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react-native-tab-view-temp
Advanced tools
A cross-platform Tab View component for React Native.
Open a Terminal in the project root and run:
yarn add react-native-tab-view
Now we need to install react-native-gesture-handler and react-native-reanimated.
If you are using Expo, to ensure that you get the compatible versions of the libraries, run:
expo install react-native-gesture-handler react-native-reanimated
If you are not using Expo, run the following:
yarn add react-native-reanimated react-native-gesture-handler
If you are using Expo, you are done. Otherwise, continue to the next steps.
Next, we need to link these libraries. The steps depends on your React Native version:
React Native 0.60 and higher
On newer versions of React Native, linking is automatic.
To complete the linking on iOS, make sure you have Cocoapods installed. Then run:
cd ios
pod install
cd ..
React Native 0.59 and lower
If you're on an older React Native version, you need to manually link the dependencies. To do that, run:
react-native link react-native-reanimated
react-native link react-native-gesture-handler
IMPORTANT: There are additional steps required for react-native-gesture-handler on Android after linking (for all React Native versions). Check the this guide to complete the installation.
We're done! Now you can build and run the app on your device/simulator.
import * as React from 'react';
import { View, StyleSheet, Dimensions } from 'react-native';
import { TabView, SceneMap } from 'react-native-tab-view';
const FirstRoute = () => (
<View style={[styles.scene, { backgroundColor: '#ff4081' }]} />
);
const SecondRoute = () => (
<View style={[styles.scene, { backgroundColor: '#673ab7' }]} />
);
const initialLayout = { width: Dimensions.get('window').width };
export default function TabViewExample() {
const [index, setIndex] = React.useState(0);
const [routes] = React.useState([
{ key: 'first', title: 'First' },
{ key: 'second', title: 'Second' },
]);
const renderScene = SceneMap({
first: FirstRoute,
second: SecondRoute,
});
return (
<TabView
navigationState={{ index, routes }}
renderScene={renderScene}
onIndexChange={setIndex}
initialLayout={initialLayout}
/>
);
}
const styles = StyleSheet.create({
scene: {
flex: 1,
},
});
The package exports a TabView component which is the one you'd use to render the tab view, and a TabBar component which is the default tab bar implementation.
TabViewContainer component responsible for rendering and managing tabs. Follows material design styles by default.
Basic usage look like this:
<TabView
navigationState={{ index, routes }}
onIndexChange={setIndex}
renderScene={SceneMap({
first: FirstRoute,
second: SecondRoute,
})}
/>
navigationState (required)State for the tab view. The state should contain the following properties:
index: a number representing the index of the active route in the routes arrayroutes: an array containing a list of route objects used for rendering the tabsEach route object should contain the following properties:
key: a unique key to identify the route (required)title: title for the route to display in the tab baricon: icon for the route to display in the tab baraccessibilityLabel: accessibility label for the tab buttontestID: test id for the tab buttonExample:
{
index: 1,
routes: [
{ key: 'music', title: 'Music' },
{ key: 'albums', title: 'Albums' },
{ key: 'recents', title: 'Recents' },
{ key: 'purchased', title: 'Purchased' },
]
}
TabView is a controlled component, which means the index needs to be updated via the onIndexChange callback.
onIndexChange (required)Callback which is called on tab change, receives the index of the new tab as argument. The navigation state needs to be updated when it's called, otherwise the change is dropped.
renderScene (required)Callback which returns a react element to render as the page for the tab. Receives an object containing the route as the argument:
const renderScene = ({ route, jumpTo }) => {
switch (route.key) {
case 'music':
return <MusicRoute jumpTo={jumpTo} />;
case 'albums':
return <AlbumsRoute jumpTo={jumpTo} />;
}
};
You need to make sure that your individual routes implement a shouldComponentUpdate to improve the performance. To make it easier to specify the components, you can use the SceneMap helper.
SceneMap takes an object with the mapping of route.key to React components and returns a function to use with renderScene prop.
import { SceneMap } from 'react-native-tab-view';
...
const renderScene = SceneMap({
music: MusicRoute,
albums: AlbumsRoute,
});
Specifying the components this way is easier and takes care of implementing a shouldComponentUpdate method.
Each scene receives the following props:
route: the current route rendered by the componentjumpTo: method to jump to other tabs, takes a route.key as it's argumentposition: animated node which represents the current positionThe jumpTo method can be used to navigate to other tabs programmatically:
this.props.jumpTo('albums');
All the scenes rendered with SceneMap are optimized using React.PureComponent and don't re-render when parent's props or states change. If you need more control over how your scenes update (e.g. - triggering a re-render even if the navigationState didn't change), use renderScene directly instead of using SceneMap.
IMPORTANT: Do not pass inline functions to SceneMap, for example, don't do the following:
SceneMap({
first: () => <FirstRoute foo={this.props.foo} />,
second: SecondRoute,
});
Always define your components elsewhere in the top level of the file. If you pass inline functions, it'll re-create the component every render, which will cause the entire route to unmount and remount every change. It's very bad for performance and will also cause any local state to be lost.
If you need to pass additional props, use a custom renderScene function:
const renderScene = ({ route }) => {
switch (route.key) {
case 'first':
return <FirstRoute foo={this.props.foo} />;
case 'second':
return <SecondRoute />;
default:
return null;
}
};
renderTabBarCallback which returns a custom React Element to use as the tab bar:
import { TabBar } from 'react-native-tab-view';
...
<TabView
renderTabBar={props => <TabBar {...props} />}
...
/>
If this is not specified, the default tab bar is rendered. You pass this props to customize the default tab bar, provide your own tab bar, or disable the tab bar completely.
<TabView
renderTabBar={() => null}
...
/>
renderPagerCallback which returns a custom React Element to use as pager.
E.g. you can import ScrollPager from react-native-tab-view. It might deliver slightly better experience on iOS.
import { TabView, ScrollPager } from 'react-native-tab-view';
// ...
<TabView
renderPager={props => <ScrollPager { ...props }/>}
// ...
/>
Also, you can use ViewPager-based pager with React Native Tab View ViewPager Adapter .
import { TabView } from 'react-native-tab-view';
import ViewPagerAdapter from 'react-native-tab-view-viewpager-adapter';
// ...
<TabView
renderPager={props => (
<ViewPagerAdapter {...props} transition="curl" showPageIndicator />
)}
// ...
/>
tabBarPositionPosition of the tab bar in the tab view. Possible values are 'top' and 'bottom'. Defaults to 'top'.
lazyBoolean indicating whether to lazily render the scenes. By default all scenes are rendered to provide a smoother swipe experience. But you might want to defer the rendering of unfocused scenes until the user sees them. To enable lazy rendering, set lazy to true.
When you enable lazy, the unfocused screens will usually take some time to render when they come into focus. You can use the renderLazyPlaceholder prop to customize what the user sees during this short period.
lazyPreloadDistanceWhen lazy is enabled, you can specify how many adjacent routes should be preloaded with this prop. This value defaults to 0 which means lazy pages are loaded as they come into the viewport.
renderLazyPlaceholderCallback which returns a custom React Element to render for routes that haven't been rendered yet. Receives an object containing the route as the argument. The lazy prop also needs to be enabled.
This view is usually only shown for a split second. Keep it lightweight.
By default, this renders null.
removeClippedSubviewsBoolean indicating whether to remove invisible views (such as unfocused screens) from the native view hierarchy to improve memory usage. Defaults to false.
Note: Don't enable this on iOS where this is buggy and views don't re-appear.
keyboardDismissModeString indicating whether the keyboard gets dismissed in response to a drag gesture. Possible values are:
'auto' (default): the keyboard is dismissed when the index changes.'on-drag': the keyboard is dismissed when a drag begins.'none': drags do not dismiss the keyboard.swipeEnabledBoolean indicating whether to enable swipe gestures. Swipe gestures are enabled by default. Passing false will disable swipe gestures, but the user can still switch tabs by pressing the tab bar.
swipeVelocityImpactDetermines how relevant is a velocity while calculating next position while swiping. Defaults to 0.2.
onSwipeStartCallback which is called when the swipe gesture starts, i.e. the user touches the screen and moves it.
onSwipeEndCallback which is called when the swipe gesture ends, i.e. the user lifts their finger from the screen after the swipe gesture.
timingConfigConfiguration object for the timing animation which occurs when tapping on tabs. Supported properties are:
duration (number)springConfigConfiguration object for the spring animation which occurs after swiping. Supported properties are:
damping (number)mass (number)stiffness (number)restSpeedThreshold (number)restDisplacementThreshold (number)springVelocityScaleNumber for determining how meaningful is gesture velocity for calculating initial velocity of spring animation. Defaults to 0.
initialLayoutObject containing the initial height and width of the screens. Passing this will improve the initial rendering performance. For most apps, this is a good default:
<TabView
initialLayout={{ width: Dimensions.get('window').width }}
...
/>
positionAnimated value to listen to the position updates. The passed position value will be kept in sync with the current position of the tabs. It's useful for accessing the animated value outside the tab view.
const [position] = useState(() => new Animated.Value(0));
return (
<TabView
position={position}
...
/>
);
sceneContainerStyleStyle to apply to the view wrapping each screen. You can pass this to override some default styles such as overflow clipping:
styleStyle to apply to the tab view container.
gestureHandlerPropsAn object with props to be passed to underlying PanGestureHandler. For example:
<TabView
gestureHandlerProps={{
maxPointers: 1,
waitFor: [someRef]
}}
...
/>
TabBarMaterial design themed tab bar. To customize the tab bar, you'd need to use the renderTabBar prop of TabView to render the TabBar and pass additional props.
For example, to customize the indicator color and the tab bar background color, you can pass indicatorStyle and style props to the TabBar respectively:
const renderTabBar = props => (
<TabBar
{...props}
indicatorStyle={{ backgroundColor: 'white' }}
style={{ backgroundColor: 'pink' }}
/>
);
//...
return (
<TabView
renderTabBar={renderTabBar}
...
/>
);
getLabelTextFunction which takes an object with the current route and returns the label text for the tab. Uses route.title by default.
<TabBar
getLabelText={({ route }) => route.title}
...
/>
getAccessibleFunction which takes an object with the current route and returns a boolean to indicate whether to mark a tab as accessible. Defaults to true.
getAccessibilityLabelFunction which takes an object with the current route and returns a accessibility label for the tab button. Uses route.accessibilityLabel by default if specified, otherwise uses the route title.
<TabBar
getAccessibilityLabel={({ route }) => route.accessibilityLabel}
...
/>
getTestIDFunction which takes an object with the current route and returns a test id for the tab button to locate this tab button in tests. Uses route.testID by default.
<TabBar
getTestID={({ route }) => route.testID}
...
/>
renderIconFunction which takes an object with the current route, focused status and color and returns a custom React Element to be used as a icon.
<TabBar
renderIcon={({ route, focused, color }) => (
<Icon
name={focused ? 'abums' : 'albums-outlined'}
color={color}
/>
)}
...
/>
renderLabelFunction which takes an object with the current route, focused status and color and returns a custom React Element to be used as a label.
<TabBar
renderLabel={({ route, focused, color }) => (
<Text style={{ color, margin: 8 }}>
{route.title}
</Text>
)}
...
/>
renderTabBarItemFunction which takes a TabBarItemProps object and returns a custom React Element to be used as a tab button.
renderIndicatorFunction which takes an object with the current route and returns a custom React Element to be used as a tab indicator.
renderBadgeFunction which takes an object with the current route and returns a custom React Element to be used as a badge.
onTabPressFunction to execute on tab press. It receives the scene for the pressed tab, useful for things like scroll to top.
By default, tab press also switches the tab. To prevent this behavior, you can call preventDefault:
<TabBar
onTabPress={({ route, preventDefault }) => {
if (route.key === 'home') {
preventDefault();
// Do something else
}
}}
...
/>
onTabLongPressFunction to execute on tab long press, use for things like showing a menu with more options
activeColorCustom color for icon and label in the active tab.
inactiveColorCustom color for icon and label in the inactive tab.
pressColorColor for material ripple (Android >= 5.0 only).
pressOpacityOpacity for pressed tab (iOS and Android < 5.0 only).
scrollEnabledBoolean indicating whether to enable scrollable tabs.
If you set scrollEnabled to true, you should also specify a width in tabStyle to improve the initial render.
bouncesBoolean indicating whether the tab bar bounces when scrolling.
tabStyleStyle to apply to the individual tab items in the tab bar.
By default, all tab items take up the same pre-calculated width based on the width of the container. If you want them to take their original width, you can specify width: 'auto' in tabStyle.
indicatorStyleStyle to apply to the active indicator.
indicatorContainerStyleStyle to apply to the container view for the indicator.
labelStyleStyle to apply to the tab item label.
contentContainerStyleStyle to apply to the inner container for tabs.
styleStyle to apply to the tab bar container.
ScrollPagerCustom pager which can we used inside renderPager prop. It is based on ScrollView and might bring a slightly better experience on iOS.
It accepts the same set of props as default pager extended with one addition:
When true, the scroll view bounces when it reaches the end of the content. The default value is false.
If you want to integrate the tab view with React Navigation's navigation system, e.g. want to be able to navigate to a tab using navigation.navigate etc, you can use the following official integrations:
Note that some functionalities are not available with the React Navigation 4 integration because of the limitations in React Navigation. For example, it's possible to dynamically change the rendered tabs.
If you use React Native Navigation by Wix on Android, you need to wrap all your screens that uses react-native-tab-view with gestureHandlerRootHOC from react-native-gesture-handler. Refer react-native-gesture-handler's docs for more details.
Normally we recommend to use React's local state to manage the navigation state for the tabs. But if you need to use Mobx to manage the navigation state, there is a gotcha you need to be aware of.
Mobx relies on data being accessed in render to work properly. However, we don't use the index value inside render in the library, so Mobx fails to track any changes to the index. You might see that the tabs don't change on pressing on the tab bar if you have a state like this:
@observable navigationState = {
index: 0,
routes: [
{ key: 'music', title: 'Music' },
{ key: 'albums', title: 'Albums' },
],
};
To workaround this, we need to make sure that index is accessed in render. We can refactor our state to something like this for it to work:
@observer
class MyComponent extends React.Component {
@observable index = 0;
@observable routes = [
{ key: 'music', title: 'Music' },
{ key: 'albums', title: 'Albums' },
];
@action handleIndexChange = index => {
this.index = index;
};
render() {
return (
<TabView
navigationState={{ index: this.index, routes: this.routes }}
renderScene={({ route }) => {
/* ... */
}}
onIndexChange={this.handleIndexChange}
/>
);
}
}
The renderScene function is called every time the index changes. If your renderScene function is expensive, it's good idea move each route to a separate component if they don't depend on the index, and use shouldComponentUpdate or React.memo in your route components to prevent unnecessary re-renders.
For example, instead of:
const renderScene = ({ route }) => {
switch (route.key) {
case 'home':
return (
<View style={styles.page}>
<Avatar />
<NewsFeed />
</View>
);
default:
return null;
}
};
Do the following:
const renderScene = ({ route }) => {
switch (route.key) {
case 'home':
return <HomeComponent />;
default:
return null;
}
};
Where <HomeComponent /> is a PureComponent if you're using class components:
export default class HomeComponent extends React.PureComponent {
render() {
return (
<View style={styles.page}>
<Avatar />
<NewsFeed />
</View>
);
}
}
Or, wrapped in React.memo if you're using function components:
function HomeComponent() {
return (
<View style={styles.page}>
<Avatar />
<NewsFeed />
</View>
);
}
export default React.memo(HomeComponent);
We need to measure the width of the container and hence need to wait before rendering some elements on the screen. If you know the initial width upfront, you can pass it in and we won't need to wait for measuring it. Most of the time, it's just the window width.
For example, pass the following initialLayout to TabView:
const initialLayout = {
height: 0,
width: Dimensions.get('window').width,
};
The tab view will still react to changes in the dimension and adjust accordingly to accommodate things like orientation change.
If you've a large number of routes, especially images, it can slow the animation down a lot. You can instead render a limited number of routes.
For example, do the following to render only 2 routes on each side:
const renderScene = ({ route }) => {
if (Math.abs(index - routes.indexOf(route)) > 2) {
return <View />;
}
return <MySceneComponent route={route} />;
};
Nesting the TabView inside a vertical ScrollView will disable the optimizations in the FlatList components rendered inside the TabView. So avoid doing it if possible.
lazy and renderLazyPlaceholder props to render routes as neededThe lazy option is disabled by default to provide a smoother tab switching experience, but you can enable it and provide a placeholder component for a better lazy loading experience. Enabling lazy can improve initial load performance by rendering routes only when they come into view. Refer the prop reference for more details.
removeClippedSubviews to improve memory usageOn Android, enabling removeClippedSubviews can improve memory usage. This option can also affect rendering performance negatively, so it is disabled by default. So make sure to test it when enabling it. Refer the prop reference for more details.
While developing, you can run the example app to test your changes.
Make sure your code passes TypeScript and ESLint. Run the following to verify:
yarn typescript
yarn lint
To fix formatting errors, run the following:
yarn lint -- --fix
Remember to add tests for your change if possible.
FAQs
Tab view component for React Native
We found that react-native-tab-view-temp demonstrated a not healthy version release cadence and project activity because the last version was released a year ago. It has 1 open source maintainer collaborating on the project.
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Security News
Multiple high-impact npm maintainers confirm they have been targeted in the same social engineering campaign that compromised Axios.

Security News
Axios compromise traced to social engineering, showing how attacks on maintainers can bypass controls and expose the broader software supply chain.

Security News
Node.js has paused its bug bounty program after funding ended, removing payouts for vulnerability reports but keeping its security process unchanged.