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OTHER_INFO.md

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Other Info

This is a place for information that needs to be documented, but aren't long enough to warrant their own file yet.

  • Modals
  • Tabbar
  • Custom navbar
  • Switch
  • Splitting Scenes
  • Drawer (side-menu)
  • Sub-Scenes

Modals

To display a modal use Modal as root renderer, so it will render the first element as normal scene and all others as popups (when they are pushed). For example:

import StatusModal from './components/StatusModal'

<Router>
  <Scene key="modal" component={Modal} >
    <Scene key="root">
      <Scene key="screen1" initial={true} component={Screen1} />
      <Scene key="screen2" component={Screen2} />
    </Scene>
    <Scene key="statusModal" component={StatusModal} />
  </Scene>
</Router>

Then in the StatusModal Component we can define what we want it to look like and what props can be passed to it:

class StatusModal extends Component {

  constructor(props) {
    super(props)
    // set state with passed in props
    this.state = {
      message: props.error,
      hide: props.hide,
    }
    // bind functions
    this.dismissModal = this.dismissModal.bind(this)
  }

  dismissModal() {
    this.setState({hide: true})
  }

  // show or hide Modal based on 'hide' prop
  render() {
    if(this.state.hide){
      return (
        <View>
        </View>
      )
    } else {
        return (
          <TouchableHighlight style={styles.mainContainer} onPress={this.dismissModal}>
            <Text style={styles.text}>{this.state.message}</Text>
          </TouchableHighlight>
        )
      }
  }
}

Lastly when calling the Modal pass the props defined in the component, for example an error message and a 'hide' prop of false to display the Modal:

Actions.statusModal({error: "Network failed...", hide: false})

When the Modal is pressed it will set hide to true and return an empty view.

TabBar

Every tab has its own navigation bar. However, if you do not set its parent <Scene tabs={true} /> with hideNavBar={true}, the tabs' navigation bar will be overrided by their parent.

Customizing TabBar:

let style = StyleSheet.create({
        tabBarStyle: {
            borderTopWidth : .5,
            borderColor    : '#b7b7b7',
            backgroundColor: 'white',
            opacity        : 1
        }
    });

// in your render method
<Scene key="myTabBar" tabs={true} hideNavBar tabBarStyle={style.tabBarStyle}>
</Scene>
    

Refresh a particular Scene when a Tab is pressed:

<Scene key="myTabBar" tabs={true} hideNavBar tabBarStyle={style.tabBarStyle}>
  <Scene 
    key="myTab" 
    title="My Tab" 
    icon={MyTabIcon} 
    onPress={()=> {
      Actions.myTab_1({type: ActionConst.REFRESH});
    }}
   >
      <Scene key="myTab_1" component={MyTabComponent} hideNavBar/>
  </Scene>
</Scene>

Custom nav bar for individual scene or even different state of scene (new feature):

Your scene component class could implement static renderNavigationBar(props) method that could return different navbar depending from component props

Switch (new feature)

New feature for 3.x release is custom scene renderer that should be used together with tabs={true} property. It allows to select tab scene to show depending from app state. Add the prop "unmountScenes" to your switch scene if the tabs should be unmounted when switched. It could be useful for authentication, restricted scenes, etc. Usually you should wrap Switch with redux connect to pass application state to it: Following example chooses scene depending from sessionID using Redux:

<Scene
    key="root"
    component={connect(state=>({profile:state.profile}))(Switch)}
    tabs={true}
    unmountScenes
    selector={props=>props.profile.sessionID ? "main" : "signUp"}
    >
    <Scene key="signUp" component={SignUp}/>
    <Scene key="main" component={Main}>
</Scene>

Split your scenes to smaller parts if needed

Scenes concept is similar to iOS storyboard where you describe all your app screens in one place. However for some large apps, you may want to split it, like iOS app could have several iOS storyboards for different areas of the app. Luckily, you could easy split Scenes using NodeJS built-in require calls:

            <Router>
                    {require("./scenesForTabBar")}
                    {require("./scenesForAnotherPart")}
            </Router>

scenesForTabBar.js:

import React from 'react-native';
import {Scene} from 'react-native-router-flux';

module.exports = <Scene key="tabbar" tabs={true}>
   // scenes here
</Scene>;

Drawer (side menu) integration

Example of Drawer custom renderer based on react-native-drawer. Note that the built-in NavBar component supports toggling of drawer. The Drawer implementation just needs to have a function: toggle() With DefaultRenderer you may build own drawer 'renderer' that transforms current navigation state into drawer. Drawer could check own state (open/close) from navigation state:

import React from 'react-native';
import Drawer from 'react-native-drawer';
import SideMenu from './SideMenu';
import {Actions, DefaultRenderer} from 'react-native-router-flux';

export default class extends Component {
    render(){
        const state = this.props.navigationState;
        const children = state.children;
        return (
            <Drawer
                ref="navigation"
                open={state.open}
                onOpen={()=>Actions.refresh({key:state.key, open: true})}
                onClose={()=>Actions.refresh({key:state.key, open: false})}
                type="displace"
                content={<SideMenu />}
                tapToClose={true}
                openDrawerOffset={0.2}
                panCloseMask={0.2}
                negotiatePan={true}
                tweenHandler={(ratio) => ({
                 main: { opacity:Math.max(0.54,1-ratio) }
            })}>
                <DefaultRenderer navigationState={children[0]} onNavigate={this.props.onNavigate} />
            </Drawer>
        );
    }
}

/// then wrap your tabs scene with Drawer:
            <Scene key="drawer" component={Drawer} open={false} >
                <Scene key="main" tabs={true} >
                        ....
                </Scene>
            </Scene>

// then you could open/hide/toggle drawer anywhere using 'refresh' modifiers:
          Actions.refresh({key: 'drawer', open: value => !value });

Sub-scenes support

You could create 'sub-scene' actions by putting them as children for needed 'base' scene without component prop and call such action anywhere - 'base' Scene will be updated accordingly. Example for 'My Account' screen with edit possibility (MyAccount component should call Actions.editAccount() to enable edit mode and process save, editMode properties accordingly - display edit controls, save data, etc.):

<Scene key="myAccount" component={MyAccount} title="My Account">
    <Scene key="viewAccount" />
    <Scene key="editAccount" editMode rightTitle="Save" onRight={()=>Actions.saveAccount()} leftTitle="Cancel" onLeft={()=>Actions.viewAccount()} />
    <Scene key="saveAccount" save />
</Scene>

Note, that almost empty viewAccount sub-state here is needed to reset MyAccount to initial params defined for this scene (remove save, editMode and other properties from original state) Sure it could be done using Redux, however it will require more coding and programmatic setting NavBar buttons using refresh.