react-native/Libraries/Components/View/View.js

153 lines
5.0 KiB
JavaScript

/**
* Copyright 2004-present Facebook. All Rights Reserved.
*
* @providesModule View
*/
'use strict';
var NativeMethodsMixin = require('NativeMethodsMixin');
var PropTypes = require('ReactPropTypes');
var React = require('React');
var ReactIOSViewAttributes = require('ReactIOSViewAttributes');
var StyleSheetPropType = require('StyleSheetPropType');
var ViewStylePropTypes = require('ViewStylePropTypes');
/**
* <View> - The most fundamental component for building UI, `View` is a
* container that supports layout with flexbox, style, some touch handling, and
* accessibility controls, and is designed to be nested inside other views and
* to have 0 to many children of any type. `View` maps directly to the native
* view equivalent on whatever platform react is running on, whether that is a
* `UIView`, `<div>`, `android.view`, etc. This example creates a `View` that
* wraps two colored boxes and custom component in a row with padding.
*
* <View style={{flexDirection: 'row', height: 100, padding: 20}}>
* <View style={{backgroundColor: 'blue', flex: 0.3}} />
* <View style={{backgroundColor: 'red', flex: 0.5}} />
* <MyCustomComponent {...customProps} />
* </View>
*
* By default, `View`s have a primary flex direction of 'column', so children
* will stack up vertically by default. `View`s also expand to fill the parent
* in the direction of the parent's flex direction by default, so in the case of
* a default parent (flexDirection: 'column'), the children will fill the width,
* but not the height.
*
* Many library components can be treated like plain `Views` in many cases, for
* example passing them children, setting style, etc.
*
* `View`s are designed to be used with `StyleSheet`s for clarity and
* performance, although inline styles are also supported. It is common for
* `StyleSheet`s to be combined dynamically. See `StyleSheet.js` for more info.
*
* Check out `ViewExample.js`, `LayoutExample.js`, and other apps for more code
* examples.
*/
var createReactIOSNativeComponentClass = require('createReactIOSNativeComponentClass');
var stylePropType = StyleSheetPropType(ViewStylePropTypes);
var View = React.createClass({
statics: {
stylePropType,
},
mixins: [NativeMethodsMixin],
/**
* `NativeMethodsMixin` will look for this when invoking `setNativeProps`. We
* make `this` look like an actual native component class.
*/
viewConfig: {
uiViewClassName: 'RCTView',
validAttributes: ReactIOSViewAttributes.RKView
},
propTypes: {
/**
* When true, indicates that the view is an accessibility element
*/
accessible: PropTypes.bool,
/**
* Used to locate this view in end-to-end tests.
*/
testID: PropTypes.string,
/**
* For most touch interactions, you'll simply want to wrap your component in
* `TouchableHighlight.js`. Check out `Touchable.js` and
* `ScrollResponder.js` for more discussion.
*/
onResponderGrant: PropTypes.func,
onResponderReject: PropTypes.func,
onResponderMove: PropTypes.func,
onResponderRelease: PropTypes.func,
onResponderTerminate: PropTypes.func,
onResponderTerminationRequest: PropTypes.func,
onMoveShouldSetResponder: PropTypes.func,
onStartShouldSetResponder: PropTypes.func,
onStartShouldSetResponderCapture: PropTypes.func,
/**
* In the absence of `auto` property, `none` is much like `CSS`'s `none`
* value. `box-none` is as if you had applied the `CSS` class:
*
* .cantTouchThis * {
* pointer-events: auto;
* }
* .cantTouchThis {
* pointer-events: none;
* }
*
* But since `pointerEvents` does not affect layout/appearance, and we are
* already deviating from the spec by adding additional modes, we opt to not
* include `pointerEvents` on `style`. On some platforms, we would need to
* implement it as a `className` anyways. Using `style` or not is an
* implementation detail of the platform.
*/
pointerEvents: PropTypes.oneOf([
'box-none',
'none',
'box-only',
'auto',
]),
/**
* Used to style and layout the `View`. See `StyleSheet.js` and
* `ViewStylePropTypes.js` for more info.
*/
style: stylePropType,
/**
* This is a special performance property exposed by RKView and is useful
* for scrolling content when there are many subviews, most of which are
* offscreen. For this property to be effective, it must be applied to a
* view that contains many subviews that extend outside its bound. The
* subviews must also have overflow: hidden, as should the containing view
* (or one of its superviews).
*/
removeClippedSubviews: PropTypes.bool,
},
render: function() {
return <RKView {...this.props} />;
},
});
var RKView = createReactIOSNativeComponentClass({
validAttributes: ReactIOSViewAttributes.RKView,
uiViewClassName: 'RCTView',
});
var ViewToExport = RKView;
if (__DEV__) {
ViewToExport = View;
}
ViewToExport.stylePropType = stylePropType;
module.exports = ViewToExport;