:bell: Customisable in-app notification component for React Native
The basic look of react-native-in-app-notification
:
What you can make react-native-in-app-notification
do with a customised component:
yarn add react-native-in-app-notification
OR
npm install react-native-in-app-notification --save
For Android you need to add the VIBRATE
permission to your app AndroidManifest.xml
<manifest xmlns:android="http://schemas.android.com/apk/res/android"
package="your.app.package.name">
<uses-permission android:name="android.permission.INTERNET" />
<uses-permission android:name="android.permission.SYSTEM_ALERT_WINDOW"/>
<!-- Required by react-native-in-app-notification -->
<uses-permission android:name="android.permission.VIBRATE" />
...
</manifest>
version | RN |
---|---|
>=3.0.0 | >= 0.54.0 |
<3.0.0 | >= 0.43.4 |
Prop Name | Prop Description | Data Type | Required | Default |
---|---|---|---|---|
closeInterval | How long the notification stays visible | Number | No | 4000 |
openCloseDuration | The length of the open / close animation | Number | No | 200 |
height | The height of the Notification component | Number | No | 80 |
backgroundColour | The background colour of the Notification component | String | No | white |
iconApp | App Icon | ImageSourcePropType | No | null |
notificationBodyComponent | See below about NotificationBody | React Node or Function | Recommended | ./DefaultNotificationBody |
The notification body is what is rendered inside the main Notification component and gives you the ability to customise how the notification looks. You can use the default notification body component in ./DefaultNotificationBody.js
as inspiration and guidance.
Your notificationBodyComponent
component is given five props:
Prop Name | Prop Description | Data Type | Default |
---|---|---|---|
title | The title passed to NotificationRef.show |
String | '' |
message | The message passed to NotificationRef.show |
String | '' |
onPress | The callback passed to NotificationRef.show |
Function | null |
icon | Icon for notification passed to NotificationRef.show |
ImageSourcePropType | null |
vibrate | Vibrate on show notification passed to NotificationRef.show |
Boolean | true |
additionalProps | Any additional props passed to NotificationBodyComponent |
Object | null |
Adding react-native-in-app-notification
is simple;
Just wrap you main App
component with the InAppNotificationProvider
component exported from this module.
import { InAppNotificationProvider } from 'react-native-in-app-notification';
import App from './App.js';
class AppWithNotifications extends Component {
render() {
return (
<InAppNotificationProvider>
<App />
</InAppNotificationProvider>
);
}
}
When you want to show the notification, just wrap the component which needs to display a notification with the withInAppNotification
HOC and call the .showNotification
methods from its props.
.showNotification
can take four arguments (all of which are optional):
title
message
onPress
additionalProps
N.B: you should probably include at least one of title
or message
!
onPress
doesn't need to be used for passive notifications and you can use onClose
in your NotificationBody
component to allow your users to close the notification.
additionalProps
can be used to pass arbitory props to NotificationBody
component. Can be accessed in NotificationBody
component via props.additionalProps
.
import React, { Component } from 'react';
import { View, Text, TouchableHighlight } from 'react-native';
import { withInAppNotification } from 'react-native-in-app-notification';
class MyApp extends Component {
render() {
return (
<View>
<Text>This is my app</Text>
<TouchableHighlight
onPress={() => {
this.props.showNotification({
title: 'You pressed it!',
message: 'The notification has been triggered',
onPress: () => Alert.alert('Alert', 'You clicked the notification!'),
additionalProps: { type: 'error' },
});
}}
>
<Text>Click me to trigger a notification</Text>
</TouchableHighlight>
</View>
);
}
}
export default withInAppNotification(MyApp);