Summary: Still gross but less gross.
Reviewed By: sebmarkbage
Differential Revision: D7107180
fbshipit-source-id: 31f1639a8f44e4ab247c338001a4a5c9b4b83cdf
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:
The previous file/class name convention seemed cool... but now it drives me BANANAS! It makes all this code really hard to maintain.
So, evething were renamed following common modern RN convention.
Reviewed By: mmmulani
Differential Revision: D6605090
fbshipit-source-id: 88ca13d793a5d2adaac2b7922ec6bd4654aacec5
Summary:
Touch cancel events are currently being ignored by the ScrollView component. Currently scrollview responds both to scroll events and touchStart/touchMove/touchEnd events.
The reason why ScrollView listens to touchStart/touchEnd is so that it can update its `state.isTouching` param. This parameter then is used in `scrollResponderHandleScrollShouldSetResponder` to make the decision if scrollview should set the responder or not. So if `isTouching` is true (we've received touchStart) then ScrollView want to became a JS responder. This in turn is important for the case where we receive scroll events that does not necessarily need to trigger responder change, e.g. we don't want Scrollview to become JS responder if scroll events have been triggered by `scrollTo` in which case setting responder would put the whole responder system in a bogus state (note that responder can be released only by touchEnd or touchCancel, so if there is no touchEnd that follows scroll event then ScrollView will remain the responder and this would break next touch interaction).
It is therefore crucial for the ScrollView to reset `isTouching` state when touchCancel arrives, as otherwise the next scroll event would incorrectly trigger responder change.
On top of that ScrollView seems to be the only component in RN's core that registers to handle touchEnd but ignores touchCancel, which stands agains the comment added to `RCTRootView.cancelTouches` [here](https://github.com/facebook/react-native/commit/c14cc123d#diff-9cd70243bd2af75c613e29972bb1b41cR127).
This problem is difficult to test with a pure RN native app, as on Android it does not surface because of the `responderIgnoreScroll` flag that is being added to every scroll event, and it essentially makes the responder system ignore scroll events so they would never trigger responder change. On the other hand on iOS the cancel events are pretty rare. With pure RN app they can only be triggered by a "system" level interaction (e.g. when system alert dialog appears or when home button is clicked and there is a touch interaction happening). This issue becomes more prominent when RN app is embedded in a more sophisticated application that may use [`RCTRootView.cancelTouches`](1e8f3b1102/React/Base/RCTRootView.h (L130)) method to block RNs gesture recognizers in some cases or with third-party libraries that deals with touch events like [react-native-gesture-handler](https://github.com/kmagiera/react-native-gesture-handler) that also calls into the method when native touch interaction is detected.
Closes https://github.com/facebook/react-native/pull/16004
Differential Revision: D6003063
Pulled By: shergin
fbshipit-source-id: f6495ffc57a5f996117b5bd80478bb1a58d2d799
Summary:
CI is currently failing because of a lint issue, this fixes it and a bunch of other warnings that are auto-fixable.
**Test plan**
Quick manual test, cosmetic changes only.
Closes https://github.com/facebook/react-native/pull/16229
Differential Revision: D6009748
Pulled By: TheSavior
fbshipit-source-id: cabd44fed99dd90bd0b35626492719c139c89f34
Summary:
Flashing scroll indicators is a standard behavior on iOS to show the user there's more content.
Launch RNTester on iOS, go to the ScrollView section, tap the "Flash scroll indicators" button.
You'll see this:
![Flash scroll indicators](https://cloud.githubusercontent.com/assets/57791/26250919/ebea607a-3cab-11e7-96c6-27579cc809ab.gif)
I've exposed the method `flashScrollIndicators` on all scrolling components that were already exposing a `scrollToXXX` method so it's usable from those components using a ref.
Let me know what you think.
Closes https://github.com/facebook/react-native/pull/14058
Differential Revision: D5103239
Pulled By: shergin
fbshipit-source-id: caad8474fbe475065418d771b17e4ea9766ffcdc
Summary:
This adds a flowified JS module for the FrameRateLogger native module and plugs
it into `ScrollResponder` and `AppRegistry`.
If there is no `FrameRateLogger` native module, then the function calls will be no-ops.
One major limitation is that we can't track animated/programatic scrolls because we don't
have reliable end events. Would be generally useful to add those in a followup though.
Reviewed By: fkgozali
Differential Revision: D4765694
fbshipit-source-id: f3bec771df6ac918200c1afd1a7d8b6da540a4e2
Summary:
This is a followup for https://github.com/facebook/react-native/pull/12088 and implements the scrolling to end on Android natively rather than sending a large scroll offset from JS.
This turned out to be an OK amount of code, and some reduction in the amount of JavaScript. The only part I'm not particularly happy about is:
```
// ScrollView always has one child - the scrollable area
int bottom = scrollView.getChildAt(0).getHeight() + scrollView.getPaddingBottom();
```
According to multiple sources (e.g. [this SO answer](http://stackoverflow.com/questions/3609297/android-total-height-of-scrollview)) it is the way to get the total size of the scrollable area, similar to`scrollView.contentSize` on iOS but more ugly and relying on the fact the ScrollView always has a single child (hopefully this won't change in future versions of Android).
An alternative is:
```
View lastChild = scrollLayout.getChildAt(scrollLayout.getChildCount() - 1);
int bottom = lastChild.getBottom() + scrollLayout.getPadd
Closes https://github.com/facebook/react-native/pull/12101
Differential Revision: D4481523
Pulled By: mkonicek
fbshipit-source-id: 8c7967a0b9e06890c1e1ea70ad573c6eceb03daf
Summary:
I'm pretty sure this is supposed to be "bottom" as opposed to "top", as it's the offset from the keyboard, which is at the bottom of the screen.
Closes https://github.com/facebook/react-native/pull/11446
Differential Revision: D4339957
Pulled By: lacker
fbshipit-source-id: 62dca544a0167704d76cd972c44570f277ea63aa
Summary:
Right now, the ScrollView's keyboard hiding behavior is either all or nothing: Hide the keyboard on any tap, or do nothing ever. This PR introduces a third mode to keyboardShouldPersistTaps which is much closer to what I consider should be the default.
In the new behavior, the tap responding is done in the bubbling phase (instead of the capture phase like =true). As a result, a child can handle the tap. If no child does, then the ScrollView will receive the tap and will hide the keyboard. As a result, changing TextInput focus works as a user expects, with a single tap and without keyboard hiding. But taping on Text or on the empty part of the ScrollView hides the keyboard and removes the focus.
You can view the behavior in a monkey patched ScrollView demo on rnplay:
https://rnplay.org/apps/E90UYwhttps://rnplay.org/apps/UGzhKA
In order to have a uniform props set, i added 3 values to the keyboardShouldPersistTaps:
'never' and 'always' are the same as false and true.
'handled' is the new behavior.
I don't
Closes https://github.com/facebook/react-native/pull/10628
Differential Revision: D4294945
Pulled By: ericvicenti
fbshipit-source-id: 1a753014156cac1a23fabfa8e1faa9a768868ef2
Summary:
This fixes a cryptic bug to appear when you try to use scrollResponderZoomTo in Android.
before this PR it would break with a `Error: TaskQueue: Error with task : invariant requires an error message argument` because the invariant() was not properly used..
Also, instead of detecting the platform, I think it's better practice to duck type.
Closes https://github.com/facebook/react-native/pull/11186
Differential Revision: D4246674
fbshipit-source-id: 47002a85d8252e5abbd1cd9ecef3d7676fa8615a
Summary:
When using text inputs inside a ScrollView with `keyboardShouldPersistTaps=false` (default behavior) tapping another text input dismisses the keyboard instead of keeping it open and focusing the new text input which I think is the better and expected behavior.
See #10628 for more discussion about that. Note that this affects nothing but the behavior with text inputs unlike #10628.
cc satya164 MaxLap ericvicenti
Closes https://github.com/facebook/react-native/pull/10887
Differential Revision: D4178474
Pulled By: ericvicenti
fbshipit-source-id: 0c62ea2fac0017d559d1f8674b0a686a5e1b3d2d
Summary: This removes `node_modules/react` from the list of directories that are used for haste module resolutions. Modules required from React are now imported with `require('react/lib/…')`.
Reviewed By: astreet
Differential Revision: D3509863
fbshipit-source-id: 32cd34e2b8496f0a6676dbe6bb1eacc18124c01e
Summary:
This is a solution for the problem I raised in https://www.facebook.com/groups/react.native.community/permalink/768218933313687/
I've added a new native base class, `RCTEventEmitter` as well as an equivalent JS class/module `NativeEventEmitter` (RCTEventEmitter.js and EventEmitter.js were taken already).
Instead of arbitrary modules sending events via `bridge.eventDispatcher`, the idea is that any module that sends events should now subclass `RCTEventEmitter`, and provide an equivalent JS module that subclasses `NativeEventEmitter`.
JS code that wants to observe the events should now observe it via the specific JS module rather than via `RCTDeviceEventEmitter` directly. e.g. to observer a keyboard event, instead of writing:
const RCTDeviceEventEmitter = require('RCTDeviceEventEmitter');
RCTDeviceEventEmitter.addListener('keyboardWillShow', (event) => { ... });
You'd now write:
const Keyboard = require('Keyboard');
Keyboard.addListener('keyboardWillShow', (event) => { ... });
Within a component, you can also use the `Subscribable.Mixin` as you would previously, but instead of:
this.addListenerOn(RCTDeviceEventEmitter, 'keyboardWillShow', ...);
Write:
this.addListenerOn(Keyboard, 'keyboardWillShow', ...);
This approach allows the native `RCTKeyboardObserver` module to be created lazily the first time a listener is added, and to stop sending events when the last listener is removed. It also allows us to validate that the event strings being observed and omitted match the supported events for that module.
As a proof-of-concept, I've converted the `RCTStatusBarManager` and `RCTKeyboardObserver` modules to use the new system. I'll convert the rest in a follow up diff.
For now, the new `NativeEventEmitter` JS module wraps the `RCTDeviceEventEmitter` JS module, and just uses the native `RCTEventEmitter` module for bookkeeping. This allows for full backwards compatibility (code that is observing the event via `RCTDeviceEventEmitter` instead of the specific module will still work as expected, albeit with a warning). Once all legacy calls have been removed, this could be refactored to something more elegant internally, whilst maintaining the same public interface.
Note: currently, all device events still share a single global namespace, since they're really all registered on the same emitter instance internally. We should move away from that as soon as possible because it's not intuitive and will likely lead to strange bugs if people add generic events such as "onChange" or "onError" to their modules (which is common practice for components, where it's not a problem).
Reviewed By: javache
Differential Revision: D3269966
fbshipit-source-id: 1412daba850cd373020e1086673ba38ef9193050
Summary:Since the React 0.14 split of modules, the findNodeHandle feature is part of the
renderer and not the generic React API.
This just greps for React.findNodeHandle and replace them with ReactNative.findNodeHandle. I fixed up the imports manually.
I also found two callers each of ReactNative.createClass and React.render with the exception of downstream and examples will fix them separately.
I'll need to find more things like `var { PropTypes } = ReactNative;` separately. I think this is a good start though.
Reviewed By: vjeux
Differential Revision: D3149356
fb-gh-sync-id: 50ed60bc67270b16f561d4c641f2f19e85724d3b
fbshipit-source-id: 50ed60bc67270b16f561d4c641f2f19e85724d3b
Summary:Follow-up to https://github.com/facebook/react-native/pull/5084
This…
- changes all requires within RN to `require('fbjs/lib/…')`
- updates `.flowconfig`
- updates `packager/blacklist.js`
- adapts tests
- removes things from `Libraries/vendor/{core,emitter}` that are also in fbjs
- removes knowledge of `fbjs` from the packager
Closes https://github.com/facebook/react-native/pull/5084
Reviewed By: bestander
Differential Revision: D2926835
fb-gh-sync-id: 2095e22b2f38e032599d1f2601722b3560e8b6e9
shipit-source-id: 2095e22b2f38e032599d1f2601722b3560e8b6e9
Summary:Fix the warning generated when some ScrollResponder methods call the deprecated form of scrollResponderScrollTo.
Closes https://github.com/facebook/react-native/pull/6138
Differential Revision: D2976681
fb-gh-sync-id: 3f5195aeebbffeccadb4bbffc55d52d7f89a9b2d
shipit-source-id: 3f5195aeebbffeccadb4bbffc55d52d7f89a9b2d
Summary:`scrollResponderInputMeasureAndScrollToKeyboard` is the only non-deprecated method in `ScrollResponder.js` that doesn't use the [new `scrollTo` API](6941c4e027). The other method that uses the deprecated API (`scrollResponderScrollWithoutAnimationTo`) is also deprecated, so it has been left unaltered.
Closes https://github.com/facebook/react-native/pull/5990
Differential Revision: D2953916
Pulled By: nicklockwood
fb-gh-sync-id: d692c598e6b85d1050e58b87146d01b031653a49
shipit-source-id: d692c598e6b85d1050e58b87146d01b031653a49
Summary:
The issue is that the ScrollResponder mixin assumes that the native scrollable node is the top level element and gets it using `React.findNodeHandle(this)` but since Android wraps the native `ScrollView` component with the `RefreshControl`, it finds the native `RefreshControl` node instead and the scroll command gets ignored because it doesn't exists.
This adds a hook to ScrollResponder mixin to allow specifying what is the native scrollable node.
The bug can be reproduced using this https://gist.github.com/janicduplessis/871c0b6d3ad0acaacba9 in UIExplorer.
Fixes#5725
Closes https://github.com/facebook/react-native/pull/5736
Reviewed By: svcscm
Differential Revision: D2896125
Pulled By: nicklockwood
fb-gh-sync-id: 0a00a20551421982c5bc519c542774877ba15c9b
Summary:
public
The current `ScrollView.scrollTo()` API is confusing due to the `(y, x)` parameter order, and the boolean `animated` argument. E.g.
ScrollView.scrollTo(5, 0, true) // what do these arguments mean?
This diff replaces the API with a configuration object, so the arguments are all explicit:
ScrollView.scrollTo({x: 0, y: 5, animated: true}) // much better
The `scrollTo()` method checks the argument types, and provides backwards compatibility with the old argument format for now. Using the old API will generate a warning, and this will eventually be upgraded to an error.
Reviewed By: davidaurelio
Differential Revision: D2892287
fb-gh-sync-id: cec4d504242391267c6e863816b6180ced7a7d5e
Summary:
public
We recently updated the `ScrollResponder.scrollResponderScrollTo` method to accept an `animated` argument, and deprecated the `scrollResponderScrollWithoutAnimationTo` method. This change was reflected in the native iOS implementation, but not on Android.
This diff updates the Android ScrollViewManager implementation to match the JS API, and removes the platform-specific fork in the JS code.
Reviewed By: dmmiller
Differential Revision: D2883515
fb-gh-sync-id: e5a0e1cf470e21af837b2311cf1048162ac3aff5
Summary:
public
Due to the cross-platform polyfills we have added (and will add in future) to `UIManager.js`, accessing UIManager directly via NativeModules instead of importing the wrapper is discouraged.
This diff fixes a few places where we were doing this inside our own modules.
Note: As a general policy, we should avoid accessing modules via NativeModules anyway. Using wrapper classes allows us to provide static declarations for all the native methods and properties, which can be checked at build time by flow. If we access the modules directly, those interfaces are only known at runtime.
Reviewed By: vjeux
Differential Revision: D2881300
fb-gh-sync-id: 6737358ea8ea6d722cc1941a4b9fa0123a87fc29
Summary:
I *think* this is causing a crash for me in a release build (curiously, not a debug build):
```
ReferenceError: Can't find variable: self
```
I saw this in 0.18.1, which I assume was renamed to v0.19.0-rc.
Closes https://github.com/facebook/react-native/pull/5562
Reviewed By: svcscm
Differential Revision: D2866491
Pulled By: androidtrunkagent
fb-gh-sync-id: 196f718bf807c5eef676f66f1e15d7bde9475d5b
Summary:
public
This diff deprecates `scrollResponderScrollWithoutAnimationTo` and replaces it with an optional `animated` param in `scrollResponderScrollTo`. This is more consistent with our other APIs.
Using the old `ScrollResponder.scrollResponderScrollWithoutAnimationTo` or `ScrollView.scrollWithoutAnimationTo` functions will still work, but will trigger a warning.
Reviewed By: javache
Differential Revision: D2823479
fb-gh-sync-id: 259966512104ca7b3995c9586144812a91b8d3e9
Summary: public
`scrollResponderScrollNativeHandleToKeyboard` would fail silently if there is no keyboard present. This makes sure to do the correct scrolling behavior, by assuming the screen height is where the keyboard would be located.
This still might not work properly in landscape apps, but it should not make the situation worse
Also fix an issue wehre `scrollResponderKeyboardDidHide` would swallow the event
Reviewed By: vjeux
Differential Revision: D2643477
fb-gh-sync-id: f917390f4709361cc47bcd553b214833422ec05d
Summary: `ScrollView.scrollWithoutAnimationTo` is supported on iOS but not Android. This is an existing API, and this diff adds Android support.
Closes https://github.com/facebook/react-native/pull/2695
Reviewed By: @svcscm
Differential Revision: D2452630
Pulled By: @mkonicek