Getting Started
Installation
Open a Terminal in your project's folder and run,
yarn add react-native-paper
If you're on a vanilla React Native project, you also need to install and link react-native-vector-icons.
yarn add react-native-vector-icons
react-native link react-native-vector-icons
Note: If you are using react-native version 0.60 or higher you don't need to link react-native-vector-icons.
If you don't want to install vector icons, you can use babel-plugin-optional-require to opt-out.
If you use Expo, you don't need to install vector icons. But if you have a babel.config.js
or .babelrc
file, make sure that it includes babel-preset-expo
.
To get smaller bundle size by excluding modules you don't use, you can use our optional babel plugin. The plugin automatically rewrites the import statements so that only the modules you use are imported instead of the whole library. Add react-native-paper/babel
to the plugins
section in your babel.config.js
for production environment. It should look like this:
module.exports = {
presets: ['module:metro-react-native-babel-preset'],
env: {
production: {
plugins: ['react-native-paper/babel'],
},
},
};
If you created your project using Expo, it'll look something like this:
module.exports = function(api) {
api.cache(true);
return {
presets: ['babel-preset-expo'],
env: {
production: {
plugins: ['react-native-paper/babel'],
},
},
};
};
The plugin only works if you are importing the library using ES2015 import statements and not with require
.
Note: The above examples are for the latest react-native
using Babel 7. If you have react-native <= 0.55
, you'll have a .babelrc
file instead of a babel.config.js
file and the content of the file will be different.
If you're using Flow for typechecking your code, you need to add the following under the [options]
section in your .flowconfig
:
module.file_ext=.js
module.file_ext=.native.js
module.file_ext=.android.js
module.file_ext=.ios.js
Usage
Wrap your root component in Provider
from react-native-paper
. If you have a vanilla React Native project, it's a good idea to add it in the component which is passed to AppRegistry.registerComponent
. This will usually be in the index.js
file. If you have an Expo project, you can do this inside the exported component in the App.js
file.
Example:
import * as React from 'react';
import { AppRegistry } from 'react-native';
import { Provider as PaperProvider } from 'react-native-paper';
import { name as appName } from './app.json';
import App from './src/App';
export default function Main() {
return (
<PaperProvider>
<App />
</PaperProvider>
);
}
AppRegistry.registerComponent(appName, () => Main);
The PaperProvider
component provides the theme to all the components in the framework. It also acts as a portal to components which need to be rendered at the top level.
If you have another provider (such as Redux
), wrap it outside PaperProvider
so that the context is available to components rendered inside a Modal
from the library:
import * as React from 'react';
import { Provider as PaperProvider } from 'react-native-paper';
import { Provider as StoreProvider } from 'react-redux';
import App from './src/App';
import store from './store';
export default function Main() {
return (
<StoreProvider store={store}>
<PaperProvider>
<App />
</PaperProvider>
</StoreProvider>
);
}
Customization
You can provide a custom theme to customize the colors, fonts etc. with the Provider
component. Check the default theme to see what customization options are supported.
Example:
import * as React from 'react';
import { DefaultTheme, Provider as PaperProvider } from 'react-native-paper';
import App from './src/App';
const theme = {
...DefaultTheme,
colors: {
...DefaultTheme.colors,
primary: 'tomato',
accent: 'yellow',
},
};
export default function Main() {
return (
<PaperProvider theme={theme}>
<App />
</PaperProvider>
);
}