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id | title | layout | category | permalink | next | previous |
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navigation | Navigation | docs | Guides | docs/navigation.html | images | animations |
This guide covers the various navigation components available in React Native. If you are just getting started with navigation, you will probably want to use React Navigation.
If you are only targeting iOS and would like to stick to the native look and feel, check out NavigatorIOS.
If you're targeting both iOS and Android, the following libraries provide native navigation on both platforms: native-navigation, react-native-navigation.
React Navigation
The community solution to navigation is a standalone library that allows developers to set up the screens of an app with just a few lines of code.
The first step is to install in your project:
npm install --save react-navigation
Then you can quickly create an app with a home screen and a profile screen:
import {
StackNavigator,
} from 'react-navigation';
const App = StackNavigator({
Home: { screen: HomeScreen },
Profile: { screen: ProfileScreen },
});
Each screen component can set navigation options such as the header title. It can use action creators on the navigation
prop to link to other screens:
class HomeScreen extends React.Component {
static navigationOptions = {
title: 'Welcome',
};
render() {
const { navigate } = this.props.navigation;
return (
<Button
title="Go to Jane's profile"
onPress={() =>
navigate('Profile', { name: 'Jane' })
}
/>
);
}
}
React Navigation routers make it easy to override navigation logic or integrate it into redux. Because routers can be nested inside each other, developers can override navigation logic for one area of the app without making widespread changes.
The views in React Navigation use native components and the Animated
library to deliver 60fps animations that are run on the native thread. Plus, the animations and gestures can be easily customized.
For a complete intro to React Navigation, follow the React Navigation Getting Started Guide, or browse other docs such as the Intro to Navigators.
NavigatorIOS
If you are targeting iOS only, you may also want to consider using NavigatorIOS
. It looks and feels just like UINavigationController
, because it is actually built on top of it.
<NavigatorIOS
initialRoute={{
component: MyScene,
title: 'My Initial Scene',
passProps: { myProp: 'foo' },
}}
/>
Like other navigation systems, NavigatorIOS
uses routes to represent screens, with some important differences. The actual component that will be rendered can be specified using the component
key in the route, and any props that should be passed to this component can be specified in passProps
. A "navigator" object is automatically passed as a prop to the component, allowing you to call push
and pop
as needed.
As NavigatorIOS
leverages native UIKit navigation, it will automatically render a navigation bar with a back button and title.
import React from 'react';
import PropTypes from 'prop-types';
import { Button, NavigatorIOS, Text, View } from 'react-native';
export default class NavigatorIOSApp extends React.Component {
render() {
return (
<NavigatorIOS
initialRoute={{
component: MyScene,
title: 'My Initial Scene',
}}
style={{flex: 1}}
/>
)
}
}
class MyScene extends React.Component {
static propTypes = {
title: PropTypes.string.isRequired,
navigator: PropTypes.object.isRequired,
}
constructor(props, context) {
super(props, context);
this._onForward = this._onForward.bind(this);
}
_onForward() {
this.props.navigator.push({
title: 'Scene ' + nextIndex,
});
}
render() {
return (
<View>
<Text>Current Scene: { this.props.title }</Text>
<Button
onPress={this._onForward}
title="Tap me to load the next scene"
/>
</View>
)
}
}
Check out the NavigatorIOS
reference docs to learn more about this component.