Handling Touches
Users interact with mobile apps mainly through touch. They can use a combination of gestures, such as tapping on a button, scrolling a list, or zooming on a map. React Native provides components to handle all sorts of common gestures, as well as a comprehensive gesture responder system to allow for more advanced gesture recognition, but the one component you will most likely be interested in is the basic Button.
Displaying a basic button
Button provides a basic button component that is rendered nicely on all platforms. The minimal example to display a button looks like this:
<Button
onPress={() => {
alert('You tapped the button!');
}}
title="Press Me"
/>
This will render a blue label on iOS, and a blue rounded rectangle with light text on Android. Pressing the button will call the "onPress" function, which in this case displays an alert popup. If you like, you can specify a "color" prop to change the color of your button.
Go ahead and play around with the Button
component using the example below. You can select which platform your app is previewed in by clicking on the toggle in the bottom right, then click on "Tap to Play" to preview the app.
Touchables
If the basic button doesn't look right for your app, you can build your own button using any of the "Touchable" components provided by React Native. The "Touchable" components provide the capability to capture tapping gestures, and can display feedback when a gesture is recognized. These components do not provide any default styling, however, so you will need to do a bit of work to get them looking nicely in your app.
Which "Touchable" component you use will depend on what kind of feedback you want to provide:
Generally, you can use TouchableHighlight anywhere you would use a button or link on web. The view's background will be darkened when the user presses down on the button.
You may consider using TouchableNativeFeedback on Android to display ink surface reaction ripples that respond to the user's touch.
TouchableOpacity can be used to provide feedback by reducing the opacity of the button, allowing the background to be seen through while the user is pressing down.
If you need to handle a tap gesture but you don't want any feedback to be displayed, use TouchableWithoutFeedback.
In some cases, you may want to detect when a user presses and holds a view for a set amount of time. These long presses can be handled by passing a function to the onLongPress
props of any of the "Touchable" components.
Let's see all of these in action:
Scrolling lists, swiping pages, and pinch-to-zoom
Another gesture commonly used in mobile apps is the swipe or pan. This gesture allows the user to scroll through a list of items, or swipe through pages of content. In order to handle these and other gestures, we'll learn how to use a ScrollView next.