## Common React Navigation API - Hybrid Integration
This is a purely speculative API that demonstrates how it may be possible to integrate the [JS navigation API](./Common-Navigation-Spec.md) in a hybrid app.
## Setting up a screen
It should be possible to register new screens from JS into native. In your main bundle:
```
const HybridNavigationModule = require('NativeModules').HybridNavigation;
HybridNavigationModule.registerScreens([
{
type: 'Marketplace',
screen: MarketplaceScreen,
},
{
type: 'Product',
screen: ProductScreen,
},
]);
```
## Linking to JS
Now, your native code can open a react screen by type name:
```
// please pretend this is Obj-C or Java syntax:
CoreHybridNavigation.openReactScreen('Profile', {id: 123});
```
## Linking to Native
If JS product code wants to request navigation to a screen that may *or may not* be in native, it can do this:
```
const MarketplaceScreen = ({ navigation }) => (
);
```
Inside the infra:
```
class InfraScreen extends React.Component {
constructor() {
const {initURI, type} = this.props;
const ScreenView = ScreenRegistry[type].screen;
const router = ScreenView.router;
const deepLinkAction = router.getActionForURI(initURI);
const initAction = deepLinkAction || {type: 'init'}
const nav = router.getStateForAction(initAction);
this.state = {
nav,
};
HybridNavigationModule.setNavOptions(this.state.nav);
}
componentWillUpdate() {
HybridNavigationModule.setNavOptions(this.state.nav);
}
dispatch = (action) => {
const {type} = this.props;
const ScreenView = ScreenRegistry[type].screen;
const {getStateForAction} = ScreenView.router;
const newNavState = getStateForAction(action, this.state.nav);
if (newNavState !== this.state.nav) {
this.setState({ nav: newNavState });
return true;
}
if (action.type === 'URI') {
HybridNavigationModule.openURI(action.uri);
return true;
}
if (action.type === 'Back') {
HybridNavigationModule.goBack();
return true;
}
HybridNavigationModule.openAction(action);
return true;
}
render() {
const {type} = this.props;
const ScreenView = ScreenRegistry[type].screen;
const navigation = {
dispatch: this.dispatch,
state: this.state.nav,
};
return ;
}
}
```
## Setting title
```
MarketplaceScreen.router = {
getStateForAction(action, lastState) {
return lastState || {title: 'Marketplace Home'};
},
};
```
A HOC could be used to make this feel more elegant.
## Disabling/Enabling the right button
```
const TestScreen = ({ navigation }) => (
Pressed {navigation.state} times
);
TestScreen.router = {
getStateForAction(action, lastState = {}) {
let state = lastState || {
rightButtonEnabled: true,
rightButtonTitle: 'Tap Me',
pressCount: 0,
};
if (action.type === 'ToggleMyButtonPressability') {
state = {
...state,
rightButtonEnabled: !state.rightButtonEnabled,
};
} else if (action.type === 'RightButtonPress') {
state = {
...state,
pressCount: state.pressCount + 1,
};
}
return state;
},
};
```
## Before JS starts
A JSON file could be defined for native to consume before JS spins up:
```
{
"screens": [
{
"type": "Profile",
"path": "/users/:id?name=:name",
"params": {
"name": "string",
"id": "number"
},
"title": "%name%' s Profile",
"rightButtonTitle": "Message %name%"
},
{
...
}
]
}
```
This seems like a pain to set up, so we can statically analyze our JS and autogenerate this JSON! If the JS in an app changes, there could be a way for JS to report the new routing configuration to native for use on the next cold start.