Summary:
1. Calculated the fling slow down velocity using OnScrollDispatchHelper
2. Calculated the END_DRAG velocity using velocity tracker in VelocityHelper.
3. Change the interface of ReactScrollViewHelper to pass velocity on x & y.
Pending future work:
Calculate the velocity of BEGIN_DRAG, MOMENTUM_BEGIN and MOMENTUM_END
Add threshold in ScrollResponder.js instead of checking x & y velocity equal zero
Reviewed By: achen1
Differential Revision: D5238126
fbshipit-source-id: 35fb70dda8ab66cd152413cb9c1c041354f1c061
Summary:
`contentSize` was removed from both iOS and Android, tests was updated.
USE `onContentSizeChange` INSTEAD.
Why?
* It always was a hack;
* We already have dedicated event for it: `onContentSizeChange`;
* `onChange` has nothing to do with layout actually;
* We have to maintain `onChange` handler as fast and simple as possible, this feature complicates it a lot;
* It was undocumented feature;
* We already have native auto-expandable <TextInput>, so it illuminates 99% current use cases of this feature.
Reviewed By: mmmulani
Differential Revision: D4989881
fbshipit-source-id: 674bb98c89ada1fca7b3b20b304736b2a3b8304e
Summary:
Previously <TextInput>'s onContentSizeChange event fires very rearly, usually just once after initial layout. This diff fixed that.
I also considered to a bunch of another things to get the native notification, but I found that overriding `onTextChanged` is the most reliable, easy and effitient way to implement this.
I tried/considered:
* onLayout (does not fire)
* OnPreDrawListener (fires to often)
* OnGlobalLayoutListener (does not fire)
* OnLayoutChangeListener (does not fire)
* isLayoutRequested (too hacky)
(I also fixed the <AutoExpandingTextInput> demo to illustrate the fix.)
And just heads up, we will remove `contentSize` info from `onChange` event very soon.
GH issue: https://github.com/facebook/react-native/issues/11692
Reviewed By: achen1
Differential Revision: D5132589
fbshipit-source-id: e7edbd8dc5ae891a6f4a87b51d9450b8c6ce4a1e
Summary:
`contentSize` was removed from both iOS and Android, tests was updated.
USE `onContentSizeChange` INSTEAD.
Why?
* It always was a hack;
* We already have dedicated event for it: `onContentSizeChange`;
* `onChange` has nothing to do with layout actually;
* We have to maintain `onChange` handler as fast and simple as possible, this feature complicates it a lot;
* It was undocumented feature;
* We already have native auto-expandable <TextInput>, so it illuminates 99% current use cases of this feature.
Reviewed By: mmmulani
Differential Revision: D4680300
fbshipit-source-id: 337836deef0767e5f26350f5a8ce73adb4146a02
Summary:
This PR fixes#6332
The issue is that Android Framework will return the same drawable instance for all requests if they request for the same resource. So the changes on the drawable instance will affect all users(`TextInput` in this case). The solution is very easy, call `mutate()` before change it will get a new drawable instance which make sure the change doesn't affect other users.
Closes https://github.com/facebook/react-native/pull/12493
Differential Revision: D4620034
Pulled By: astreet
fbshipit-source-id: a7b10fbc7447e01132b7ca0e1f78413796493e07
Summary:
This PR will:
- add missing documentation for `caretHidden` prop to the docs
- add `caretHidden` prop implementation for Android
I noticed this by accident when looking at `RCTTextFieldManager.m` and there is `RCT_EXPORT_VIEW_PROPERTY(caretHidden, BOOL)` which hides caret on iOS. Then I realised that the docs were missing for this prop and implementation on Android side :)
Render `TextInput` with prop `caretHidden`. After this caret is not visible anymore.
`<TextInput style={styles.input} caretHidden />`
If you omit the prop then caret is visible again
`<TextInput style={styles.input} />`
Closes https://github.com/facebook/react-native/pull/11863
Differential Revision: D4448402
fbshipit-source-id: 456e1df3e2cbb8af32540d2c7a8f4e7da219f5c3
Summary:
This matches the behavior on iOS, there was no way before to change the cursor color per input, it was only possible to change it globally via the theme. Ideally cursor color and selection color would be 2 different props but I think this is better than what we have (and matches iOS).
Sadly there is no api to change it pragmatically (only possible via xml) so this uses reflection and can easily break so it is wrapped in a try catch to avoid crashes. I think it is better to just silently fail in this case. Definetly not super happy about the solution but I think it's worth adding since it is possible to do it natively using xml so it would suck not to be able to do it in RN.
**Test plan**
Tested that the cursor has the same color as before the change when not setting the prop and that it gets the selectionColor color when set.
Closes https://github.com/facebook/react-native/pull/12280
Differential Revision: D4571858
Pulled By: astreet
fbshipit-source-id: 7dca2db33a0a4eecb6115b45155549b1265ffbed
Summary:
Corresponding iOS PR: https://github.com/facebook/react-native/pull/11002
This adds an onScroll event to TextInput which is useful when a multiline TextInput has so much content that it is scrollable.
**Test plan (required)**
Verified the event works properly in a test app. Also, my team uses this event in our app.
Adam Comella
Microsoft Corp.
Closes https://github.com/facebook/react-native/pull/11001
Differential Revision: D4220941
Pulled By: mkonicek
fbshipit-source-id: 7e420579946f2ae840c9e1fcdc8afab68007da17
Summary:
When using a TextInput with a custom font, the placeholder didn't use that font. This is because ReactTextInputManager didn't use ReactFontManager to create the TypeFace which handles custom fonts.
**Test plan**
Tested in UI explorer by reproducing the bug with and testing that the custom font gets applied properly after the fix.
``` js
<TextInput
placeholder="Hello"
style={{ fontFamily: 'notoserif' }}
/>
```
Closes https://github.com/facebook/react-native/pull/12000
Reviewed By: hramos
Differential Revision: D4443713
fbshipit-source-id: e92c9822d9226681d7b00126dad95e5534c0c46e
Summary:
For returnKeyType 'go', 'search' and 'send' Android will call
onEditorAction twice, once with IME_NULL and another time with the respective IME_ACTION.
This change makes sure to only fire one onSubmitEditing by always returning true in onEditorAction, which causes no subsequent events to be fired by android.
Fixes#10443
**Test plan**
1. Create view with TextInput having 'go', 'search' or 'send as `returnKeyType`
```javascript
<View>
<TextInput
returnKeyType='search'
onSubmitEditing={event => console.log('submit search')}></TextInput>
<TextInput
returnKeyType='go'
onSubmitEditing={event => console.log('submit go')}></TextInput>
<TextInput
returnKeyType='send'
onSubmitEditing={event => console.log('submit send')}></TextInput>
</View>
```
2. Input some text and click submit button in soft keyboard
3. See event fired only once instead of two times
Closes https://github.com/facebook/react-native/pull/11006
Differential Revision: D4439110
Pulled By: hramos
fbshipit-source-id: 5573b7f15f862b432600ddd3d61a0852ce51b2b3
Summary:
Android has a text API called breakStrategy for controlling how paragraphs are broken up into lines. For example, some modes support automatically hyphenating words so a word can be split across lines while others do not.
One source of complexity is that Android provides different defaults for `breakStrategy` for `TextView` vs `EditText`. `TextView`'s default is `BREAK_STRATEGY_HIGH_QUALITY` while `EditText`'s default is `BREAK_STRATEGY_SIMPLE`.
In addition to exposing `textBreakStrategy`, this change also fixes a couple of rendering glitches with `Text` and `TextInput`. `TextView` and `EditText` have different default values for `breakStrategy` and `hyphenationFrequency` than `StaticLayout`. Consequently, we were using different parameters for measuring and rendering. Whenever measuring and rendering parameters are inconsistent, it can result in visual glitches such as the text taking up too much space or being clipped.
This change fixes these inconsistencies by setting `breakStrategy` and `hyphenat
Closes https://github.com/facebook/react-native/pull/11007
Differential Revision: D4227495
Pulled By: lacker
fbshipit-source-id: c2d96bd0ddc7bd315fda016fb4f1b5108a2e35cf
Summary:
On Android, if there is a small amount of space available around a text input (e.g. landscape orientation on a phone), Android may choose to have the user edit the text inside of a full screen text input mode. This behavior isn't always desirable. For example, if your app offers some UI controls for controlling the formatting of the text, you want the controls to be visible while the user is editing the text. This Android feature conflicts with that desired experience because the UI controls would be hidden while the text is being edited.
The `disableExtractUI` prop enables developers to choose whether or not Android's full screen text input editing mode is enabled. When this prop is true, Android's `IME_FLAG_NO_EXTRACT_UI` flag is passed to the `setImeOptions` method.
**Test plan (required)**
Verified `disableExtractUI` works for both `true` and `false` values in a test app.
My team is also using this change in our app.
Adam Comella
Microsoft Corp.
Closes https://github.com/facebook/react-native/pull/10900
Differential Revision: D4226483
Pulled By: mkonicek
fbshipit-source-id: 8f1055f6e612b05bafabe6f07a3705dd8788e3da
Summary:
Virtual shadow nodes (e.g. text) don't use CSSNodes so we don't need to create them. This shows large savings in CSSNodes allocated, depending on the app.
This could be breaking if:
- You have virtual nodes that still set and get CSS properties. The setters now no-op for virtual nodes (I unfortunately couldn't remove them completely -- see the comment on LayoutShadowNode), but the getters will NPE. If you see these NPE's, you should almost definitely be using your own datastructure instead of a CSSNode as virtual nodes will not participate in the layout process (and the CSSNode is then behaving just as a POJO for you).
I do not anticipate this to be breaking for anyone, but am including breaking in the commit message since this is a change in API contract.
Reviewed By: emilsjolander
Differential Revision: D4220204
fbshipit-source-id: b8dc083fff420eb94180f669dd49389136111ecb
Summary:
TextInput rounds padding down with `floor` when measuring. However, it rounds padding up with `ceil` when rendering.
This change makes things consistent by moving TextInput's rendering code to use `floor` as well. It looks like this is the intended behavior because commit bdff10b moved measuring from `ceil` to `floor`. It looks like TextInput's rendering code was just overlooked in that commit.
**Test plan (required)**
Verified TextInput padding works in a test app. Also, my team uses this change in our app.
Adam Comella
Microsoft Corp.
Closes https://github.com/facebook/react-native/pull/11003
Differential Revision: D4220855
Pulled By: mkonicek
fbshipit-source-id: 95349867ef89c021a8441b383a09052ca0dd569c
Summary:
The issue here is that on some devices (ie. Nexus 5X), under certain
circumstances, the text gets trimmed. A simple example is P56651885, where the
text is at the end of the line and some padding is set. Digging further with
P56659346, I found that only the paddings that have integer pixel values work
correctly: these are the values P56656483, and this is the screenshot of that
test: {F63510378}.
It turns out that when we set the padding directly on the TextView, we have to
convert from float to int, and use `ceil` in the process. We lose some precision
here, since the csslayout will use the float values to compute the layout of the
views. The ideal solution would be to just set the float values on the TextView,
but since we can't do that, we should avoid using `ceil` instead of `floor`
since it can have bad side-effects in some scenarios.
Going way back to D1881202 and D1710471, we started using `ceil` because that
is how android handles non-integer
density ratios: "This figure is the factor by which you should multiply the dp
units on order to get the actual pixel count for the current screen. (Then add
0.5f to round the figure up to the nearest whole number, when converting to an
integer.)", see https://developer.android.com/guide/practices/screens_support.html.
Reviewed By: emilsjolander
Differential Revision: D3876310
fbshipit-source-id: 701c05a8b1a045d4e06fc89ffe79162c1eecb62c
Summary:
Setting the line height with the help of Android-provided StaticLayout is incorrect. A
simple example app will display the following when `setLineSpacing(50.f, 0.f)`
is set: {F62987699}. You'll notice that the height of the first line is a few
pixels shorter than the other lines.
So we use a custom LineHeightSpan instead, which needs to be applied to the text
itself, and no height-related attributes need to be set on the TextView itself.
Reviewed By: lexs
Differential Revision: D3841658
fbshipit-source-id: 7257df4f1b2ce037554c7a7a5ca8f547a2056939
Summary:
Currently, `<Text>` and `<TextInput>` components on Android do not support borders.
This change adds support for the borderRadius, borderColor, and
borderWidth props on the `<Text>` and `<TextInput>` components on Android.
ReactViewGroup already implements this functionality so
we copied its implementation over into the ReactTextView
and ReactEditText classes.
**Test plan (required)**
Verified that the various border props work on Text and TextInput components in a test app.
Adam Comella
Microsoft Corp.
Closes https://github.com/facebook/react-native/pull/9658
Differential Revision: D3819993
Pulled By: lexs
fbshipit-source-id: 183b0aa95369dd781f03b5a1f0f409ab47284e39
Summary:
This diff changes the textinput component to only scroll (and interrupt parent
views from scrolling), when it is possible for the text inside the component to
be scrolled. Before (D3735237), we would intercept all touch events on the
textinput if it's focused. But this makes it: a.) impossible to scroll a scrollview from within
a textinput that cannot be scrolled; b.) different from iOS behavior.
What the component now does is intercept move touches, and check if it can
scroll in any direction. If it does, it will intercept the touches and stop the parent
component from scrolling; otherwise, it will give the control back to the parent
component.
Note: this might change in the future to also detect the direction of the scroll, and
only block the scroll if the component can scroll in that direction. This is however not
trivial, since the scroll needs to be above some threshold of pixels. Blocking the
parent view from scrolling until that threshold is passed might cause incorrect behavior
in the parent component.
Reviewed By: astreet
Differential Revision: D3764267
fbshipit-source-id: 47e7b5e03855b3c85789e04fc31a8317afbafa84
Summary:
This fixes some inaccuracies in our reporting of textinput's contentsize.
First, we were not using the correct padding info. Then, we are converting the
contentSize width and height to ints right before sending
them over to JS. This adds some inaccuracy with the textinput behaviour,
especially in the case of auto expending text inputs, since those same sizes are
then sent right back.
Reviewed By: astreet
Differential Revision: D3806008
fbshipit-source-id: 7e32f91fde50099fd8a122833fd0042683e68df1
Summary:
Android PR for TextInput selection, based on the iOS implementation in #8958.
** Test plan **
Tested using the text selection example in UIExplorer.
Closes https://github.com/facebook/react-native/pull/8962
Differential Revision: D3819285
Pulled By: andreicoman11
fbshipit-source-id: 9a2408af2a8b694258c88ab5c46322830c71452a
Summary:
Setting the line height with the help of Android-provided StaticLayout is incorrect. A
simple example app will display the following when `setLineSpacing(50.f, 0.f)`
is set: {F62987699}. You'll notice that the height of the first line is a few
pixels shorter than the other lines.
So we use a custom LineHeightSpan instead, which needs to be applied to the text
itself, and no height-related attributes need to be set on the TextView itself.
Reviewed By: lexs
Differential Revision: D3751097
fbshipit-source-id: 6c5a8d01a6dca4ff6eef9c3aadd1b550054432d2
Summary:
Setting the line height with the help of Android-provided StaticLayout is incorrect. A
simple example app will display the following when `setLineSpacing(50.f, 0.f)`
is set: {F62987699}. You'll notice that the height of the first line is a few
pixels shorter than the other lines.
So we use a custom LineHeightSpan instead, which needs to be applied to the text
itself, and no height-related attributes need to be set on the TextView itself.
Reviewed By: lexs
Differential Revision: D3751097
fbshipit-source-id: c3574a1080efec26436a5c61afbff89afa8679e7
Summary:
Since the core layout in RN is now assigning `left/right` to `start/end`, we need to tweak the text input handling as well:
1. We need to replace all left/right to start/end
2. For text inset padding, we need to manually flipped the padding in RTL situation.
Reviewed By: fkgozali
Differential Revision: D3670277
fbshipit-source-id: 442bead25af8548a85dd1f359aa5a799982d1185