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id | title | layout | category | permalink | next |
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known-issues | Known Issues | docs | Guides | docs/known-issues.html | native-modules-ios |
Missing Modules and Native Views
This is an initial release of React Native Android and therefore not all of the views present on iOS are released on Android. We are very much interested in the communities' feedback on the next set of modules and views for Open Source. Not all native views between iOS and Android have a 100% equivalent representation, here it will be necessary to use a counterpart eg using ProgressBar on Android in place of ActivityIndicator on iOS.
Our provisional plan for common views and modules includes:
Views
View Pager
Swipe Refresh
Spinner
ART
Maps
Webview
Modules
Geo Location
Net Info
Camera Roll
App State
Dialog
Intent
Media
Pasteboard
Alert
Some props are only supported on one platform
There are properties that work on one platform only, either because they can inherently only be supported on that platform or because they haven't been implemented on the other platforms yet. All of these are annotated with @platform
in JS docs and have a small badge next to them on the website. See e.g. Image.
Publishing modules on Android
There is currently no easy way of publishing custom native modules on Android. Smooth work flow for contributors is important and this will be looked at very closely after the initial Open Source release. Of course the aim will be to streamline and optimize the process between iOS and Android as much as possible.
Overlay view with opacity of 0 cannot be clicked through
There is a noted difference in the handling of Views with an opacity of 0 between iOS and Android. While iOS will allow these views to be clicked through and the View below will receive the touch input, for Android the touch will be blocked. This can be demonstrated in this example where it will only be possible to click the touchable on iOS.
<View style={{flex: 1}}>
<TouchableOpacity onPress={() => alert('hi!')}>
<Text>HELLO!</Text>
</TouchableOpacity>
<View style={{
position: 'absolute',
top: 0,
left: 0,
bottom: 0,
right: 0,
opacity: 0}} />
</View>
The behavior on Android is what you would expect from the web as well. If you want to be able to click through an overlaying transparent view, you can set pointerEvents='none'
on it.
The overflow
style property defaults to hidden
and cannot be changed on Android
This is a result of how Android rendering works. This feature is not being worked on as it would be a significant undertaking and there are many more important tasks.
No support for shadows on Android
We don't support shadows on Android currently. These are notoriously hard to implement as they require drawing outside of a view's bounds and Android's invalidation logic has a hard time with that. A possible solution is to use elevation, but more experimentation will be required.
Layout-only nodes on Android
An optimization feature of the Android version of React Native is for views which only contribute to the layout to not have a native view, only their layout properties are propagated to their children views. This optimization is to provide stability in deep view hierarchies for React Native and gis therefore enabled by default. Should you depend on a view being present or internal tests incorrectly detect a view is layout only it will be necessary to turn off this behavior. To do this, set collapsable
to false as in this example:
<View collapsable={false}>
...
</View>
Memory issues with PNG images
React Native Android depends on Fresco for loading and displaying images. Currently we have disabled downsampling because it is experimental, so you may run into memory issues when loading large PNG images.