Summary:
We are removing `reactBridgeDidFinishTransaction`.
Why?
* It is a performance drain. Supporting this requires dispatching main-thread block on every single transaction complete;
* It has "too broad" non-conceptual semantic which encouraged using this as a "band-aid solution" for poorly designed components;
* It is conceptually incompatible with new approaches that we are trying to implement to optimize the render layer;
* It was deprecated for very long time.
This diff replaces usage of `reactBridgeDidFinishTransaction` with `uiManagerDidPerformMounting` which has very similar semantic except that fact that `uiManagerDidPerformMounting` is called asynchronously on the next run loop tick. And this should be okay because new React partial rendering does not guarantee synchronous execution anyways.
Reviewed By: mmmulani
Differential Revision: D6549217
fbshipit-source-id: 2649e943e82e6fbe02c7678583a97db3f5800201
Summary:
Hey!
So, I was interested to contibure, and started from todo
Thank
Closes https://github.com/facebook/react-native/pull/14823
Differential Revision: D5546610
Pulled By: javache
fbshipit-source-id: 58e1b67786cbafa20399ac12dde9fcc3920abe94
Summary:
Previously, the back swipe navigation gesture would be enabled when the navigation bar is shown and disabled when the navigation bar is hidden.
This change enables developers to control the back swipe gesture independently of the visibility of the navigation bar. An example use case would be that an app wants to render a custom navigation bar so it sets `navigationBarHidden` to true and it wants to enable the back swipe gesture so it sets `interactivePopGestureEnabled` to true.
**Test plan (required)**
- Created a test app to verify setting `interactivePopGestureEnabled` to `true` and `false` with the navigation bar both hidden and shown.
- Verified prop works in a larger app.
Adam Comella
Microsoft Corp.
Closes https://github.com/facebook/react-native/pull/7369
Differential Revision: D3269304
Pulled By: javache
fb-gh-sync-id: ec4324f6517cec4b4fc4f62c4394dc9208a8af6a
fbshipit-source-id: ec4324f6517cec4b4fc4f62c4394dc9208a8af6a
Summary:
Currently, the system for mapping JS event handlers to blocks is quite clean on the JS side, but is clunky on the native side. The event property is passed as a boolean, which can then be checked by the native side, and if true, the native side is supposed to send an event via the event dispatcher.
This diff adds the facility to declare the property as a block instead. This means that the event side can simply call the block, and it will automatically send the event. Because the blocks for bubbling and direct events are named differently, we can also use this to generate the event registration data and get rid of the arrays of event names.
The name of the event is inferred from the property name, which means that the property for an event called "load" must be called `onLoad` or the mapping won't work. This can be optionally remapped to a different property name on the view itself if necessary, e.g.
RCT_REMAP_VIEW_PROPERTY(onLoad, loadEventBlock, RCTDirectEventBlock)
If you don't want to use this mechanism then for now it is still possible to declare the property as a BOOL instead and use the old mechanism (this approach is now deprecated however, and may eventually be removed altogether).
Summary:
Our events all follow a common pattern, so there's no good reason why the configuration should be so verbose. This diff eliminates that redundancy, and gives us the freedom to simplify the underlying mechanism in future without further churning the call sites.
Summary:
The bridge implementation on React Android does not currently support boxed numeric/boolean types (the equivalent of NSNumber arguments on iOS), nor does Java support Objective-C's nil messaging system that transparently casts nil to zero, false, etc for primitive types.
To avoid platform incompatibilities, we now treat all primitive arguments as non-nullable rather than silently converting NSNull -> nil -> 0/false.
We also now enforce that NSNumber * objects must be explicitly marked as `nonnull` (this restriction may be lifted in future if/when Android supports boxed numbers).
Other object types are still assumed to be nullable unless specifically annotated with `nonnull`.
Summary:
@public
I've increased the warning levels in the OSS frameworks, which caught a bunch of minor issues. I also fixed some new errors in Xcode 7 relating to designated initializers and TLS security.
Test Plan:
* Test the sample apps and make sure they still work.
* Run tests.