c27699e6795f43584f13d594a9a82
Summary:
Expose aspectRatio style prop from css-layout to React Native.
This means the following will now work:
<View style={{backgroundColor: 'blue', aspectRatio: 1}}/>
Reviewed By: javache
Differential Revision: D4226472
fbshipit-source-id: c8709a7c0abbf77089a4e867879b42dcd9116f65
Summary: Reveting the recent view clipping changes, since it doesn't work well with modals and the fix is not super simple.
Reviewed By: mmmulani
Differential Revision: D4204490
fbshipit-source-id: 510f2b04c604b3f3a223dc4accb424b030876fbe
Summary: This method has been deprecated for a while and there are no internal use-cases left (customBubblingEventTypes is still used by RCTViewManager though).
Reviewed By: fkgozali
Differential Revision: D4083327
fbshipit-source-id: 261e0dce3b41714d13b46d146f87fc415eb9e817
Summary:
This fixes measuring of items in the main axis of a container. Previously items were in a lot of cases measured with UNSPECIFIED instead of AT_MOST. This was to support scrolling containers. The correct way to handle scrolling containers is to instead provide them with their own overflow value to activate this behavior. This is also similar to how the web works.
This is a breaking change. Most of your layouts will continue to function as before however some of them might not. Typically this is due to having a `flex: 1` style where it is currently a no-op due to being measured with an undefined size but after this change it may collapse your component to take zero size due to the implicit `flexBasis: 0` now being correctly treated. Removing the bad `flex: 1` style or changing it to `flexGrow: 1` should solve most if not all layout issues your see after this diff.
Reviewed By: majak
Differential Revision: D3876927
fbshipit-source-id: 81ea1c9d6574dd4564a3333f1b3617cf84b4022f
Summary: Introduce `overflow:scroll` so that scrolling can be implemented without the current overflow:visible hackiness. Currently we use AT_MOST to measure in the cross axis but not in the main axis. This was done to enable scrolling containers where children are not constraint in the main axis by their parent. This caused problems for non-scrolling containers though as it meant that their children cannot be measured correctly in the main axis. Introducing `overflow:scroll` fixes this.
Reviewed By: astreet
Differential Revision: D3855801
fbshipit-source-id: 3c365f9e6ef612fd9d9caaaa8c650e9702176e77
Summary: Introduce `overflow:scroll` so that scrolling can be implemented without the current overflow:visible hackiness. Currently we use AT_MOST to measure in the cross axis but not in the main axis. This was done to enable scrolling containers where children are not constraint in the main axis by their parent. This caused problems for non-scrolling containers though as it meant that their children cannot be measured correctly in the main axis. Introducing `overflow:scroll` fixes this.
Reviewed By: astreet
Differential Revision: D3855801
fbshipit-source-id: 6077b0bcb68fe5ddd4aa22926acab40ff4d83949
Summary:
The overflow prop needs to be set on the shadow view so that it can make its way into the layout engine. In some situations, the value of the overflow prop affects the calculations of the layout engine.
**Test plan (required)**
Verified in a test app that the `overflow` prop makes its way into the layout engine. Also, my team's app is currently using this change.
Adam Comella
Microsoft Corp.
Closes https://github.com/facebook/react-native/pull/9659
Differential Revision: D3790552
fbshipit-source-id: 61513ece63ae214f48c6cb6f40fb29757a0ac706
Summary: Converted the zIndex property on iOS to NSInteger instead of double. This is consistent with the CSS spec, and helps to simplify the Android implementation.
Reviewed By: javache
Differential Revision: D3411491
fbshipit-source-id: 902ebc29aac39a65f7e8707a28607655f9f5052c
Summary:
This diff implement the CSS z-index for React Native iOS views. We've had numerous pull request for this feature, but they've all attempted to use the `layer.zPosition` property, which is problematic for two reasons:
1. zPosition only affects rendering order, not event processing order. Views with a higher zPosition will appear in front of others in the hierarchy, but won't be the first to receive touch events, and may be blocked by views that are visually behind them.
2. when using a perspective transform matrix, views with a nonzero zPosition will be rendered in a different position due to parallax, which probably isn't desirable.
See https://github.com/facebook/react-native/pull/7825 for further discussion of this problem.
So instead of using `layer.zPosition`, I've implemented this by actually adjusting the order of the subviews within their parent based on the zIndex. This can't be done on the JS side because it would affect layout, which is order-dependent, so I'm doing it inside the view itself.
It works as follows:
1. The `reactSubviews` array is set, whose order matches the order of the JS components and shadowView components, as specified by the UIManager.
2. `didUpdateReactSubviews` is called, which in turn calls `sortedSubviews` (which lazily generates a sorted array of `reactSubviews` by zIndex) and inserts the result into the view.
3. If a subview is added or removed, or the zIndex of any subview is changed, the previous `sortedSubviews` array is cleared and `didUpdateReactSubviews` is called again.
To demonstrate it working, I've modified the UIExplorer example from https://github.com/facebook/react-native/pull/7825
Reviewed By: javache
Differential Revision: D3365717
fbshipit-source-id: b34aa8bfad577bce023f8af5414f9b974aafd8aa