View full documentation and demo on https://stackflow.so
Stackflow is a project that implements Stack Navigation UX, which is mainly used in mobile devices (iOS/Android, etc.) in a JavaScript environment. So, it can help to easily develop hybrid apps and webviews.
- Stack screens and keep scrolling state.
- It supports transition effects that stack up the screen and the transition effect that disappears when you go back.
- Supports iOS-style swipe back.
- It passes the necessary parameters to the screen to be switched.
So, what advantages does Stackflow have compared to the existing navigation library?
- You can only use the state for stacks and transitions separately without UI. You can tear off the UI and use it as you like.
- You can inject any additional extensions you want between lifecycles through the plugin interface.
- Since the core logic and integration layers are separated, it can be integrated with various front-end frameworks. (Now only supports React)
- Because render logic and UI can be injected from the outside, mobile webview and desktop development can be done in one codebase.
- Server-Side Rendering is supported. (
ReactDOMServer.renderToString
)
$ yarn add @stackflow/core @stackflow/react
import ReactDOM from 'react-dom'
import { stackflow } from '@stackflow/react';
const { Stack, useFlow } = stackflow({
// ...
});
const App: React.FC = () => {
return (
<Stack />
);
};
ReactDOM.render(<App />, ...)
- Standalone
- Gatsby
- Next.js (💥 Not Recommended)
To integrate Stackflow with a specific framework with routing capabilities, the framework requires an extension to manually call the preload API. However, Next.js does not officially support the preload API.
To contribute new features or options to Stackflow, please check Contribution Guide
MIT