Summary:The UICollectionView example is actually my use-case, which is discussed in a
bit more detail [here](https://github.com/alloy/ReactNativeExperiments/issues/2).
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This is useful when wrapping native iOS components that determine their
own suggested size and which would be too hard/unnecessary to replicate
in the shadow view. For instance a `UICollectionView` that after layout
will update its `contentSize`, which could be used to suggest a size to
the shadow view.
The reason for adding it to -[RCTShadowView setFrame:] is mainly so it
can be used via the existing -[RCTUIManager setFrame:forView:] API and
because it might not be a feature you want to expose too prominently.
An origin of `{ NAN, NAN }` is used as a sentinel to indicate that the
frame should be used as a size suggestion. The size portion of the rect
may contain a `NAN` to skip that dimension or a suggested value for the
dimension which will be used if no explicit styling has been assigned.
Examples:
* Without any expl
Closes https://github.com/facebook/react-native/pull/6114
Differential Revision: D2994796
Pulled By: nicklockwood
fb-gh-sync-id: 6dd3dd86a352ca7d31a0da38bc38a2859ed0a410
shipit-source-id: 6dd3dd86a352ca7d31a0da38bc38a2859ed0a410
Summary:
A component can be backed by native "node" that can change its internal state, which would result in a new UI after the next layout. Since js has no way of knowing that this has happened it wouldn't trigger a layout if nothing in js world has changed. Therefore we need a way how to trigger layout from native code.
This diff does it by adding methods `layoutIfNeeded` on the uimanager and `isBatchActive` on the bridge.
When `layoutIfNeeded` is called it checks whether a batch is in progress. If it is we do nothing, since at it's end layout happens. If a batch is not in progress we immidiately do layout.
I went with the easiest way how to implement this - `isBatchActive` is a public method on the bridge. It's not ideal, but consistent with other methods for modules.
public
Reviewed By: jspahrsummers, nicklockwood
Differential Revision: D2748896
fb-gh-sync-id: f3664c4af980d40a463b538e069b26c9ebad6300
Summary:
public
Currently, we wait to invoke `-flushUIBlocks` until the JavaScript batch to native has completed. This means we may be waiting an unnecessarily long time to perform view hierarchy changes and prop changes.
By instead invoking this after each chunk of enqueued UI blocks, we can perform some updates more eagerly, increasing our utilization of the main thread while splitting up the amount of time we spend running upon it.
This shouldn't affect layout, which is still tied to `-batchDidComplete`, so any visual inconsistencies should be limited to prop changes, which seems acceptable for the dramatic improvement in performance.
Reviewed By: javache
Differential Revision: D2658552
fb-gh-sync-id: 6d4560e21d7da1b02d2f30d1860d60735f11c4b5
Summary:
Moved the view creation & property binding logic out of RCTUIManager into a separate RCTComponentData class - this follows the pattern used with the bridge.
I've also updated the property binding to use pre-allocated blocks for setting the values, which is more efficient than the previous system that re-contructed the selectors each time it was called. This should improve view update performance significantly.
Summary:
Dynamic Text Sizes for Text component.
Text gains new prop - allowFontScaling (false by default).
There is also AccessibilityManager module that allows you to tune multipliers per each content size category.
Summary:
Dynamic Text Sizes for Text component.
Text gains new prop - allowFontScaling (true by default).
There is also AccessibilityManager module that allows you to tune multipliers per each content size category, but predefined multipliers are there.
This could potentially break some apps so please test carefully.