Summary:
React has some internal code related only to React Native.
Some times React needs to update them which will result in a breaking change for React Native but it would not be a breaking change for React public API, so no major version bump will happen.
It means that a non breaking API bump may result in a break for React Native.
That is why React Native should not depend on a ^ of React version.
However React is a peer dependency to React Native and we want to give some flexibility to users to update React independently, so we don't fix the version strict and use ~ to allow patches.
This will be fixed once we extract RN specific code from React into an independent dependency.
Reviewed By: avaly
Differential Revision: D3398202
fbshipit-source-id: cca520f4b80c9ed5ae6fb1444f3d0bf7ffb9c9dd
Summary:
Just released on Play Store and iOS has been in production since November.
Closes https://github.com/facebook/react-native/pull/7874
Differential Revision: D3397811
fbshipit-source-id: 3ed293c1baff59c9171814ed7d34402beb30b383
Summary:
Fixing the WebSocket SendBinary method error. This is a regression caused during recent change.
Closes https://github.com/facebook/react-native/pull/7956
Differential Revision: D3398065
fbshipit-source-id: 5d56eba807b59d1f3265cba5d5f501d610afebf2
Summary:
This diff refactors the view update process into two stages:
1. The `reactSubviews` array is set, whose order matches the order of the JS components and shadowView components, as specified by the UIManager.
2. The `didUpdateReactSubviews` method is called, which actually inserts the reactSubviews into the view hierarchy.
This simplifies a lot of the hacks we had for special-case treatment of subviews: In many cases we don't want to actually insert `reactSubviews` into the parentView, and we had a bunch of component-specific solutions for that (typically overriding all of the reactSubviews methods to store views in an array). Now, we can simply override the `didUpdateReactSubviews` method for those views to do nothing, or do something different.
Reviewed By: wwjholmes
Differential Revision: D3396594
fbshipit-source-id: 92fc56fd31db0cfc66aac3d1634a4d4ae3903085
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/7962
Differential Revision: D3397289
fbshipit-source-id: 21adf955af4a623f1ce71e7a5e412020ceaad12a
Summary:
`react-native start` already ensures that the `--transformer` path is understood to be relative to CWD, not to the module that ends up importing that file. `react-native bundle` and `react-native dependencies` didn't up until this point.
**Test plan:** Ensured that `react-native bundle ... --transformer ./relative/path` works with this patch applied.
Closes https://github.com/facebook/react-native/pull/7857
Differential Revision: D3393777
fbshipit-source-id: 303a226fae9c8087c3dd3b2e8d004462ca66665e
Summary:
It's annoying and inefficient to create styles like
```
wrapper: {
position: 'absolute',
left: 0,
right: 0,
top: 0,
bottom: 0,
},
```
all the time, so this makes a handy constant for reuse and a helper method to create customized
styles.
Reviewed By: devknoll
Differential Revision: D3389612
fbshipit-source-id: 88fbe9e8ca32a0bc937bf275cf5ae0739ee21302
Summary: Allow some right swipe so users know swiping is a possibility, with some bounceback.
Reviewed By: fkgozali
Differential Revision: D3388836
fbshipit-source-id: 596a6be3c641ff0ee6ac32d7c0d798478edef72b
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/7951
Differential Revision: D3394509
Pulled By: JoelMarcey
fbshipit-source-id: 0ae23950c69ae06a4b85d2e4b577a71e9aa2b7f4
Summary:
RCTShadowText currently explicitly defaults to black text color:
https://github.com/facebook/react-native/blob/d46ac11/Libraries/Text/RCTShadowText.m#L204
However, the UITextView used by RCTTextInput doesn't explicitly default to black text color.
This causes issues when RCTTextInput is in rich text editing mode (i.e. when the <TextInput> element uses child <Text> nodes to provide extra styling info) and the client doesn't provide us with any explicit color info. In this case, the following series of badness occurs:
1. -[UITextView attributedText] will return an attributed string without the NSColor property set.
2. -[RCTShadowText attributedString] will return an attributed string with NSColor equal to blackColor.
3. The `[_textView.attributedText isEqualToAttributedString:_pendingAttributedText]` check in -performPendingTextUpdate will fail and causes -[UITextView setText:] to be called.
4. -setText: clears the marked text range in the text view, which breaks multi-character autocomplete (e.g. QWERTY input methods for CJK languages).
The easiest fix for now is to just make sure RCTUITextView and RCTShadowText default to the same text color.
Reviewed By: nicklockwood
Differential Revision: D3368726
fbshipit-source-id: a92cb188c60bac80d963af6b1f2a09f27ae084f5
Summary:
Reduce the public surface area of TextInput. It only exposes a secureTextEntry property, but on Android was also accepting password as a prop.
This removes that.
Reviewed By: javache
Differential Revision: D3392223
fbshipit-source-id: 67c36fbe16fe493e2841d5d9deb78e3be2209ebd
Summary:
This is a followup for "Add Shortcut "Double R" to Reload JS in iOS".
Please see the previous two revisions:[[ D3371536 | D3371536 ]], [[ D3343907 | D3343907 ]]
In previous revisions, we only tested with the iOS UIExplorer app, without testing in the iOS Catalyst app, where the key shortcuts we added are always invoked in TextInput components. It's due to a bug with the `UIApplicationDelegate`. Just fix this bug in this revision and successfully tested in the Catalyst app.
Reviewed By: mkonicek
Differential Revision: D3391045
fbshipit-source-id: 8b76fbfe7592218b02dd22502d25eebbc59f3cbc
Summary:
_(This is a remake of #6907, which I botched pretty good with a rebase.)_
This returns an `Array` of Local Notifications that have been scheduled to be delivered.
Available attributes on return Notification object (if set in the local notification itself):
`alertAction`
`alertBody`
`applicationIconBadgeNumber`
`category`
`fireDate`
`soundName`
`userInfo`
More could be added to this but I just matched what was available in the `Object` passed to `presentLocalNotification` and `scheduleLocalNotification`.
**Motivation**
I needed to determine the number and other details about local notifications that were already scheduled. There is an API for this in iOS but one hadn't been built yet for React Native.
I created the Obj-C method and updated the documentation in `PushNotificationIOS.js` as well.
**Usage:**
```js
PushNotificationIOS.getScheduledLocalNotifications( (notifications) => {
console.log(notifications);
});
```
**Sample Output:**
```js
[
Object {
aler
Closes https://github.com/facebook/react-native/pull/7937
Differential Revision: D3392476
Pulled By: javache
fbshipit-source-id: d83f419bfcfbdaf9b955724dcf5cfe26834895fb
Summary:
As per https://twitter.com/olebegemann/status/738656134731599872, our use of "main thread" to mean "main queue" seems to be unsafe.
This diff replaces the `NSThread.isMainQueue` checks with dispatch_get_specific(), which is the recommended approach.
I've also replaced all use of "MainThread" terminology with "MainQueue", and taken the opportunity to deprecate the "sync" param of `RCTExecuteOnMainThread()`, which, while we do still use it in a few places, is incredibly unsafe and shouldn't be encouraged.
Reviewed By: javache
Differential Revision: D3384910
fbshipit-source-id: ea7c216013372267b82eb25a38db5eb4cd46a089
Summary:
The `removeClippedSubviews` feature works by umounting views from the hierarchy if they move outside the bounds of their parent.
This was previously restricted to clipping views which had `overflow: hidden`, since we cannot efficiently check whether the subviews of a view go outside its bounds, and so clipping a view that has potentially overflowing children becomes an expensive recursive operation.
The problem with this is that `overflow: visible` is the default, and it's not well documented nor easy to tell that `removeClippedSubviews` has been set up correctly (i.e. with all children having `overflow: hidden`).
When I checked, I found that `removeClippedSubviews` was not working on any of the examples in UIExplorer, nor in several of our internal apps, because the views inside the ListView has `overflow: visible`. This was probably caused by an infra change at some point, but I'm not sure how long it's been broken.
It's vanishingly unlikely that anyone would ever deliberately want subviews to overflow their bounds in this scenario, so I've updated the logic to simply ignore the `overflow` property and assume that views should be clipped if you are using the `removeClippedSubviews` property on the parent.
Cons / Breaking changes: in some rare circumstances, a view might get clipped prematurely if its parent is outside the scrollview bounds, but it itself is inside. This doesn't occur in practice in any of our products, and could be worked around with additional wrapper views if it did.
Pros: removeClippedSubviews is now much easier to use, and much more likely to work as intended, so most list-based apps should see a performance improvement.
Reviewed By: javache
Differential Revision: D3385316
fbshipit-source-id: 1c0064a4c21340a971ba80d794062a356ae6cfb3
Summary:
RCTScrollView was calling `dockClosestSectionHeader` in `reactBridgeDidFinishTransaction`, which triggers a layout update. The reason for this was in case the `stickyHeaderIndexes` property was updated, which would require the headers to be adjusted.
However, doing this in `reactBridgeDidFinishTransaction` had the affect of causing `layoutSubviews` to be called repeatedly every frame even if nothing had changed and the scrollview wasn't moving, which was especially expensive when combined with the `removeClippedSubviews` logic, that loops through every view to calculate if it needs to be clipped.
This fix moves the `dockClosestSectionHeader` call into `didUpdateProps`, and checks that the stickyHeaderIndexes have actually changed before calling it.
Reviewed By: javache
Differential Revision: D3387607
fbshipit-source-id: c71e00c6fac48337a63d7fee7c7c23e016acf24e
Summary:
Instead of passing the helper to each method that uses it, just pass it
to the image constructor.
Reviewed By: dmmiller
Differential Revision: D3364532
fbshipit-source-id: 949bdbf951875c9b8cd05d028a2c329e12d72042
Summary: We are already inlining `Platform.OS`. This diff adds support to inline calls to `Platform.select` with an object literal as first argument. The transform will replace the call with the property value corresponding to the platform, or `undefined` if it does not exist.
Reviewed By: frantic
Differential Revision: D3385391
fbshipit-source-id: bb068d17948ed84e381707faeaa0450399c2f306
Summary:
**Test plan:** With the given patch applied to `react.gradle`, I specified the following in my `android/app/build.gradle`:
```
project.ext.react = [
nodeExecutableAndArgs: ["node", "--max_old_space_size=4096"]
]
```
and ensured in a `./gradlew installDebug --debug` run that the packager gets indeed invoked with these parameters.
Closes https://github.com/facebook/react-native/pull/7903
Differential Revision: D3390543
fbshipit-source-id: cf440b36633420b8f67070f47dfabf4c84cb28a7
Summary:
When using FormData upload images or files, in Android version, network module cannot send an event for showing progress.
This PR will solve this issue.
I changed example in XHRExample for Android, you can see uploading progress in warning yellow bar.
Closes https://github.com/facebook/react-native/pull/7256
Differential Revision: D3390087
fbshipit-source-id: 7f3e53c80072fff397afd6f5fe17bf0f2ecd83b2
Summary:
Implement a handler to allow intercepting all RN redboxes in Android, including exceptions in both JS and Java.
The handler is not open sourced, so there is only an open-source interface called **RedBoxHandler** in //fbandroid/java/com/facebook/catalyst/js/react-native-github/ReactAndroid/src/main/java/com/facebook/react/devsupport//, meantime there is an internal class called **FBRedBoxHandler**, which implements **RedBoxHandler** and is located in //fbandroid/java/com/facebook/fbreact/redboxhandler//, actually handles the exception information.
The code structure is as follows:
- **AdsManagerActivity** has a member variable of **FBRedBoxHandler**.
- **AdsManagerActivity** passes this handler all the way down to the **DevSupportManagerImpl**, through** ReactInstanceManager**, **ReactInstanceManagerImpl**, **DevSupportManagerFactory**.
- **DevSupportManagerImpl** intercepts the exceptions just before showing the redboxes, like this:
mRedBoxDialog.setExceptionDetails(message, stack);
mRedBoxDialog.setErrorCookie(errorCookie);
if (mRedBoxHandler != null) {
mRedBoxHandler.handleRedbox(message, stack);
}
mRedBoxDialog.show();
By now, the internal class just prints information for each redbox to logcat, including exception message and stack trace.
Reviewed By: mkonicek
Differential Revision: D3369064
fbshipit-source-id: 199012c4b6ecf4b3d3aff51a26c9c9901847b6fc
Summary:
**Motivation**
Today it's hard to build a good flow around requesting permissions if we don't know when the user rejects the push notification permission.
With this PR I wrap `PushNotificationIOS#requestPermission` in a promise. The promise will return with the updated permissions when the user accepts, rejects or has previously rejected the permission.
An example flow of how an app should handle push notifications with the change proposed:
1) Show user an explanation of push notification permissions with a button to enable,
2) User presses the enable push notifications button,
3) If the user accepts -> take them into the app,
4) if the user rejects -> explain how to enable permission in the settings app.
5) My app will now store some state about how it has asked permissions for push notifications so that the next time the user is taken through this flow they will go straight to step 4.
Without this change we could listen to the `register` event that PushNotificationIOS fires on the success sc
Closes https://github.com/facebook/react-native/pull/7900
Differential Revision: D3387424
Pulled By: nicklockwood
fbshipit-source-id: e27df41e83216e4e2a14d1e42c6b26e72236f48c