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Summary: The RunningOnDeviceAndroid doc had some Linux-specific instructions that are not relevant to macOS/Windows users. Closes https://github.com/facebook/react-native/pull/10726 Differential Revision: D4139089 Pulled By: JoelMarcey fbshipit-source-id: cc57c1d7e3c9dec94e123c3597ac78b3efb15dd0
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id, title, layout, category, permalink, next, previous
| id | title | layout | category | permalink | next | previous |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| running-on-simulator-ios | Running On Simulator | docs | Guides (iOS) | docs/running-on-simulator-ios.html | communication-ios | linking-libraries-ios |
Starting the simulator
Once you have your React Native project initialized, you can run react-native run-ios inside the newly created project directory. If everything is set up correctly, you should see your new app running in the iOS Simulator shortly.
Specifying a device
You can specify the device the simulator should run with the --simulator flag, followed by the device name as a string. The default is "iPhone 6". If you wish to run your app on an iPhone 4s, just run react-native run-ios --simulator "iPhone 4s".
The device names correspond to the list of devices available in Xcode. You can check your available devices by running xcrun simctl list devices from the console.