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Appendix

caution

This documentation is still experimental and details are subject to changes as we iterate. Feel free to share your feedback on the discussion inside the working group for this page.

Moreover, it contains several manual steps. Please note that this won't be representative of the final developer experience once the New Architecture is stable. We're working on tools, templates and libraries to help you get started fast on the New Architecture, without having to go through the whole setup.

I. Terminology​

The whole New Architecture related guides will stick to the following terminology:

  • Legacy Native Components - To refer to Components which are running on the old React Native architecture.
  • Legacy Native Modules - To refer to Modules which are running on the old React Native architecture.
  • Fabric Native Components - To refer to Components which have been adapted to work well with the New Architecture, namely the new renderer. For brevity you might find them referred as Fabric Components.
  • Turbo Native Modules - To refer to Modules which have been adapted to work well with the New Architecture, namely the new Native Module System. For brevity you might find them referred as Turbo Modules

II. Flow Type to Native Type Mapping​

You may use the following table as a reference for which types are supported and what they map to in each platform:

string​

Nullable Support??string
Android (Java)String
iOSNSString

boolean​

Nullable Support??boolean
Android (Java)Boolean
iOSNSNumber

Object literal​

This is recommended over using plain Object, for type safety.

Example: {| foo: string, ... |}

Nullable Support??{| foo: string, ...|}
Android (Java)-
iOS-

Object​

note

Recommended to use Object literal instead.

Nullable Support??Object
Android (Java)ReadableMap
iOS@ (untyped dictionary)

Array<*>​

Nullable Support??Array<*>
Android (Java)ReadableArray
iOSNSArray (or RCTConvertVecToArray when used inside objects)

Function​

Nullable Support??Function
Android (Java)-
iOS-

Promise<*>​

Nullable Support??Promise<*>
Android (Java)com.facebook.react.bridge.Promise
iOSRCTPromiseResolve and RCTPromiseRejectBlock

Type Unions​

Type unions are only supported as callbacks.

Example: 'SUCCESS' | 'FAIL'

Nullable Support?Only as callbacks.
Android (Java)-
iOS-

Callbacks​

Callback functions are not type checked, and are generalized as Objects.

Example: () =>

Nullable Support?Yes
Android (Java)com.facebook.react.bridge.Callback
iOSRCTResponseSenderBlock
note

You may also find it useful to refer to the JavaScript specifications for the core modules in React Native. These are located inside the Libraries/ directory in the React Native repository.

III. TypeScript to Native Type Mapping​

You may use the following table as a reference for which types are supported and what they map to in each platform:

string​

Nullable Support?string | null
Android (Java)String
iOSNSString

boolean​

Nullable Support?boolean | null
Android (Java)Boolean
iOSNSNumber

number​

Nullable Support?No
Android (Java)double
iOSNSNumber

Object literal​

This is recommended over using plain Object, for type safety.

Example: {| foo: string, ... |}

Nullable Support?{| foo: string, ...|} | null
Android (Java)-
iOS-

Object​

note

Recommended to use Object literal instead.

Nullable Support?Object | null
Android (Java)ReadableMap
iOS@ (untyped dictionary)

Array<*>​

Nullable Support?Array<*> | null
Android (Java)ReadableArray
iOSNSArray (or RCTConvertVecToArray when used inside objects)

Function​

Nullable Support??Function | null
Android (Java)-
iOS-

Promise<*>​

Nullable Support?Promise<*> | null
Android (Java)com.facebook.react.bridge.Promise
iOSRCTPromiseResolve and RCTPromiseRejectBlock

Type Unions​

Type unions are only supported as callbacks.

Example: 'SUCCESS' | 'FAIL'

Nullable Support?Only as callbacks.
Android (Java)-
iOS-

Callbacks​

Callback functions are not type checked, and are generalized as Objects.

Example: () =>

Nullable Support?Yes
Android (Java)com.facebook.react.bridge.Callback
iOSRCTResponseSenderBlock

You may also find it useful to refer to the JavaScript specifications for the core modules in React Native. These are located inside the Libraries/ directory in the React Native repository.

IV. Invoking the code-gen during development​

This section contains information specific to v0.66 of React Native.

The Codegen is typically invoked at build time, but you may find it useful to generate your native interface code on demand for troubleshooting.

If you wish to invoke the codegen manually, you have two options:

  1. Invoking a Gradle task directly (Android).
  2. Invoking a script manually.

Android - Invoking a Gradle task directly​

You can trigger the Codegen by invoking the following task:

./gradlew generateCodegenArtifactsFromSchema --rerun-tasks

The extra --rerun-tasks flag is added to make sure Gradle is ignoring the UP-TO-DATE checks for this task. You should not need it during normal development.

The generateCodegenArtifactsFromSchema task normally runs before the preBuild task, so you should not need to invoke it manually, but it will be triggered before your builds.

Invoking the script manually​

Alternatively, you can invoke the Codegen directly, bypassing the Gradle Plugin or CocoaPods infrastructure. This can be done with the following commands.

The parameters to provide will look quite familiar to you now that you have already configured the Gradle plugin or CocoaPods library.

Generating the schema file​

First, you’ll need to generate a schema file from your JavaScript sources. You only need to do this whenever your JavaScript specs change. The script to generate this schema is provided as part of the react-native-codegen package. If running this from within your React Native application, you can use the package from node_modules directly:

node node_modules/react-native-codegen/lib/cli/combine/combine-js-to-schema-cli.js \
<output_file_schema_json> <javascript_sources_dir>

The source for the react-native-codegen is available in the React Native repository, under packages/react-native-codegen. Run yarn install and yarn build in that directory to build your own react-native-codegen package from source. In most cases, you will not want to do this as the guide assumes the use of the react-native-codegen package version that is associated with the relevant React Native nightly release.

Generating the native code artifacts​

Once you have a schema file for your native modules or components, you can use a second script to generate the actual native code artifacts for your library. You can use the same schema file generated by the previous script.

node node_modules/react-native/scripts/generate-specs-cli.js \
--platform <ios|android> \
--schemaPath <generated_schema_json_file> \
--outputDir <output_dir> \
[--libraryName library_name] \
[--javaPackageName java_package_name] \
[--libraryType all(default)|modules|components]

NOTE: The output artifacts of the Codegen are inside the build folder and should not be committed. They should be considered only for reference.

Example​

The following is a basic example of invoking the Codegen script to generate native iOS interface code for a library that provides native modules. The JavaScript spec sources for this library are located in a js/ subdirectory, and this library’s native code expects the native interfaces to be available in the ios subdirectory.

# Generate schema - only needs to be done whenever JS specs change
node node_modules/react-native-codegen/lib/cli/combine/combine-js-to-schema-cli.js /tmp/schema.json ./js

# Generate native code artifacts
node node_modules/react-native/scripts/generate-specs-cli.js \
--platform ios \
--schemaPath /tmp/schema.json \
--outputDir ./ios \
--libraryName MyLibSpecs \
--libraryType modules

In the above example, the code-gen script will generate several files: MyLibSpecs.h and MyLibSpecs-generated.mm, as well as a handful of .h and .cpp files, all located in the ios directory.

V. Note on Existing Apps​

This guide provides instructions for migrating an application that is based on the default app template that is provided by React Native. If your app has deviated from the template, or you are working with an application that was never based off the template, then the following sections might help.

Finding your bridge delegate​

This guide assumes that the AppDelegate is configured as the bridge delegate. If you are not sure which is your bridge delegate, then place a breakpoint in RCTBridge and RCTCxxBridge, run your app, and inspect self.delegate.