Summary: public
Make sure some modules that are only available in dev mode are only
included in dev bundles.
Depends on: D2663838
Reviewed By: davidaurelio
Differential Revision: D2663889
fb-gh-sync-id: 42be40b865ef305828b3519556125af090ec61f4
Summary:
The `InspectorOverlay` component was getting unwieldy, so I broke it into three components:
- Inspector
- InspectorOverlay
- InspectorPanel
and added @flow types.
The inspector was also living under the `ReactIOS` directory, and I moved it
up into the `Libraries` directory, as the inspector will soon be usable [on
Android](https://phabricator.fb.com/D2138319).
All features of the inspector should remain functional, with the addition of
one feature:
- you can toggle "touch to inspect" by tapping the "Inspect" button at the
bottom of the inspection panel. When inspection is disabled, the panel remains, but you can interact with
the app normally without touches being intercepted
@public
Test Plan:
Open the inspector:
- touch to inspect things, verify that margin, padding, size and position are
reported correctly, and that the component hierarchy is navigable.
- tap the "Inspect" button, and verify that you can interact with the app
normally.
{F22548949}
[Video of toggling inspection](https://www.latest.facebook.com/pxlcld/mrs9)
Summary:
This adds new development feature to React Native that provides information
about selected element (see the demo in Test Plan).
This is how it works:
App's root component is rendered to a container that also has a hidden layer called
`<InspectorOverlay/>`. When activated, it shows full screen view and captures all
touches. On every touch we ask UIManager to find a view for given {x,y} coordinates.
Then, we use React's internals to find corresponding React component. `setRootInstance`
is used to remember the top level component to start search from, lmk if you have a
better idea how to do this. Given a component, we can climb up its owners tree
to provice more context on how/where the component is used.
In future we could use the `hierarchy` array to inspect and print their props/state.
Known bugs and limitations:
* InspectorOverlay sometimes receives touches with incorrect coordinates (wtf)
* Not integrated with React Chrome Devtools (maybe in followup diffs)
* Doesn't work with popovers (maybe put the element inspector into an `<Overlay/>`?)
@public
Test Plan:
https://www.facebook.com/pxlcld/mn5k
Works nicely with scrollviews
Summary:
Requiring ExceptionsManager in renderApplication (added in D2023119) led to a transitive require of ExecutionEnvironment, which has to run after InitializeJavaScriptAppEngine.
InitializeJavaScriptAppEngine is the right place for this sort of logic because we control the order that things are loaded, so move the console.error hook initialization there.
@public
Test Plan: Loaded shell app in simulator with Chrome debugging with no errors.