Summary:
The RunningOnDeviceAndroid doc had some Linux-specific instructions that are not relevant to macOS/Windows users.
Closes https://github.com/facebook/react-native/pull/10726
Differential Revision: D4139089
Pulled By: JoelMarcey
fbshipit-source-id: cc57c1d7e3c9dec94e123c3597ac78b3efb15dd0
Summary:
`react-native run-android` will need `adb` in `$PATH` as I explained in issue #10702.
Closes https://github.com/facebook/react-native/pull/10703
Differential Revision: D4118918
fbshipit-source-id: 873e46d044b8cc7acf026aba330ad1dc4ff6f2d3
Summary:
Small contribution for MacOS users:
For those users who using zsh with their Mac OS filename to place variables should be different
Closes https://github.com/facebook/react-native/pull/10432
Differential Revision: D4078102
Pulled By: lacker
fbshipit-source-id: 6cbfb81a472f37bfda85964e929c99b438348fd8
Summary:
This PR restores some [additional detail](http://facebook.github.io/react-native/releases/0.28/docs/getting-started.html) that was removed from the Android Getting Started this summer.
I'm not fully restoring the original list of steps as the React Native website should not be the source of truth for setting up an Android development environment.
Closes https://github.com/facebook/react-native/pull/9867
Differential Revision: D3887834
Pulled By: fredemmott
fbshipit-source-id: 8e3599f8945ba68f31dc9b0f79c2db7e525e7f45
Summary:
Create the initial Core Components tutorial. The core components are `Text`, `Image`, `View`, `TextInput`, `ListView`.
1. Provide a summary for each core component, including a runnable sample.
2. Allow the tutorials for each component to be extended with more details and detailed examples, particularly after we add other tutorials (i.e., around state and props).
3. The samples should be runnable in a React Native simulator, if we can get that going in the docs.
4. Reorganize the docs sidebar to make the current Tutorial actually a Sample App, etc.
Closes https://github.com/facebook/react-native/pull/7593
Differential Revision: D3313563
Pulled By: JoelMarcey
fbshipit-source-id: cfe1d397d60822b8c531405d66b4e73694c7dbf9
Summary:
1. Remove note about upgrading Homebrew packages. That was kind of noisy.
2. Use local images instead of those stored on Akamai.
3. Add wording for modifying test project about actually opening a file.
4. Add note about keeping initial defaults for Android Studio install in tact.
Tested site locally. Images and new wording appeared as expected.
Closes https://github.com/facebook/react-native/pull/7477
Reviewed By: vjeux
Differential Revision: D3281639
Pulled By: JoelMarcey
fbshipit-source-id: ca956d97293ac3793431cb54f3560ee3e52c0dce
Summary:
Thanks for submitting a pull request! Please provide enough information so that others can review your pull request:
(You can skip this if you're fixing a typo or adding an app to the Showcase.)
Explain the **motivation** for making this change. What existing problem does the pull request solve?
Prefer **small pull requests**. These are much easier to review and more likely to get merged. Make sure the PR does only one thing, otherwise please split it.
**Test plan (required)**
Demonstrate the code is solid. Example: The exact commands you ran and their output, screenshots / videos if the pull request changes UI.
Make sure tests pass on both Travis and Circle CI.
**Code formatting**
Look around. Match the style of the rest of the codebase. See also the simple [style guide](https://github.com/facebook/react-native/blob/master/CONTRIBUTING.md#style-guide).
For more info, see the ["Pull Requests" section of our "Contributing" guidelines](https://github.com/facebook/react-native/blob/mas
Closes https://github.com/facebook/react-native/pull/7471
Differential Revision: D3276360
Pulled By: JoelMarcey
fb-gh-sync-id: 30edd7086a3c4b88695dc91af76ef56d43306ce9
fbshipit-source-id: 30edd7086a3c4b88695dc91af76ef56d43306ce9
Summary:
Hi,
The [commit](156d3ed7a2?_pjax=%23js-repo-pjax-container) by JoelMarcey is much appreciated. However, when you click on the nav buttons in Firefox (v46.0.1, I'm on El-Capitan), it will switch the content but also navigate you to the React-Native homepage. This doesn't happen in Chrome, so that's how it probably slipped through.
I propose these changes to fix that.
**Test plan**
Tested locally on FF and Chrome on El-Capitan
Closes https://github.com/facebook/react-native/pull/7435
Differential Revision: D3276285
Pulled By: vjeux
fb-gh-sync-id: c9a14059e609297fe273d02fe6c0a5f98ec7060c
fbshipit-source-id: c9a14059e609297fe273d02fe6c0a5f98ec7060c
Summary:
This simplifies the Quick Start section of the React Native documentation into
two pages. A Getting Started and a Tutorial.
The Getting Started page uses some CSS and Javascript magic (thanks vjeux for
the initial infra for this!!) to allow selection between platforms and have
instructions for Getting Started with React Native be shown according to the
selection -- all within the same page, realtime. A much cleaner interface.
I have made a pretty large presentation and information overhaul for each
platform as well. For example, requiring Android Studio for Android
development to make the Android SDK and build tools installation easier.
I added more screenshots to the Android sections since they are more complicated
than the more straightforward iOS. Screenshots for Android for Windows, Linux and
iOS are available now.
Some of the other pages such as `GettingStartedOnLinux` are now obsolete and deleted.
** Test Plan **
Tested locally and navigation works.
Closes https://github.com/facebook/react-native/pull/7418
Differential Revision: D3268621
Pulled By: vjeux
fb-gh-sync-id: 65f9181c9f959fadeffd254efddc5b64816eb1f4
fbshipit-source-id: 65f9181c9f959fadeffd254efddc5b64816eb1f4
Summary:
This simplifies the Quick Start section of the React Native documentation into
two pages. A Getting Started and a Tutorial.
The Getting Started page uses some CSS and Javascript magic (thanks @vjeux for
the initial infra for this!!) to allow selection between platforms and have
instructions for Getting Started with React Native be shown according to the
selection -- all within the same page, realtime. A much cleaner interface.
I have made a pretty large presentation and information overhaul for each
platform as well. For example, requiring Android Studio for Android
development to make the Android SDK and build tools installation easier.
I added more screenshots to the Android sections since they are more complicated
than the more straightforward iOS. Screenshots for Android for Windows, Linux and
iOS are available now.
Some of the other pages such as `GettingStartedOnLinux` are now obsolete and deleted.
Test Plan:
Video demo (it's a 1m20s or so, peruse at your pace): https://www.facebook.com/pxlcld/nKW3
Inspection
Reviewers: lacker, bestander, mkonicek, vjeux
Reviewed By: vjeux
Subscribers: cdykes, vjeux, mjohnston, sema, balpert, tomocchino, hramos, caabernathy, jpearce
Differential Revision: https://phabricator.intern.facebook.com/D3265822
Signature: t1:3265822:1462479878:5453ec81808b59fd71c288b6cc79268fccd921bc
Summary:Emulator in Android Studio 2.0 introduced new shortcut for hardware menu button.
Closes https://github.com/facebook/react-native/pull/6924
Differential Revision: D3163356
Pulled By: vjeux
fb-gh-sync-id: 3532095703973858efca305dee7c6151023aa21b
fbshipit-source-id: 3532095703973858efca305dee7c6151023aa21b
Summary:Thanks for submitting a pull request! Please provide enough information so that others can review your pull request:
(You can skip this if you're fixing a typo or adding an app to the Showcase.)
Explain the **motivation** for making this change. What existing problem does the pull request solve?
Prefer **small pull requests**. These are much easier to review and more likely to get merged. Make sure the PR does only one thing, otherwise please split it.
**Test plan (required)**
Demonstrate the code is solid. Example: The exact commands you ran and their output, screenshots / videos if the pull request changes UI.
Make sure tests pass on both Travis and Circle CI.
**Code formatting**
Look around. Match the style of the rest of the codebase. See also the simple [style guide](https://github.com/facebook/react-native/blob/master/CONTRIBUTING.md#style-guide).
the iOS run is now aligned with Android and can be run preferably from the command line.
Closes https://github.com/facebook/react-native/pull/6590
Differential Revision: D3087759
Pulled By: vjeux
fb-gh-sync-id: 9a75f960dce2f3aaa182c4e98537397e5b71dde2
shipit-source-id: 9a75f960dce2f3aaa182c4e98537397e5b71dde2
Summary:
npm 3 is working fine especially if you use shrinkwrap at the end. we've been using it for a month+ and the dependency deduping works well.
Closes https://github.com/facebook/react-native/pull/5391
Reviewed By: svcscm
Differential Revision: D2839472
Pulled By: androidtrunkagent
fb-gh-sync-id: 33e551185236694ee5979da701312f12e2582f3c
Lots of people keep asking why they get a red screen telling them to connect to a dev server when using their device. Most have followed the "Getting Started" guide, but didn't notice the "Running on Device" section since it is kinda buried in the sidebar and isn't linked to from anywhere.
The io.js codebase has been rebranded as "Node.js", so moving forward everyone should install the latest version of Node. The name "io.js" is no longer.
This is an early release and there are several things that are known
not to work if you're porting your iOS app to Android.
See the Known Issues guide on the website.
We will work with the community to reach platform parity with iOS.
The instructions as given did not work. The reason they did not work was that, while my .bashrc was made aware of nvm, my running bash process did not know about nvm until I ran ". ~/bashrc", after which things worked as expected.
nvm is way better than homebrew for managing node installations:
- can install multiple versions
- can choose which version of node to install
- easy to clean up under ~/.nvm
- there are still some rough edges with /usr/local on El Cap -- nvm avoids those altogether
Clarify that io.js is the modern version of Node and explain a little more about how to get set up with nvm, and that it lets you switch between multiple io.js/node versions.
It's pretty straightforward -- io.js is available through Homebrew so all you run is `brew install iojs` and then you can still run `node` from the command line. Also mentioned nvm since it's really good for switching between Node/io.js versions.