2.2 KiB
id | title | layout | category | permalink | next | previous |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
using-a-listview | Using a ListView | docs | The Basics | docs/using-a-listview.html | network | using-a-scrollview |
The ListView
component displays a scrolling list of changing, but similarly structured, data.
ListView
works well for long lists of data, where the number of items might change over time. Unlike the more generic ScrollView
, the ListView
only renders elements that are currently showing on the screen, not all the elements at once.
The ListView
component requires two props: dataSource
and renderRow
. dataSource
is the source of information for the list. renderRow
takes one item from the source and returns a formatted component to render.
This example creates a simple ListView
of hardcoded data. It first initializes the dataSource
that will be used to populate the ListView
. Each item in the dataSource
is then rendered as a Text
component. Finally it renders the ListView
and all Text
components.
A
rowHasChanged
function is required to useListView
. Here we just say a row has changed if the row we are on is not the same as the previous row.
import React, { Component } from 'react';
import { AppRegistry, ListView, Text, View } from 'react-native';
class ListViewBasics extends Component {
// Initialize the hardcoded data
constructor(props) {
super(props);
const ds = new ListView.DataSource({rowHasChanged: (r1, r2) => r1 !== r2});
this.state = {
dataSource: ds.cloneWithRows([
'John', 'Joel', 'James', 'Jimmy', 'Jackson', 'Jillian', 'Julie', 'Devin'
])
};
}
render() {
return (
<View style={{flex: 1, paddingTop: 22}}>
<ListView
dataSource={this.state.dataSource}
renderRow={(rowData) => <Text>{rowData}</Text>}
/>
</View>
);
}
}
// App registration and rendering
AppRegistry.registerComponent('ListViewBasics', () => ListViewBasics);
One of the most common uses for a ListView
is displaying data that you fetch from a server. To do that, you will need to learn about networking in React Native.