Files
react-native/docs/Performance.md
Joel Marcey 7ac931ee9b Publish DocDown Commits Into Next Release (0.29) (#8480)
* Separate Out Core Components Into Individual Parts

Summary:
Will create new issue to add more information to the `Components` section of the Tutorial
since that was gutted by this change.

Fixes #8156
Closes https://github.com/facebook/react-native/pull/8256

Differential Revision: D3459601

Pulled By: JoelMarcey

fbshipit-source-id: 4038afc463bffcf8efda36d29bc7c443bbc8f4bd

* Cleanup troubleshooting and debugging docs.

Summary:
This is a followup to #8010. Troubleshooting has been updated to list only those issues that may affect a user that is setting up their environment. Any issues related to day to day use have been moved or merged into a more relevant doc.
Closes https://github.com/facebook/react-native/pull/8254

Reviewed By: caabernathy

Differential Revision: D3459018

Pulled By: JoelMarcey

fbshipit-source-id: dd76097af34bd33dda376fab39fb0f71061ef3e4

* Remove survey link

Summary:
We have enough responses now and we are in the lockdown for improving the documentation.

We can add another "did we improve?" survey after lockdown sometime.
Closes https://github.com/facebook/react-native/pull/8260

Differential Revision: D3463284

Pulled By: JoelMarcey

fbshipit-source-id: f2d585a8aa6308de0cce0bea3974b1e7f14d5a6f

* Add docs to show how to select specific simulator.

Summary:
Add a message to let people know they can use the `--simulator` flag to run their apps on different simulators instead of the default "iPhone 6"
Closes https://github.com/facebook/react-native/pull/8078

Differential Revision: D3464912

Pulled By: JoelMarcey

fbshipit-source-id: b59d5061d2b3501618602932fcc285bac99b7573

* Add ScrollView to Basics docs

Summary:
Add basic information about the generic `ScrollView` -- talk a bit about how it renders elements and a quick compare against something like a `ListView`. Provide a simple example.

Fixes #8261
Closes https://github.com/facebook/react-native/pull/8266

Differential Revision: D3465105

Pulled By: JoelMarcey

fbshipit-source-id: 3a2e1eac6e877669763fc6b8bb0fc78ebe870ab1

* Improve autogen for reference docs including jsdoc support

Summary:
As part of improving the API and Component reference docs #8154 this pull request adds the following:

- jsdoc support for API docs. See the AlertIOS changes as an example.
- type definitions support and added to both API and Component docs. This is supported via react-docgen and jsdoc.
- better formatting of method properties (now shown in a table).

FYI, API and Component docs were previously generated in two different ways. Components were using react-docgen and that basically remains as-is. APIs were using custom parsing code and that's been switched to use a jsdoc parser + react-docgen as an option for typedefs (it could also use the jsdoc parser).

Two docs have been updated to showcase how we'd like the new docs to look:

- AlertIOS (API): showing method parameters, examples, typedefs, more details overall.
- Statusbar (Component): showing method parameters, typedefs, more details overall.

**Note**: To convert new API docs to use the new format, add `jsdoc` to the initial file comment. C
Closes https://github.com/facebook/react-native/pull/8196

Differential Revision: D3465037

Pulled By: lacker

fbshipit-source-id: 78415d44bc5be02db802f5b1f7a0b249689abdf7

* overhaul showcase

Summary:
The motivation is that the showcase is becoming far too large to be useful. I filtered the apps for, basically, "apps that have some sort of interesting news coverage or technical blog post about them". The UI is a bit updated to also mention something about the information link. I also added the FB app itself.
Closes https://github.com/facebook/react-native/pull/8263

Differential Revision: D3463856

Pulled By: JoelMarcey

fbshipit-source-id: cdd309ba85edca417868f14dee7c772f73af654b

* New React Native Landing Page

Summary:
The motivation is that we haven't changed the copy on the initial React Native landing page since launching, and we have a much clearer view of the React Native value prop now.

Themes:
1. React Native is like React but for mobile apps
2. A React Native app is a "real native app"
3. Development is fast
4. You can drop down to normal native development if you need
Closes https://github.com/facebook/react-native/pull/8291

Differential Revision: D3466855

Pulled By: JoelMarcey

fbshipit-source-id: d1a5035640bcd795704d5f830b79e7c3d2e3ab02

* Move Videos and Newsletter to Support

Summary:
Simplify the sidebar. We have Twitter feed in support. These have
a community feel as well.
Closes https://github.com/facebook/react-native/pull/8287

Differential Revision: D3467042

Pulled By: lacker

fbshipit-source-id: 60749d0cb31f284dae7c5402bfcde7b4d01aa32f

* Include info about console.log

Summary:
I spent so much time trying to optimize my JS without noticing this.
Closes https://github.com/facebook/react-native/pull/8285

Differential Revision: D3468707

fbshipit-source-id: bd5ff38ca2501891318b4be3c75bdaa10a4c64da

* Add a new Handling Touches guide

Summary:
The new Handling Touches guide provides an overall view of how touches can be handled. It is meant to be a higher level discussion of basic touch handling, e.g. "how do I implement a button?". The existing Gesture Responder System guide has been moved to the end of the docs and is still available for reference when building custom gesture handlers.

Reference: #8160

![handlingtouchesguide](https://cloud.githubusercontent.com/assets/165856/16256634/50a20c92-3808-11e6-8a5b-b49f2cda9fca.png)
Closes https://github.com/facebook/react-native/pull/8299

Differential Revision: D3469681

Pulled By: JoelMarcey

fbshipit-source-id: 3bc18e759b26c2d5c141b626acb433c5e973cef0

* Remove Polyfills section from sidebar

Summary:
Some of these will be in basics, guides and apis instead. One less layer
of confusion.

> Note: APIs are not totally alphabetical any longer -- but neither were
Polyfills. We can fix that in `extractDocs.js` maybe. But not worth doing
in this pull request, imho.
Closes https://github.com/facebook/react-native/pull/8293

Differential Revision: D3469684

Pulled By: JoelMarcey

fbshipit-source-id: 4f7830ca10b8e4406df9cec8bf13ff150e355250

* Docs: Basic Components Update

Summary:
This is an improvement to basic components docs.

* I updated the basic components example code to better render components on iOS (added paddingTop).
* I also modified the code to allow reader to easily copy, paste, and then run the code in their project if they followed the 'Getting Started' quick start guide.
* I also added additional copy to clarify suggested usage/guidelines.
Closes https://github.com/facebook/react-native/pull/8292

Differential Revision: D3469943

Pulled By: JoelMarcey

fbshipit-source-id: 21ff6ee13b59741c43d80aab68a38aace0fbfca6

* Add react-native-web-player to core components docs

Summary:
This PR adds the interactive [React Native Web Player](http://dabbott.github.io/react-native-web-player/) to the docs. The web player is an embeddable iframe which runs React Native code using components from [react-native-web](https://github.com/necolas/react-native-web). For now, it's primarily for educational purposes, since only the basic components are implemented.

Some details:
- The iframe is loaded from MaxCDN using rawgit, locked down to a git tag.
- Asset paths (i.e. images) are resolved relative to `//facebook.github.io/react-native/`
- When viewed on mobile, it falls back to the syntax-highlighted code blocks.

The WebPlayer can be inserted into markdown by using the fences:

```
```ReactNativeWebPlayer

import ...

AppRegistry.registerComponent ...

`` `
```

![screen shot 2016-06-22 at 12 46 50 pm](https://cloud.githubusercontent.com/assets/1198882/16281068/7056804e-3877-11e6-82f7-ece245690548.png)

I didn't actually add the WebPlayer to any docs pages in this PR. That we c
Closes https://github.com/facebook/react-native/pull/8328

Differential Revision: D3471527

Pulled By: lacker

fbshipit-source-id: 704da41cd77e08c7e2bc820557a74d36e88e8eb7

* More Resources doc, updating Support doc and quickstart too

Summary:
TLDR even more docs changes

So I created a More Resources doc that aggregates the high-quality-but-off-site stuff. Let's try to put more outlinks there. Also I removed the stuff on Support that was not support, and some misc changes to clean stuff up.
Closes https://github.com/facebook/react-native/pull/8329

Differential Revision: D3471669

Pulled By: JoelMarcey

fbshipit-source-id: 54edd543ced1b3a8f3d0baca5475ac96bae6e487

* Add React Native Web Player to most component basics

Summary:
> ListView is not supported by React Native Web as of yet, so it will not have it.
Closes https://github.com/facebook/react-native/pull/8331

Differential Revision: D3472019

Pulled By: lacker

fbshipit-source-id: e5fb430b6c8f4d437943c159beb00b9d9252c92d

* Update Navigator component doc

Summary:
Related to #8203 to update the Navigator component reference doc.

**Test plan (required)**

Started up the website and checked:
http://localhost:8079/react-native/docs/navigator.html

![component_navigator_2](https://cloud.githubusercontent.com/assets/691109/16280426/3f2cdc32-3874-11e6-810b-ca34d7bd4972.png)

**Note**

The code is not Flow-ified so depended on jsdoc formatting to get the method parameter types. There's a current issue with handling optional types via react-docgen which parses components. There's an open PR to look into this: https://github.com/reactjs/react-docgen/pull/89. When that's resolved the `replaceAtIndex` method parameter type that's documented for `cb` needs to be updated to make it optional.
Closes https://github.com/facebook/react-native/pull/8318

Differential Revision: D3471185

Pulled By: JoelMarcey

fbshipit-source-id: 99f85ee2ab00dc200cf2812cce5b3ccec743d6a0

* fix Firefox bug

Summary:
The motivation is that the getting started page was not working in some cases in Firefox.

This line of code appears to be at best a no-op, at worst fails in Firefox, since "event" is undefined.
Closes https://github.com/facebook/react-native/pull/8335

Differential Revision: D3473333

Pulled By: JoelMarcey

fbshipit-source-id: 40581e83126675aa072c6ee25609cfb787015ce7

* Fix guides docs to es2015 classes and remove flowtype from Animation example

Summary:
1. Animation guide page is the only place where Flowtype is used, it would be better to remove it to prevent some confusion.

2. ES2015 classes in guidelines docs pages and fixed some typos

**Test plan (required)**

Should i write any tests for this?
Closes https://github.com/facebook/react-native/pull/8339

Differential Revision: D3474192

Pulled By: bestander

fbshipit-source-id: 5531d1e399eaed0952732ac2e0bd1effc72d00a8

* Update Views API documentation

Summary:
Ensure all `props` have documentation. Add more details to current `props`.
Provide more information to the API in general.

> Would like to try to integrate the React Native Web Player for the initial
> example, but not right now.
Closes https://github.com/facebook/react-native/pull/8341

Differential Revision: D3475105

Pulled By: caabernathy

fbshipit-source-id: 00ad30b2359831740715517278bec1d0231e089d

* Fixes #8252: Document how to connect to a non-default packager port o…

Summary:
Added some documentation to the `RunningOnDeviceAndroid.md` with screenshots to set custom port
Closes https://github.com/facebook/react-native/pull/8355

Differential Revision: D3475846

Pulled By: mkonicek

fbshipit-source-id: 73675b19e2bb93c859bda239f228da0883f0e305

* Add docs pages for basics: Dimensions and Layout

Summary:
These pages should sufficiently give a beginner enough information to make most layouts in React Native. They should go after the basics-style page, whenever that is ready.

Having a single page for Layout was too much, so I split it into two: Dimensions and Layout.

![dimensions react native a framework for building native apps using react](https://cloud.githubusercontent.com/assets/1198882/16311045/c6918b64-3923-11e6-8cc9-daeda9eb40e6.png)

![layout react native a framework for building native apps using react](https://cloud.githubusercontent.com/assets/1198882/16310233/9a66405a-3920-11e6-9ef6-1594f7228e83.png)

lacker
Closes https://github.com/facebook/react-native/pull/8364

Differential Revision: D3477147

Pulled By: lacker

fbshipit-source-id: 1ef31ac0a64e43166a7581b38fa8263282672eeb

* ES6-ify ListView Basics

Summary:
Fixes #8184
Closes https://github.com/facebook/react-native/pull/8370

Differential Revision: D3477196

Pulled By: caabernathy

fbshipit-source-id: 929f84b3f8edaf03f918bb04fb9dbb48b4884b18

* Fix nits in update View API documentation

Summary:
Ref comments in #8341

Ref #8203
Closes https://github.com/facebook/react-native/pull/8361

Differential Revision: D3477174

Pulled By: caabernathy

fbshipit-source-id: 495011c2d370d06d355e966d6ba2c52880146183

* ES6-ify ScrollView basics

Summary: Closes https://github.com/facebook/react-native/pull/8368

Differential Revision: D3477381

Pulled By: caabernathy

fbshipit-source-id: 0c43a9b8309db8f268a2776ebff2b4e52df559df

* ES6-ify View Basics

Summary: Closes https://github.com/facebook/react-native/pull/8366

Differential Revision: D3477409

Pulled By: caabernathy

fbshipit-source-id: 5906e8dffc7884a6ed527fada5f907702a72c08f

* ES6-ify Image Basics

Summary: Closes https://github.com/facebook/react-native/pull/8365

Differential Revision: D3477411

Pulled By: caabernathy

fbshipit-source-id: 26214fcf13c9e1352e198f34fcd6f5e88f1fe2da

* ES6-ify TextInput Basics

Summary: Closes https://github.com/facebook/react-native/pull/8367

Differential Revision: D3477404

Pulled By: caabernathy

fbshipit-source-id: 16c279853b5c7a2d24033ef0d987da52dd148b24

* ES6-ify Text Basics

Summary: Closes https://github.com/facebook/react-native/pull/8363

Differential Revision: D3477431

Pulled By: caabernathy

fbshipit-source-id: 86ee5efb84e50609fbfae82102b1dc61fea69f05

* Update NavigatorIOS component doc

Summary:
Reference: #8203

Changes made:

- Added more to the intro section and updated the intro examples to ES6
- Added more details to prop explanations
- Added parameter descriptions for methods

**Test plan (required)**

Ran the website locally and checked: http://localhost:8079/react-native/docs/navigatorios.html

![component_navigatorios_2](https://cloud.githubusercontent.com/assets/691109/16315939/1501ba2a-3939-11e6-8ec0-54b43e03b323.png)
Closes https://github.com/facebook/react-native/pull/8334

Differential Revision: D3476066

Pulled By: JoelMarcey

fbshipit-source-id: 9fcefe3f9d59008d8c72683c57cb004d1f185f62

* Update webview doc

Summary:
Reference: #8203

Changes made:

Added a webview example to the intro section
Added more details to prop explanations
Test plan (required)

Ran the website locally and checked: http://localhost:8079/react-native/docs/webview.html

![component_webview_2](https://cloud.githubusercontent.com/assets/691109/16316552/f6847c56-393b-11e6-8fdd-a0b61e7f787b.png)
Closes https://github.com/facebook/react-native/pull/8372

Differential Revision: D3477685

Pulled By: JoelMarcey

fbshipit-source-id: a624f5c6c12a8367aea2a6e7c2e520da7a074bbd

* Move everything out of Known Issues and into more appropriate locations.

Summary:
Two of the known issues have been moved to the issue tracker:

* #8315
* #8316

Others have been moved into more appropriate locations, such as the `TextInput` issue to the API doc itself, and the React debugging issue to the Debugging doc.

The Android-specific compatibility concerns have been dropped entirely as it does not seem like people would find these in the docs.
Closes https://github.com/facebook/react-native/pull/8321

Differential Revision: D3477999

Pulled By: JoelMarcey

fbshipit-source-id: dfffc9910ebf5514eb14c6aa8a9a3e70761db874

* Make a new "Style" doc that's in The Basics and uses the RNWP

Summary:
The example uses StyleSheet.create and also arrays-of-styles. I think this covers everything the old one did, but in simple-enough-for-the-basics form, so I removed the old one. I also reordered so that "Style -> Dimensions -> Layout" is the flow for learning "Styley" things.
Closes https://github.com/facebook/react-native/pull/8379

Differential Revision: D3478384

Pulled By: caabernathy

fbshipit-source-id: 158f0f0367c8eb8b2b24feda0d8d7a533fd7af4d

* Add `extends Component` to Dimensions and Layout Basics Examples

Summary:
It works without out the `extends`, but I do not really understand why,
unless there is some magic implicit `extends` if you don't put it and
you call `registerComponent`. But, I figure we should be explicit unless
there is a good reason not to be.
Closes https://github.com/facebook/react-native/pull/8377

Differential Revision: D3478950

Pulled By: JoelMarcey

fbshipit-source-id: 05ea4367c3c8c34aea6c092639ee51d8761bca3f

* Bring out prop descriptions, for Flexbox

Summary:
For Flexbox API docs would like to tease out the prop descriptions. This PR makes that feasible by exposing the description for style.

**Test plan (required)**

1. Temporarily modified the flexbox source doc: Libraries/StyleSheet/LayoutPropTypes.js to add a description.
2. Checked it out on local webpage: http://localhost:8079/react-native/docs/flexbox.html

![style_prop_descriptions](https://cloud.githubusercontent.com/assets/691109/16321579/866b186e-3952-11e6-823a-2d38132bd553.png)
Closes https://github.com/facebook/react-native/pull/8382

Differential Revision: D3478796

Pulled By: lacker

fbshipit-source-id: 49f3b7876ff1ccec9ee837921a78ee0dfb915453

* Update web player in docs for custom registerComponent names

Summary:
In the web player in the docs, allows `AppRegistry.registerComponent('name', App)` to use *anything* for `'name'`. It is ignored by the web player - last registration wins.
Closes https://github.com/facebook/react-native/pull/8383

Differential Revision: D3478922

Pulled By: JoelMarcey

fbshipit-source-id: 3d1d96e0ad41216d29134ba384896e86d0cd2b32

* Networking Guide

Summary:
Simplified Networking Guide, based on the old Network polyfill doc.

This guide strongly recommends using fetch, while still informing the user about React Native's support for other libraries.

In order to provide an actual working networking example, a `movies.json` file is added at the root of the site, allowing the user to fetch a small blob of JSON:

```
fetch('http://facebook.github.io/react-native/movies.json')
```

![networking](https://cloud.githubusercontent.com/assets/165856/16321804/d2bd7c6a-3953-11e6-9fc5-30baaa38d7a4.png)
Closes https://github.com/facebook/react-native/pull/8381

Differential Revision: D3479018

Pulled By: lacker

fbshipit-source-id: 1f2078bf2414a13f7f77d5af55b08948909093a3

* Move Component Embedded Simulator next to its example

Summary:
Right now the embedded simulator is always at the top right corner.
This can be confusing as to what code is associated with the simulation.

So, move the simulator next to its actual code.

This has the added benefit of allowing us to use the React Native
Web Player for the simpler examples in the components.
Closes https://github.com/facebook/react-native/pull/8384

Differential Revision: D3479056

Pulled By: bestander

fbshipit-source-id: f400d8387ec771b94d5e798c1e955b25f9a0f1bf

* fix bugs on landing page code, make the url an easter egg

Summary:
This is just improving a bit of lameness on the homepage - Devin pointed out the <>'s don't work within a Text tag, so I removed them, and someone else pointed out that nonexistent fake urls are suboptimal, so I improved that too.
Closes https://github.com/facebook/react-native/pull/8387

Differential Revision: D3479087

Pulled By: JoelMarcey

fbshipit-source-id: 45a2d21a9073b58b869e8b344550c28f849e0185

* Api documentation update for modal.js

Summary:
Related to #8203 to update the Modal API reference doc.

**Test plan (required)**

Started up the website and checked:
http://localhost:8079/react-native/docs/modal.html

![modal update](https://cloud.githubusercontent.com/assets/23874/16316792/ecde19cc-393c-11e6-8136-16243a199d9b.png)

**Note, copied from a previous PR**

The code is not Flow-ified so depended on jsdoc formatting to get the method parameter types. There's a current issue with handling optional types via react-docgen which parses components. There's an open PR to look into this: https://github.com/reactjs/react-docgen/pull/89. When that's resolved the `replaceAtIndex` method parameter type that's documented for `cb` needs to be updated to make it optional.
Closes https://github.com/facebook/react-native/pull/8375

Differential Revision: D3479536

Pulled By: caabernathy

fbshipit-source-id: de2db3aa221e4adce0c0c5f3d94a1fad528a60da

* Update MapView doc

Summary:
Reference: #8203

Changes made:

- Added a MapView example to the intro section
- Added more details to prop explanations
- Added more info to an exported type, even if it's not used anywhere I can see
- Removed mention of ios platform in props. Left an android one in there as I didn't want to touch code.

**Test plan (required)**

Ran the website locally and checked: http://localhost:8079/react-native/docs/mapview.html

![component_mapview_2](https://cloud.githubusercontent.com/assets/691109/16329753/43419508-3999-11e6-9310-11c53ca8c04b.png)
Closes https://github.com/facebook/react-native/pull/8389

Differential Revision: D3481609

Pulled By: JoelMarcey

fbshipit-source-id: 71e35ce49193dc09d40546ff16bc48559135d63f

* Accessing console logs

Summary:
Instructions for accessing the output of a `console.log`.

![debugging](https://cloud.githubusercontent.com/assets/165856/16318119/7aff884e-3942-11e6-9a78-853aaba68308.png)
Closes https://github.com/facebook/react-native/pull/8323

Differential Revision: D3480718

Pulled By: JoelMarcey

fbshipit-source-id: 4185d2e730277b8ad986d3c8904420e7ae1ceb21

* Add Navigation Overview

Summary:
Initial stab at writing a high level guide on navigation. Its main focus is on Navigator due to it being cross-platform and fairly simple to use.

This guide should be expanded to cover tabbed applications in a future pull request.

The Navigation (Experimental) section will be similarly expanded upon as the API stabilizes.

![navigation](https://cloud.githubusercontent.com/assets/165856/16324560/52b508dc-396a-11e6-94b7-b2d1175f69e0.png)
Closes https://github.com/facebook/react-native/pull/8390

Differential Revision: D3480304

Pulled By: caabernathy

fbshipit-source-id: 280da9185fca295bc107a2df20106c783b461be7

* Update AsyncStorage doc

Summary:
Relates to #8203 for AsyncStorage API update.

- Added a small example to the intro section.
- Added jsdoc format tags to show up class description, parameter descriptions.
- Word-smithed many of the method descriptions.

I also made a bug fix to the autogen. It wasn't handling the scenario where a method may have no parameters.

**Test plan (required)**

Wrote a small sample app to test the snippet added to the intro section.

Ran website locally: http://localhost:8079/react-native/docs/asyncstorage.html

![api_asyncstorage](https://cloud.githubusercontent.com/assets/691109/16329457/84f9d69c-3997-11e6-9e68-3a475df90377.png)

Ran changed files through the linter.
Closes https://github.com/facebook/react-native/pull/8396

Differential Revision: D3481783

Pulled By: JoelMarcey

fbshipit-source-id: ebc4b9695482ada8a3455e621534d2a7fb11edf4

* Fix errors related to typehint when generating docs

Summary:
After pulling in AsyncStorage doc changes, getting typehint errors when running docs. This fixes that issue.

**Test plan (required)**

Opened http://localhost:8079/react-native/index.html

Clicked around. No errors. Also successfully ran:

```
node server/generate.js
```
Closes https://github.com/facebook/react-native/pull/8412

Differential Revision: D3482007

Pulled By: JoelMarcey

fbshipit-source-id: 7b0da2b2b38fd1f1bdec1b7c810ee70c536dd2bb

* Update Image API

Summary:
- Provide runnable examples
- Add more details to properties and jsdoc-ify the methods

Ref #8203
Closes https://github.com/facebook/react-native/pull/8413

Differential Revision: D3482168

Pulled By: caabernathy

fbshipit-source-id: 04fce5133317af282cced5850a53858e3f5b72f2

* Replace NavigatorComparison with the new Navigation guide.

Summary:
Several external sites link back to docs/navigator-comparison.html when talking about React Native's navigation. The Navigation guide added in #8390 is meant to replace this content, but it was added at docs/navigation.html.

This pull request removes the comparison guide and replaces it with the Navigation guide's content. There is no content update in this PR. For review purposes, note that the next link from the previous document (JS Environment) has been updated to point to navigator-comparison, and the content of the Navigation guide remain unchanged from #8390.
Closes https://github.com/facebook/react-native/pull/8417

Differential Revision: D3482273

Pulled By: caabernathy

fbshipit-source-id: 9e04e11a5829d48541f8612fb65c01fe319e768b

* Overhaul the Flexbox documentation

Summary: Closes https://github.com/facebook/react-native/pull/8395

Differential Revision: D3482652

Pulled By: lacker

fbshipit-source-id: 0bf8955341221b74f69ba24dcf5ab332c910a52c

* Update TextInput API

Summary:
- Make the examples runnable (both copy/paste and with the web player)
- Add a bit more information in props where needed.
Closes https://github.com/facebook/react-native/pull/8392

Differential Revision: D3482747

Pulled By: caabernathy

fbshipit-source-id: 8f2d812efc1efb3f14db45b5c054ce0d5c14f5f5

* Make "The Basics" flow like a linear tutorial

Summary: Closes https://github.com/facebook/react-native/pull/8429

Differential Revision: D3487369

Pulled By: lacker

fbshipit-source-id: 59b32f2a2a67370192c91dc43da3d4b76a43b810

* map -> object

Summary: Closes https://github.com/facebook/react-native/pull/8450

Differential Revision: D3488018

fbshipit-source-id: a30269c89e87b546f77da7a32b1c4c65d978459d

* Make the method signatures stand out more

Summary:
And more delineated from other parts of the method
information.

Hopefully this makes it easier to parse through.
Closes https://github.com/facebook/react-native/pull/8421

Differential Revision: D3488251

Pulled By: JoelMarcey

fbshipit-source-id: 44f2ed00b16849396cac94fd46567eaab48c50f3

* Use npmcdn in docs instead of rawgit for web player

Summary:
Switch web player cdn to npmcdn per discussion with lacker. This will make the url agnostic to who owns the git repo.
Closes https://github.com/facebook/react-native/pull/8426

Differential Revision: D3488755

Pulled By: lacker

fbshipit-source-id: b54dd4428a48c8a5a15b0b38ee0564d119916f9b

* Update instructions for pointing Gradle to Android SDK

Summary:
Closes #8439
Closes https://github.com/facebook/react-native/pull/8446

Differential Revision: D3489034

fbshipit-source-id: 7cb50a43e64e216512294eaec06690dc9f3d6895

* Update RunningOnDeviceAndroid.md

Summary:
Add note associating error message to "adb reverse" command. When I first ran a React Native app on my Android phone, I received a cryptic "bridge configuration isn't available" error. After some research, I discovered that the "adb reverse" command mentioned further down on the page resolved the problem.
Closes https://github.com/facebook/react-native/pull/7725

Differential Revision: D3491577

Pulled By: JoelMarcey

fbshipit-source-id: 34c580acd6bf3e7788b674bd0b41bc5a1023b010

* improve text input docs

Summary:
Not a big deal, I was just going through the tutorial trying to figure out which doc was the most boring, and improve it a bit. IMO now the example is slightly funnier, and it mentions onSubmitEditing which in practice is probably a more useful callback.
Closes https://github.com/facebook/react-native/pull/8447

Differential Revision: D3491938

Pulled By: JoelMarcey

fbshipit-source-id: 3bd0f5762dc4db4a85c9d5badb6c005f4b8c52f4

* Update Text Component

Summary:
This updates the documentation for the `Text` component itself and the embedded `Text.md` that goes with it.

- React Native Web Player
- Document all props
  - NOTE: I actually added a new prop to `Text` called `accessible` since it was set by default and thus shown in the Props list
    in the original documentation (but with an empty description).
- Stylistic fixes
Closes https://github.com/facebook/react-native/pull/8445

Differential Revision: D3493112

Pulled By: JoelMarcey

fbshipit-source-id: b428d4eb09065db5c6cb1ae5524ad22084fd2a82

* Fix TextInput API update nits

Summary:
Ref: 7e7c2b5d57 (r68444537)

Ref: 7e7c2b5d57 (r68444442)
Closes https://github.com/facebook/react-native/pull/8476

Differential Revision: D3494641

Pulled By: JoelMarcey

fbshipit-source-id: 9a75ff66ccb895deb2f5027bdffe5d5bfe898e41
2016-06-29 03:25:02 -07:00

14 KiB

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performance Performance docs Guides docs/performance.html upgrading

A compelling reason for using React Native instead of WebView-based tools is to achieve 60 FPS and a native look & feel to your apps. Where possible, we would like for React Native to do the right thing and help you to focus on your app instead of performance optimization, but there are areas where we're not quite there yet, and others where React Native (similar to writing native code directly) cannot possibly determine the best way to optimize for you and so manual intervention will be necessary.

This guide is intended to teach you some basics to help you to troubleshoot performance issues, as well as discuss common sources of problems and their suggested solutions.

What you need to know about frames

Your grandparents' generation called movies "moving pictures" for a reason: realistic motion in video is an illusion created by quickly changing static images at a consistent speed. We refer to each of these images as frames. The number of frames that is displayed each second has a direct impact on how smooth and ultimately life-like a video (or user interface) seems to be. iOS devices display 60 frames per second, which gives you and the UI system about 16.67ms to do all of the work needed to generate the static image (frame) that the user will see on the screen for that interval. If you are unable to do the work necessary to generate that frame within the allotted 16.67ms, then you will "drop a frame" and the UI will appear unresponsive.

Now to confuse the matter a little bit, open up the developer menu in your app and toggle Show FPS Monitor. You will notice that there are two different frame rates.

JavaScript frame rate

For most React Native applications, your business logic will run on the JavaScript thread. This is where your React application lives, API calls are made, touch events are processed, etc... Updates to native-backed views are batched and sent over to the native side at the end of each iteration of the event loop, before the frame deadline (if all goes well). If the JavaScript thread is unresponsive for a frame, it will be considered a dropped frame. For example, if you were to call this.setState on the root component of a complex application and it resulted in re-rendering computationally expensive component subtrees, it's conceivable that this might take 200ms and result in 12 frames being dropped. Any animations controlled by JavaScript would appear to freeze during that time. If anything takes longer than 100ms, the user will feel it.

This often happens during Navigator transitions: when you push a new route, the JavaScript thread needs to render all of the components necessary for the scene in order to send over the proper commands to the native side to create the backing views. It's common for the work being done here to take a few frames and cause jank because the transition is controlled by the JavaScript thread. Sometimes components will do additional work on componentDidMount, which might result in a second stutter in the transition.

Another example is responding to touches: if you are doing work across multiple frames on the JavaScript thread, you might notice a delay in responding to TouchableOpacity, for example. This is because the JavaScript thread is busy and cannot process the raw touch events sent over from the main thread. As a result, TouchableOpacity cannot react to the touch events and command the native view to adjust its opacity.

Main thread (aka UI thread) frame rate

Many people have noticed that performance of NavigatorIOS is better out of the box than Navigator. The reason for this is that the animations for the transitions are done entirely on the main thread, and so they are not interrupted by frame drops on the JavaScript thread. (Read about why you should probably use Navigator anyways.)

Similarly, you can happily scroll up and down through a ScrollView when the JavaScript thread is locked up because the ScrollView lives on the main thread (the scroll events are dispatched to the JS thread though, but their receipt is not necessary for the scroll to occur).

Common sources of performance problems

Console.log statements

When running a bundled app, these statements can cause a big bottleneck in the JavaScript thread. This includes calls from debugging libraries such as redux-logger, so make sure to remove them before bundling.

Development mode (dev=true)

JavaScript thread performance suffers greatly when running in dev mode. This is unavoidable: a lot more work needs to be done at runtime to provide you with good warnings and error messages, such as validating propTypes and various other assertions.

Slow navigator transitions

As mentioned above, Navigator animations are controlled by the JavaScript thread. Imagine the "push from right" scene transition: each frame, the new scene is moved from the right to left, starting offscreen (let's say at an x-offset of 320) and ultimately settling when the scene sits at an x-offset of 0. Each frame during this transition, the JavaScript thread needs to send a new x-offset to the main thread. If the JavaScript thread is locked up, it cannot do this and so no update occurs on that frame and the animation stutters.

Part of the long-term solution to this is to allow for JavaScript-based animations to be offloaded to the main thread. If we were to do the same thing as in the above example with this approach, we might calculate a list of all x-offsets for the new scene when we are starting the transition and send them to the main thread to execute in an optimized way. Now that the JavaScript thread is freed of this responsibility, it's not a big deal if it drops a few frames while rendering the scene -- you probably won't even notice because you will be too distracted by the pretty transition.

Unfortunately this solution is not yet implemented, and so in the meantime we should use the InteractionManager to selectively render the minimal amount of content necessary for the new scene as long as the animation is in progress. InteractionManager.runAfterInteractions takes a callback as its only argument, and that callback is fired when the navigator transition is complete (each animation from the Animated API also notifies the InteractionManager, but that's beyond the scope of this discussion).

Your scene component might look something like this:

class ExpensiveScene extends React.Component {
  constructor(props, context) {
    super(props, context);
    this.state = {renderPlaceholderOnly: true};
  }

  componentDidMount() {
    InteractionManager.runAfterInteractions(() => {
      this.setState({renderPlaceholderOnly: false});
    });
  }

  render() {
    if (this.state.renderPlaceholderOnly) {
      return this._renderPlaceholderView();
    }

    return (
      <View>
        <Text>Your full view goes here</Text>
      </View>
    );
  }


  _renderPlaceholderView() {
    return (
      <View>
        <Text>Loading...</Text>
      </View>
    );
  }
};

You don't need to be limited to rendering some loading indicator, you could alternatively render part of your content -- for example, when you load the Facebook app you see a placeholder news feed item with grey rectangles where text will be. If you are rendering a Map in your new scene, you might want to display a grey placeholder view or a spinner until the transition is complete as this can actually cause frames to be dropped on the main thread.

ListView initial rendering is too slow or scroll performance is bad for large lists

This is an issue that comes up frequently because iOS ships with UITableView which gives you very good performance by re-using underlying UIViews. Work is in progress to do something similar with React Native, but until then we have some tools at our disposal to help us tweak the performance to suit our needs. It may not be possible to get all the way there, but a little bit of creativity and experimentation with these options can go a long way.

initialListSize

This prop specifies how many rows we want to render on our first render pass. If we are concerned with getting something on screen as quickly as possible, we could set the initialListSize to 1, and we'll quickly see other rows fill in on subsequent frames. The number of rows per frame is determined by the pageSize.

pageSize

After the initial render where initialListSize is used, ListView looks at the pageSize to determine how many rows to render per frame. The default here is 1 -- but if your views are very small and inexpensive to render, you might want to bump this up. Tweak it and find what works for your use case.

scrollRenderAheadDistance

"How early to start rendering rows before they come on screen, in pixels."

If we had a list with 2000 items and rendered them all immediately that would be a poor use of both memory and computational resources. It would also probably cause some pretty awful jank. So the scrollRenderAhead distance allows us to specify how far beyond the current viewport we should continue to render rows.

removeClippedSubviews

"When true, offscreen child views (whose overflow value is hidden) are removed from their native backing superview when offscreen. This can improve scrolling performance on long lists. The default value is true."(The default value is false before version 0.14-rc).

This is an extremely important optimization to apply on large ListViews. On Android the overflow value is always hidden so you don't need to worry about setting it, but on iOS you need to be sure to set overflow: hidden on row containers.

My component renders too slowly and I don't need it all immediately

It's common at first to overlook ListView, but using it properly is often key to achieving solid performance. As discussed above, it provides you with a set of tools that lets you split rendering of your view across various frames and tweak that behavior to fit your specific needs. Remember that ListView can be horizontal too.

JS FPS plunges when re-rendering a view that hardly changes

If you are using a ListView, you must provide a rowHasChanged function that can reduce a lot of work by quickly determining whether or not a row needs to be re-rendered. If you are using immutable data structures, this would be as simple as a reference equality check.

Similarly, you can implement shouldComponentUpdate and indicate the exact conditions under which you would like the component to re-render. If you write pure components (where the return value of the render function is entirely dependent on props and state), you can leverage PureRenderMixin to do this for you. Once again, immutable data structures are useful to keep this fast -- if you have to do a deep comparison of a large list of objects, it may be that re-rendering your entire component would be quicker, and it would certainly require less code.

Dropping JS thread FPS because of doing a lot of work on the JavaScript thread at the same time

"Slow Navigator transitions" is the most common manifestation of this, but there are other times this can happen. Using InteractionManager can be a good approach, but if the user experience cost is too high to delay work during an animation, then you might want to consider LayoutAnimation.

The Animated api currently calculates each keyframe on-demand on the JavaScript thread, while LayoutAnimation leverages Core Animation and is unaffected by JS thread and main thread frame drops.

One case where I have used this is for animating in a modal (sliding down from top and fading in a translucent overlay) while initializing and perhaps receiving responses for several network requests, rendering the contents of the modal, and updating the view where the modal was opened from. See the Animations guide for more information about how to use LayoutAnimation.

Caveats:

  • LayoutAnimation only works for fire-and-forget animations ("static" animations) -- if it must be be interruptible, you will need to use Animated.

Moving a view on the screen (scrolling, translating, rotating) drops UI thread FPS

This is especially true when you have text with a transparent background positioned on top of an image, or any other situation where alpha compositing would be required to re-draw the view on each frame. You will find that enabling shouldRasterizeIOS or renderToHardwareTextureAndroid can help with this significantly.

Be careful not to overuse this or your memory usage could go through the roof. Profile your performance and memory usage when using these props. If you don't plan to move a view anymore, turn this property off.

Animating the size of an image drops UI thread FPS

On iOS, each time you adjust the width or height of an Image component it is re-cropped and scaled from the original image. This can be very expensive, especially for large images. Instead, use the transform: [{scale}] style property to animate the size. An example of when you might do this is when you tap an image and zoom it in to full screen.

My TouchableX view isn't very responsive

Sometimes, if we do an action in the same frame that we are adjusting the opacity or highlight of a component that is responding to a touch, we won't see that effect until after the onPress function has returned. If onPress does a setState that results in a lot of work and a few frames dropped, this may occur. A solution to this is to wrap any action inside of your onPress handler in requestAnimationFrame:

handleOnPress() {
  // Always use TimerMixin with requestAnimationFrame, setTimeout and
  // setInterval
  this.requestAnimationFrame(() => {
    this.doExpensiveAction();
  });
}

Profiling

Use the built-in Profiler to get detailed information about work done in the JavaScript thread and main thread side-by-side.

For iOS, Instruments are an invaluable tool, and on Android you should learn to use systrace.