expo-splash-screen
expo-splash-screen
allows you to customize your app's splash screen, which is the initial screen users see when the app is launched, before it has loaded. Splash screens (sometimes called launch screens) provide a user's first experience with your application.
🚀 Features
Built-in splash screen image resize modes
expo-splash-screen
contains a built-in feature for taking care of properly displaying your splash screen image. You can use the following resize modes to obtain behavior as if you were using the React Native <Image>
component's resizeMode
style.
CONTAIN
resize mode
Scale the image uniformly (maintaining the image's aspect ratio) so that both dimensions the width and height of the image will be equal to or less than the corresponding dimension of the device's screen.
COVER
resize mode
Scale the image uniformly (maintaining the image's aspect ratio) so that both the width and height of the image will be equal to or larger than the corresponding dimension of the device's screen.
NATIVE
resize mode
Android only.
By using this resize mode your app will will leverage Android's ability to present a static bitmap while the application is starting up.
Android (unlike iOS) does not support stretching of the provided image during launch, so the application will present the given image centered on the screen at its original dimensions.
Animation above presents one of our known issues
Selecting this resize mode requires some more work to be done in native configuration.
Please take a look at the res/drawable/splashscreen.xml
and res/drawable/splashscreen_background.png
sections.
Per-appearance (a.k.a. dark-mode) splash screen
expo-splash-screen
supports per-appearance splash screens that respond to system appearance changes on iOS 13+ and dark-mode changes on Android 10+.
StatusBar customization
expo-splash-screen
allows customization of the StatusBar according to the ReactNative StatusBar API.
📚 API
import * as SplashScreen from 'expo-splash-screen';
The native splash screen that is controlled via this module autohides once the ReactNative-controlled view hierarchy is mounted. This means that when your app first render
s view component, the native splash screen will hide. This default behavior can be prevented by calling SplashScreen.preventAutoHideAsync()
and later on SplashScreen.hideAsync()
.
SplashScreen.preventAutoHideAsync()
This method makes the native splash screen stay visible until SplashScreen.hideAsync()
is called. This must be called before any ReactNative-controlled view hierarchy is rendered (either in the global scope of your main component, or when the component renders null
at the beginning - see Examples section).
Preventing default autohiding might come in handy if your application needs to prepare/download some resources and/or make some API calls before first rendering some actual view hierarchy.
Returns
A Promise
that resolves to true
when preventing autohiding succeeded and to false
if the native splash screen is already prevented from autohiding (for instance, if you've already called this method).
Promise
rejection most likely means that native splash screen cannot be prevented from autohiding (it's already hidden when this method was executed).
SplashScreen.hideAsync()
Hides the native splash screen. Only works if the native splash screen has been previously prevented from autohiding by calling SplashScreen.preventAutoHideAsync()
method.
Returns
A Promise
that resolves to true
once the splash screen becomes hidden and to false
if the splash screen is already hidden.
🗒 Examples
SplashScreen.preventAutoHideAsync()
in global scope
App.tsx
import React from 'react';
import { StyleSheet, Text, View } from 'react-native';
import * as SplashScreen from 'expo-splash-screen';
SplashScreen.preventAutoHideAsync()
.then(result => console.log(`SplashScreen.preventAutoHideAsync() succeeded: ${result}`))
.catch(console.warn);
export default class App extends React.Component {
componentDidMount() {
setTimeout(async () => {
await SplashScreen.hideAsync();
}, 2000);
}
render() {
return (
<View style={styles.container}>
<Text style={styles.text}>SplashScreen Demo! 👋</Text>
</View>
);
}
}
const styles = StyleSheet.create({
container: {
flex: 1,
alignItems: 'center',
justifyContent: 'center',
backgroundColor: '#aabbcc',
},
text: {
color: 'white',
fontWeight: 'bold',
},
});
SplashScreen.preventAutoHideAsync()
in component that initially renders null
App.tsx
import React from 'react';
import { StyleSheet, Text, View } from 'react-native';
import * as SplashScreen from 'expo-splash-screen';
export default class App extends React.Component {
state = {
appIsReady: false,
};
async componentDidMount() {
try {
await SplashScreen.preventAutoHideAsync();
} catch (e) {
console.warn(e);
}
this.prepareResources();
}
prepareResources = async () => {
await performAPICalls(...);
await downloadAssets(...);
this.setState({ appIsReady: true }, async () => {
await SplashScreen.hideAsync();
});
}
render() {
if (!this.state.appIsReady) {
return null;
}
return (
<View style={styles.container}>
<Text style={styles.text}>SplashScreen Demo! 👋</Text>
</View>
)
}
}
const styles = StyleSheet.create({
container: {
flex: 1,
alignItems: 'center',
justifyContent: 'center',
backgroundColor: '#aabbcc',
},
text: {
color: 'white',
fontWeight: 'bold',
},
});
💻 Installation in managed Expo projects
Refer to the SplashScreen section of the Expo documentation.
🖥 Installation in bare React Native projects
For bare React Native projects, you must ensure that you have installed and configured the expo
package before continuing.
Add the package to your dependencies
expo install expo-splash-screen
📱 Configure iOS
Run npx pod-install
after installing the package.
Automatic configuration
The easiest way to configure the splash screen in bare React Native projects is with the expo-splash-screen command. See the README for more information, or run yarn expo-splash-screen --help
in your project.
Manual Configuration
To achieve native splash screen (in iOS ecosystem it's called LaunchScreen
) behavior, you have to provide either a SplashScreen.storyboard
file or a SplashScreen.xib
file, and configure your Xcode project accordingly.
The guide below shows how to configure your Xcode project to use a single image file as a splash screen using a .storyboard
file (configuration for .xib
filetype is analogous).
- Add an image to
Images.xcassets
- Create
SplashScreen.storyboard
- Select
Content Mode
for the ImageView
in SplashScreen.storyboard
- Mark
SplashScreen.storyboard
as the LaunchScreen - (optional) Enable dark mode
- (optional) Customize StatusBar
🛠 Add an image to Images.xcassets
First you need to add the image file that would serve as a splash screen to your native project's resources.
- In your Xcode project open the
.xcassets
(often named Images.xcassets
or Assets.xcassets
) file. - In the content panel add
New image set
and name it SplashScreen
. - Provide the splash screen image you've prepared (you have to provide it in three different scales).
Show image with details
🛠 Create SplashScreen.storyboard
This is the actual splash screen definition and will be used by the system to render your splash screen.
- Create a
SplashScreen.storyboard
file. - Add a
View Controller
to the newly created .storyboard
file:
- open
Library
(+
button on the top-right), - find
View Controller
element, - drag-and-drop it to the
.storyboard
file.
Show image with details
- Add an
Image View
to the View Controller
:
- first remove other
View
element from View Controller
, - open
Library
(+
button on the top-right), - find
Image View
element, - drag-and-drop it as a
View Controller
child in view hierarchy inspector.
Show image with details
- Set
Storyboard ID
to SplashScreenViewController
:
- select
View Controller
in view hierarchy inspector, - navigate to
Identity Inspector
in the right panel, - and set
Storyboard ID
to SplashScreenViewController
.
Show image with details
- Tick
Is Initial View Controller
in SplashScreenViewController
:
- select
View Controller
in view hierarchy inspector, - navigate to
Attributes Inspector
in the right panel, - and tick
Is Initial View Controller
in View Controller section.
Show image with details
- Configure
Image View
source:
- select
Image View
in view hierarchy inspector, - navigate to
Attributes Inspector
in the right panel, - select
SplashScreen
in Image
parameter).
Show image with details
- Configure
Background
of the Image View
:
- select
Image View
in view hierarchy inspector, - navigate to
Attributes Inspector
in the right panel, - configure
Background
parameter:
- To enter a
#RRGGBB
value you need to select Custom
option and in the Colors Popup
that appeared you need to navigate to the second tab and choose RGB Sliders
from dropdown select.
Show image with details
🛠 Select Content Mode
for the ImageView
in SplashScreen.storyboard
This is how your image will be displayed on the screen.
- Open
SplashScreen.storyboard
and select Image View
from View Controller
. - Navigate to
Attributes Inspector
in the right panel and locate Content Mode
. - Select one of the following:
- You can always choose other options to achieve different image positioning and scaling.
Show image with details
🛠 Mark SplashScreen.storyboard
as the LaunchScreen
The newly created SplashScreen.storyboard
needs to be marked as the Launch Screen File
in your Xcode project in order to be presented from the very beginning of your application launch.
- Select your project in
Project Navigator
- Select your project name from
TARGETS
panel and navigate to General
tab. - Locate
App Icons and Launch Images
section and Launch Screen File
option. - Select or enter
SplashScreen
as the value for located option.
Show image with details
🛠 (optional) Enable dark mode
Provide different background colors
Depending on what iOS version your application is targeting, you have to adjust your native project differently to a obtain working per-appearance splash screen view.
I'm targeting iOS 11+
You can take advantage of named colors
in your Xcode project.
- Create a new
Color Set
and customize its values for different color modes:
- in your
.xcassets
directory (either create a new .xcassets
for colors, or reuse an existing one e.g. with images) create New Color Set
and name it SplashScreenBackground
, - navigate to
Attributes Inspector
in the right panel and change Appearance
to Any, Dark
, - select desired color in
Attributes Inspector
in the right panel for each mode.
Show image with details
- Select created
named color
as the Background
for the Image View
in SplashScreen.storyboard
:
- open
SplashScreen.storyboard
and select Image View
in view hierarchy inspector, - navigate to
Attributes Inspector
in the right panel, - configure
Background
parameter by selecting your created named color
(that should be listed as SplashScreenBackground
).
Show image with details
I'm targeting iOS version < 11
You cannot use named colors
feature in your Xcode project.
Instead you have to create an additional image set that contains small 1x1px images, each with the desired background color. Then, you'll use this additional image resource as a background in the splash screen view.
You can use this online generator to obtain 1x1px .png
images with desired colors: http://www.1x1px.me.
- Create
SplashScreenBackground
Image Set
with desired background colors for each mode in your Images.xcassets
directory:
- open your
.xcassets
directory with images, - in the content panel add
New image set
and name it SplashScreenBackground
, - convert this
Image set
to support Dark Appearance
by navigating to Attributes Inspector
in the right panel and changing Appearance
to Any, Dark
, - provide images with colors for every mode (you can generate color 1x1px images using http://www.1x1px.me).
Show image with details
-
Update SplashScreen.storyboard
to consist of a single top-level View
with two Image View
subviews (solid-colored image in the background and actual splash screen image in the foreground):
- open
SplashScreen.storyboard
and replace Image View
with a plain View
(search Library
for it and drag&drop it in place of current Image View
), - add two
-
Configure first Image View
(background color):
- configure attributes in
Attributes Inspector
:
- set
Image
to SplashScreenBackground
(prepared in previous step), - set
Content Mode
to Scale To Fill
(color needs to take all available space),
- make this subview take all available space in parent view:
- open
Add new constraints
bottom menu, - make sure
Constrain to margin
is not checked, - for every input, open the dropdown and select
View
(parent view reference) and set 0
as the value, - once every side is covered (
0
value and parent view reference selected in dropdown) hit Add 4 Constraints
, - observe that in
View Hierarchy Inspector
constraints are added and Image View
resized to take whole place of parent view.
Show image with details
- Configure second
Image View
(actual splash screen image):
- select second
Image View
and select correct Image
in Attributes Inspector
alongside with desired Content Mode
, - make this subview take all available space in parent view (see previous step).
Show image with details
Provide different splash screen image
You might want to add a separate image for dark
mode. If the system is switched to dark
mode, it would pick this different image instead of the normal one and present it in the splash screen view.
- In your Xcode project open
SplashScreen
(created in previous section). - Convert this asset to support
Dark Appearance
:
- navigate to
Attributes Inspector
in the right panel, - locate
Appearances
section and select Any, Dark
, - provide image for
dark mode
by dropping it to the correct box.
Show image with details
Background color when you want to support iOS < 11
If you're targeting a version of iOS < 11 then you cannot use named color
feature and instead you need to generate images with desired background colors that are going to be used as the background for splash screen view.
There is this awesome 1x1px png online generator: http://www.1x1px.me (use it to generate two 1x1px images with desired background colors for different color modes).
🛠 (optional) Customize StatusBar
You might want to customize the StatusBar appearance during the time the SplashScreen is being shown.
- Customize
StatusBar hiding
flag:
- open main project view, select your project name from
TARGETS
panel and navigate to Info
tab, - add or modify
Status bar initially hidden
attribute with desired value.
Show image with details
- Customize
StatusBar style
option:
- open main project view, select your project name from
TARGETS
panel and navigate to Info
tab, - add or modify
Status bar style
attribute with desired value.
Show image with details
🤖 Configure Android
To achieve fully-native splash screen behavior, expo-splash-screen
needs to be hooked into the native view hierarchy and consume some resources that have to be placed under /android/app/src/res
directory.
Automatic configuration
The easiest way to configure the splash screen in bare React Native projects is with the expo-splash-screen command. See the README for more information, or run yarn expo-splash-screen --help
in your project.
Manual Configuration
- Configure
res/drawable/splashscreen_image.png
- Configure
res/values/colors.xml
- Configure
res/drawable/splashscreen.xml
- Configure
res/values/styles.xml
- Configure
AndroidManifest.xml
- (optional) Customzine
resizeMode
- (optional) Enable dark mode
- (optional) Customize StatusBar
🛠 Configure res/drawable/splashscreen_image.png
You have to provide your splash screen image and place it under the res/drawable
directory.
This image will be loaded as soon as Android mounts your application's native view hierarchy.
NATIVE
mode adjustments
If you've overridden <string name="expo_splash_screen_resize_mode">native</string>
mode in res/values/strings.xml
, you need to do a few additional steps.
In your application's res
directory you might want to have a number of drawable-X
sub-directories (where X
is the different DPI for different devices). They store different versions of images that are picked based on the device's DPI (for more information please see this official Android docs).
To achieve proper scaling of your splash screen image on every device you should have following directories:
res/drawable-mdpi
- scale 1x - resources for medium-density (mdpi) screens (~160dpi). (This is the baseline density.)res/drawable-hdpi
- scale 1.5x - resources for high-density (hdpi) screens (~240dpi).res/drawable-xhdpi
- scale 2x - resources for extra-high-density (xhdpi) screens (~320dpi).res/drawable-xxhdpi
- scale 3x - resources for extra-extra-high-density (xxhdpi) screens (~480dpi).res/drawable-xxxhdpi
- scale 4x - resources for extra-extra-extra-high-density (xxxhdpi) uses (~640dpi).
Each of directories mentioned above should contain the same splashscreen_image.png
file, but with a different resolution (pay attention to scale factors).
🛠 Configure res/values/colors.xml
This file contains colors that are reused across your application at the native level.
Update the file with the following content or create one if missing:
<resources>
+ <color name="splashscreen_background">#AABBCC</color> <!-- #AARRGGBB or #RRGGBB format -->
<!-- Other colors defined for your application -->
</resources>
🛠 Configure res/drawable/splashscreen.xml
This file contains the description of how the splash screen view should be drawn by the Android system.
Create the file with the following content:
+ <layer-list xmlns:android="http://schemas.android.com/apk/res/android">
+ <item android:drawable="@color/splashscreen_background"/>
+ </layer-list>
NATIVE
mode adjustments
If you've overridden <string name="expo_splash_screen_resize_mode">native</string>
mode in res/values/strings.xml
, you shoulw add:
<layer-list xmlns:android="http://schemas.android.com/apk/res/android">
<item android:drawable="@color/splashscreen_background"/>
+ <item>
+ <bitmap android:gravity="center" android:src="@drawable/splashscreen_image"/>
+ </item>
</layer-list>
🛠 Configure res/values/styles.xml
Locate your main activity theme in /android/app/src/res/values/styles.xml
or create one if missing.
<!-- Main activity theme. -->
<style name="AppTheme" parent="Theme.AppCompat.Light.NoActionBar">
+ <item name="android:windowBackground">@drawable/splashscreen</item> <!-- this line instructs the system to use 'splashscreen.xml' as a background of the whole application -->
<!-- Other style properties -->
</style>
🛠 Configure AndroidManifest.xml
Adjust your application's main AndroidManifest.xml
to contain an android:theme
property pointing to the style that contains your splash screen configuration:
<manifest xmlns:android="http://schemas.android.com/apk/res/android"
package="com.example.myapp">
...
<application ...>
+ <!-- Ensure that 'android:theme' property is pointing to the style containing native splash screen reference - see 'styles.xml' -->
<activity
android:name=".MainActivity"
+ android:theme="@style/AppTheme"
...
>
...
</activity>
</application>
</manifest>
🛠 (optional) Customize resizeMode
The default image resizeMode
is CONTAIN
. If you want to have different resizeMode
, you need to override in res/values/strings.xml
.
<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8" standalone="yes"?>
<resources>
<string name="app_name">sdk42</string>
+ <string name="expo_splash_screen_resize_mode">contain|cover|native</string>
</resources>
🛠 (optional) Enable dark mode
Provide different background colors - res/values-night/colors.png
If you want to have different background colors in your splash screen depending on the system color mode, you need to create a similar file to colors.xml
, but in the directory res/values-night
.
Values in this file are going to picked by the system when it is switched to dark
mode.
<resources>
+ <color name="splashscreen_background">#AABBCC</color> <!-- #AARRGGBB or #RRGGBB format -->
</resources>
Provide different splash screen image - res/drawable-night/splashscreen_image.png
You might want to provide a separate splash screen image for dark mode usage, and place it under the res/drawable-night
directory with exactly the same name as the normal one.
This step is optional, because you might want to have the same image in both light
and dark
modes (e.g. you have just a light-themed logo and you want to have different background colors in different modes).
🛠 (optional) Customize StatusBar
You might want to customize the StatusBar appearance during the time the SplashScreen is being shown.
- Customize
StatusBar hiding
flag
To have the StatusBar completely hidden you need to update your res/values/styles.xml
file with the following entry (to prevent StatusBar from hiding either remove this entry or enter false
as the value):
<!-- Main/SplashScreen activity theme. -->
<style name="AppTheme" parent="Theme.AppCompat.Light.NoActionBar">
<item name="android:windowBackground">@drawable/splashscreen</item>
+ <item name="android:windowFullscreen">true</item>
<!-- Other style properties -->
</style>
If you have multiple styles.xml
files located in different directories containing exactly the same style
entry (e.g. in res/values-night
, res/values-night-v23
, etc.), be sure to update these files accordingly.
Read more about android:windowFullscreen
flag in official Android documentation.
- Customize
StatusBar style
option
This option is only available for Android devices running Android 6.0 or greater.
To enforce light
or dark
StatusBar style for given system color mode, you have to prepare or update your res/values-v23/styles.xml
file with the following entry (as of this option being supported since API 23, you have to configure specifically named directory containing separate configuration files):
<!-- Main/SplashScreen activity theme. -->
<style name="AppTheme" parent="Theme.AppCompat.Light.NoActionBar">
<item name="android:windowBackground">@drawable/splashscreen</item>
+ <item name="android:windowLightStatusBar">true|false</item>
<!-- Other style properties -->
</style>
Available values:
true
for having dark-colored icons,false
for having light-colored icons.
If you have multiple styles.xml
files located in different directories containing exactly the same style
entry (e.g. in res/values-night-v23
(for dark color mode), etc.), be sure to update these files accordingly.
Read more about android:windowLightStatusBar
flag in official Android documentation.
To read more about Android multi-API-level support see this official documentation.
- Customize
StatusBar color
option (a.k.a. background color
of the StatusBar component)
To achieve custom background color you need to create a new color resource and provide it to the SplashScreen style
description.
Create new color resource in your res/values/colors.xml
(if your application supports dark mode, consider adding different color in res/values-night/colors.xml
file):
<resources>
<!-- Below line is handled by '@expo/configure-splash-screen' command and it's discouraged to modify it manually -->
<color name="splashscreen_background">#D0D0C0</color>
+ <color name="splashscreen_statusbar_color">#(AA)RRGGBB</color> <!-- #AARRGGBB or #RRGGBB format -->
</resources>
Update your res/values/styles.xml
file with the following entry:
<!-- Main/SplashScreen activity theme. -->
<style name="AppTheme" parent="Theme.AppCompat.Light.NoActionBar">
<item name="android:windowBackground">@drawable/splashscreen</item>
+ <item name="android:statusBarColor">@color/splashscreen_statusbar_color</item>
<!-- Other style properties -->
</style>
If you have multiple styles.xml
files located in different directories containing exactly the same style
entry (e.g. in res/values-night
, res/values-night-v23
, etc.), be sure to update these files accordingly.
Read more about android:statusBarColor
option in official Android documentation.
- Customize
StatusBar translucent
flag
When the StatusBar is translucent, the app will be able to draw under the StatusBar component area.
To make the StatusBar translucent update your res/values/strings.xml
file with the following content:
<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8" standalone="yes"?>
<resources>
<string name="app_name">sdk42</string>
+ <string name="expo_splash_screen_status_bar_translucent">true</string>
</resources>
👏 Contributing
Contributions are very welcome! Please refer to guidelines described in the contributing guide.
❓ Known issues
iOS caching
Splash Screens on iOS apps can sometimes encounter a caching issue where the previous image will flash before showing the new, intended image. When this occurs, we recommend you try power cycling your device and uninstalling and re-installing the application. However, the caching sometimes can persist for a day or two so be patient if the aforementioned steps were unable to resolve the issue.
NATIVE
mode pushes splash image up a little bit
See NATIVE
mode preview above.
We are aware of this issue and unfortunately haven't been able to provide a solution as of yet. This is on our immediate roadmap...
⬆️ Migrate from old versions
Migrate from expo-splash-screen < 0.12.0
We try to keep changes backward compatible, the code for expo-splash-screen
will still work as it used to be. However, if you are going to migrate as new style API, here are the steps:
- Migrate your project from react-native-unimodules to expo-modules-core
- Remove expo-splash-screen code from MainActivity
import com.facebook.react.ReactRootView;
import com.swmansion.gesturehandler.react.RNGestureHandlerEnabledRootView;
-import expo.modules.splashscreen.singletons.SplashScreen;
-import expo.modules.splashscreen.SplashScreenImageResizeMode;
-
public class MainActivity extends ReactActivity {
@Override
protected void onCreate(Bundle savedInstanceState) {
// This is required for expo-splash-screen.
setTheme(R.style.AppTheme);
super.onCreate(null);
- // SplashScreen.show(...) has to be called after super.onCreate(...)
- // Below line is handled by '@expo/configure-splash-screen' command and it's discouraged to modify it manually
- SplashScreen.show(this, SplashScreenImageResizeMode.CONTAIN, ReactRootView.class, false);
}
- Override default
resizeMode
and statusBarTranslucent
in stings.xml
<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8" standalone="yes"?>
<resources>
<string name="app_name">sdk42</string>
+ <string name="expo_splash_screen_resize_mode">contain</string>
+ <string name="expo_splash_screen_status_bar_translucent">false</string>
</resources>
🏅 Hall Of Fame
This module is based on a solid work from (many thanks for that 👏):