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checkinme-react-native-sms-user-consent-custom

React Native wrapper for Android's SMS User Consent API, ready to use in React Native apps with minimum effort

  • 1.0.11-1
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React Native wrapper for Android's SMS User Consent API, ready to use in React Native apps with minimum effort. The purpose of SMS User Consent API is to provide one-tap auto-filling of SMS verification codes.

iOS

SMS User Consent API exists only on Android, so this package is Android-only. Calling this package's APIs on iOS is no-op.

If you want auto-filling on iOS, textContentType="oneTimeCode" for TextInput is the way to go. Basically, this is the only way for iOS.

Getting started

Install the package:

yarn add @eabdullazyanov/react-native-sms-user-consent

or

npm install @eabdullazyanov/react-native-sms-user-consent

Basic usage

import React, { useEffect, useState } from 'react';
import { TextInput } from 'react-native';

import { useSmsUserConsent } from '@eabdullazyanov/react-native-sms-user-consent';

const Example = () => {
  const [code, setCode] = useState();

  const retrievedCode = useSmsUserConsent();

  useEffect(() => {
    if (retrievedCode) setCode(retrievedCode);
  }, [retrievedCode]);

  return <TextInput value={code} onChangeText={setCode} />;
};

In the example we use a controlled TextInput for the code entry. retrievedCode equals to the empty string initially, and whenever an SMS is handled retrievedCode receives the code from it. We use the useEffect to update the input value when an SMS is handled.

API

useSmsUserConsent()

useSmsUserConsent(codeLength = 6): string

React hook that starts SMS handling and provides the received code as its return value, which is the empty string initially. Stops handling SMS messages on unmount. Uses startSmsHandling and retrieveVerificationCode internally.

This hook is the way to go in most cases. Alternatively, you can use startSmsHandling and retrieveVerificationCode directly if dealing with something that is not a functional component or you need some more flexibility.

On iOS it just returns the empty string, so no additional code to handle iOS is needed.

startSmsHandling()

startSmsHandling(onSmsReceived: (event: {sms?: string}) => void): (
  stopSmsHandling(): void
)

Starts the native SMS listener that will show the SMS User Consent system prompt. If the user allowed reading the SMS, then the onSmsReceived callback is called. onSmsReceived receives the event object containing the SMS.

Returns stopSmsHandling function that stops showing the system prompt and stops SMS handling.

retrieveVerificationCode()

retrieveVerificationCode(sms: string, codeLength: number = 6): string | null

Retrieves the verification code from an SMS if there is any.


You can import the whole API as one object if you prefer

import SmsUserConsent from 'react-native-sms-user-consent';

// ...
SmsUserConsent.useSmsUserConsent();
// ...

Help

If you have any ideas about the project or found a bug or have a question, feel free to create an issue with all the relevant information. We are engaged to response ASAP. The following info will make it faster to resolve issues:

  1. Device or emulator model
  2. Android version
  3. Your environment info - output of the npx react-native info command

Contribution

PRs are always welcome. If you're feeling like contributing to the project, please do. It would be great to have all the relevant information with the PR.

To make changes, you'll need to follow these steps:

  1. clone the repo
  2. go to /example folder
  3. run yarn and npx react-native run-android to build and view the example project
  4. make changes
  5. repeat steps 3 and 4 until the desired result is achieved
  6. create a PR
  7. 🥳

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Package last updated on 12 Feb 2024

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