Summary: This re-implements sticky headers in JS to make it work on Android. The only change that was needed was to expose a way to attach a an animated value to an event manually since we can't use the Animated wrapper and `Animated.event` to do it for us because this is implemented directly in the `ScrollView` component. Simply exposed `attachNativeEvent` that takes a ref, event name and event object mapping. This is what is used by `Animated.event`. TODO: - Need to check why momentum scrolling isn't triggering scroll events properly on Android. - Remove native iOS implementation - cleanup / fix flow **Test plan** Test the example list in UIExplorer, test the ListViewPaging example. Closes https://github.com/facebook/react-native/pull/11315 Differential Revision: D4450278 Pulled By: sahrens fbshipit-source-id: fec8da2cffce9807d74f8e518ebdefeb6a708667
UIExplorer
The UIExplorer is a sample app that showcases React Native views and modules.
Running this app
Before running the app, make sure you ran:
git clone https://github.com/facebook/react-native.git
cd react-native
npm install
Running on iOS
Mac OS and Xcode are required.
- Open
Examples/UIExplorer/UIExplorer.xcodeproj
in Xcode - Hit the Run button
See Running on device if you want to use a physical device.
Running on Android
You'll need to have all the prerequisites (SDK, NDK) for Building React Native installed.
Start an Android emulator (Genymotion is recommended).
cd react-native
./gradlew :Examples:UIExplorer:android:app:installDebug
./packager/packager.sh
Note: Building for the first time can take a while.
Open the UIExplorer app in your emulator.
See Running on Device in case you want to use a physical device.
Running with Buck
Follow the same setup as running with gradle.
Install Buck from here.
Run the following commands from the react-native folder:
./gradlew :ReactAndroid:packageReactNdkLibsForBuck
buck fetch uiexplorer
buck install -r uiexplorer
./packager/packager.sh
Note: The native libs are still built using gradle. Full build with buck is coming soon(tm).
Built from source
Building the app on both iOS and Android means building the React Native framework from source. This way you're running the latest native and JS code the way you see it in your clone of the github repo.
This is different from apps created using react-native init
which have a dependency on a specific version of React Native JS and native code, declared in a package.json
file (and build.gradle
for Android apps).