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A well-tested, adaptable, lightweight <Popover> component for react-native

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react-native-popover-view

npm version npm version npm licence

A well-tested, adaptable, lightweight <Popover> component for react-native with no dependencies. Tested and working on iOS and Android. May work on Web, but not officially supported.

It is written entirely in TypeScript and uses React Native's native driver for responsive animations, even when the JS thread is busy.

Demo Video

Open the snack to play with all the features!


Looking for maintainers

I no longer have any React Native apps that I actively maintain, and so am thus detached from the community and need to focus my attention elsewhere. If you actively use this project and are interested in maintaining it, please reach out and let me know!

Table of Contents
  • Simple: By default the popover will float in the center of the screen, but if you choose to anchor it to a view (like a Touchable) or to a point on the screen, it will automatically find the best placement to accommodate the popover content.
  • Customizable: Tweak everything, including the popover and arrow style, placement heuristics, animation configuration, and more.
  • Adaptable: Popover adapts to changing content size, screen size, and orientation, and will move to accomidate the on-screen keyboard for text input into the popover.
npm i react-native-popover-view

or

yarn add react-native-popover-view

Showing popover from an element

For the simplest usage, just pass your Touchable into the from prop. The Popover will automatically be shown when the Touchable is pressed.

import React from 'react';
import Popover from 'react-native-popover-view';

function App() {
  return (
    <Popover
      from={(
        <TouchableOpacity>
          <Text>Press here to open popover!</Text>
        </TouchableOpacity>
      )}>
      <Text>This is the contents of the popover</Text>
    </Popover>
  );
}

Note that if you pass an onPress or ref prop to the Touchable it will be overwritten.

Showing popover from an element (advanced)

For more advanced usage, pass in a function that returns any React element. You control which element the popover anchors on (using the sourceRef) and when the popover will be shown (using the showPopover callback). In this example, the Popover will appear to originate from the text inside the popover, and will only be shown when the Touchable is held down.

import React from 'react';
import Popover from 'react-native-popover-view';

function App() {
  return (
    <Popover
      from={(sourceRef, showPopover) => (
        <View>
          <TouchableOpacity onLongPress={showPopover}>
            <Text ref={sourceRef}>Press here to open popover!</Text>
          </TouchableOpacity>
        </View>
      )}>
      <Text>This is the contents of the popover</Text>
    </Popover>
  );
}

Showing popover from an element (allow manual dismiss)

You can control visibility yourself instead of letting the Popover manage it automatically by using the isVisible and onRequestClose prop. This would allow you to manually dismiss the Popover. onRequestClose is called when the user taps outside the Popover. If you want to force the user to tap a button inside the Popover to dismiss, you could omit onRequestClose and change the state manually.

import React, { useState, useEffect } from 'react';
import Popover from 'react-native-popover-view';

function App() {
  const [showPopover, setShowPopover] = useState(false);

  useEffect(() => {
    setTimeout(() => setShowPopover(false), 2000);
  }, []);

  return (
    <Popover
      isVisible={showPopover}
      onRequestClose={() => setShowPopover(false)}
      from={(
        <TouchableOpacity onPress={() => setShowPopover(true)}>
          <Text>Press here to open popover!</Text>
        </TouchableOpacity>
      )}>
      <Text>This popover will be dismissed automatically after 2 seconds</Text>
    </Popover>
  );
}

Showing popover from an element (alternative approach)

If you prefer to let the Popover handle opening from an element but need to close it programmatically, you can also use the exposed method requestClose to close it manually.

import React, { useRef } from 'react';
import Popover from 'react-native-popover-view';

function App() {
  const popoverRef = useRef();

  return (
    <Popover
      ref={popoverRef}
      from={(
        <TouchableOpacity>
          <Text>Press here to open popover!</Text>
        </TouchableOpacity>
      )}>
      <TouchableOpacity onPress={() => popoverRef.current.requestClose()}>
        <Text>Tap to close me</Text>
      </TouchableOpacity>
    </Popover>
  );
}

Showing popover from a reference to an element

If you need even more control (e.g. having the Popover and Touchable in complete different parts of the node hierarchy), you can just pass in a normal ref.

import React, { useRef, useState } from 'react';
import Popover from 'react-native-popover-view';

function App() {
  const touchable = useRef();
  const [showPopover, setShowPopover] = useState(false);

  return (
    <>
      <TouchableOpacity ref={touchable} onPress={() => setShowPopover(true)}>
        <Text>Press here to open popover!</Text>
      </TouchableOpacity>
      <Popover from={touchable} isVisible={showPopover} onRequestClose={() => setShowPopover(false)}>
        <Text>This is the contents of the popover</Text>
      </Popover>
    </>
  );
}

Showing popover from a predetermined position

If you already know the exact location of the place you want the Popover to anchor, you can create a Rect(x, y, width, height) object, and show from that Rect. Note that Rect(x, y, 0, 0) is equivalent to showing from the point (x, y).

import React, { useState } from 'react';
import Popover, { Rect } from 'react-native-popover-view';

function App() {
  const [showPopover, setShowPopover] = useState(false);

  return (
    <>
      <TouchableOpacity onPress={() => setShowPopover(true)}>
        <Text>Press here to open popover!</Text>
      </TouchableOpacity>
      <Popover from={new Rect(5, 100, 20, 40)} isVisible={showPopover} onRequestClose={() => setShowPopover(false)}>
        <Text>This is the contents of the popover</Text>
      </Popover>
    </>
  );
}

Showing popover without anchor

If you just want the popover to be floating on the screen, not anchored to anything, you can omit the from prop altogether.

import React, { useState } from 'react';
import Popover from 'react-native-popover-view';

function App() {
  const [showPopover, setShowPopover] = useState(false);

  return (
    <>
      <TouchableOpacity onPress={() => setShowPopover(true)}>
        <Text>Press here to open popover!</Text>
      </TouchableOpacity>
      <Popover isVisible={showPopover} onRequestClose={() => setShowPopover(false)}>
        <Text>This popover will stay centered on the screen, even when the device is rotated!</Text>
      </Popover>
    </>
  );
}

Showing popover in a specific direction

Normally, the Popover will automatically pick the direction it pops out based on where it would fit best on the screen, even showing centered and unanchored if the contents would be compressed otherwise. If you would like to force a direction, you can pass in the placement prop.

import React from 'react';
import Popover, { PopoverPlacement } from 'react-native-popover-view';

function App() {
  return (
    <Popover
      placement={PopoverPlacement.BOTTOM}
      from={(
        <TouchableOpacity>
          <Text>Press here to open popover!</Text>
        </TouchableOpacity>
      )}>
      <Text>This is the contents of the popover</Text>
    </Popover>
  );
}

Showing popover as a tooltip

Normally, the popover creates a background that dims the content behind it. You can also show a tooltip without fading the background. Read more about the available modes below. Note that when using TOOLTIP mode, you must control the visiblity manually (onRequestClose will never be called).

import React, { useRef, useState } from 'react';
import Popover, { PopoverMode, PopoverPlacement } from 'react-native-popover-view';

function App() {
  const [showPopover, setShowPopover] = useState(false);

  return (
    <Popover
      mode={PopoverMode.TOOLTIP}
      placement={PopoverPlacement.TOP}
      isVisible={showPopover}
      from={(
        <TouchableOpacity onPress={() => setShowPopover(true)}>
          <Text>Press here to open popover!</Text>
        </TouchableOpacity>
      )}>
      <>
        <Text>This is the contents of the popover</Text>
        <TouchableOpacity onPress={() => setShowPopover(false)}>
          <Text>Dismiss</Text>
        </TouchableOpacity>
      </>
    </Popover>
  );
}

Using class components

If you are not using functional components and hooks yet, you can still use class components in almost every case outlined above. Here is an example of using a class component and a ref, which is slightly different when using class components.

import React, { createRef } from 'react';
import Popover from 'react-native-popover-view';

class App extends React.Component {
  constructor(props) {
    super(props);

    this.touchable = createRef();
    this.state = {
      showPopover: false
    }
  }

  render() {
    return (
      <>
        <TouchableOpacity ref={this.touchable} onPress={() => this.setState({ showPopover: true })}>
          <Text>Press here to open popover!</Text>
        </TouchableOpacity>
        <Popover
          from={this.touchable}
          isVisible={this.state.showPopover}
          onRequestClose={() => this.setState({ showPopover: false })}>
          <Text>This is the contents of the popover</Text>
        </Popover>
      </>
    );
  }
}

All props are optional

Prop Type Default Description
from multiple null Popover source. See From section below.
isVisible bool false Show/Hide the popover. Required if from is not a Touchable or function that uses showPopover call (see examples). If supplied, takes precedence regardless of from.
mode string 'rn-modal' One of: 'rn-modal', 'js-modal', 'tooltip'. See Mode section below for details.
placement string OR string list 'auto' How to position the popover, one of 'top', 'bottom', 'left', 'right', 'floating', or 'auto'. When 'auto' is specified, it will try to determine the best placement so that the popover is fully visible within displayArea. If an array of options is passed in, it will pick the first option that can accommodate the content.
offset number 0 The amount to shift the popover away from the source. Does not apply if the popover is centered.
popoverStyle object The style of the popover itself. You can override the borderRadius, backgroundColor, or any other style prop for a View.
popoverShift object How much to shift the popover in each direction, as a multiplier. Object of shape { x: -1 to 1, y: -1 to 1 }, where both x and y are optional. -1 shifts the popover all the way to the left/top and 1 shifts it to the right/bottom. Currently only applies when placement is floating, but this will apply to all placements in a future version.
backgroundStyle object The style of the background view. Default is a black background with 0.5 opacity.
arrowSize object { width: 16, height: 8 } The size of the arrow, as an object with width & height properties. The width of the arrow is the size of the arrow on the edge that touches the popover (base of isosceles triangle), while the height covers the distance from the popover to the source view, regardless of the placement of the popover. You can use { width: 0, height: 0 } to hide the arrow completely.
arrowShift number 0 How much to shift the arrow to either side, as a multiplier. -1 will shift it all the way to the left (or top) corner of the source view, while 1 will shift all the way to the right (or bottom) corner. A value of 0.5 or -0.8 will shift it partly to one side.
onOpenStart function Callback to be fired when the open animation starts (before animation)
onOpenComplete function Callback to be fired when the open animation ends (after animation)
onRequestClose function Callback to be fired when the user taps outside the popover (on the background) or taps the system back button on Android
onCloseStart function Callback to be fired when the popover starts closing (before animation)
onCloseComplete function Callback to be fired when the popover is finished closing (after animation)
onPositionChange function Callback to be fired when the popover position finishes moving position (after animation)
animationConfig object An object containing any configuration options that can be passed to Animated.timing (e.g. { duration: 600, easing: Easing.inOut(Easing.quad) }). The configuration options you pass will override the defaults for all animations.
displayArea rect Area where the popover is allowed to be displayed. By default, this will be automatically calculated to be the size of the display, or the size of the parent component if mode is not 'rn-modal'.
displayAreaInsets object Insets to apply to the display area. The Popover will not be allowed to go beyond the display area minus the insets.
statusBarTranslucent bool true For 'rn-modal' mode on Android only. Determines whether the background should go under the status bar. Passed through to RN Modal component, see their docs as well.
debug bool false Set this to true to turn on debug logging to the console. This is useful for figuring out why a Popover isn't showing.

The from prop can be:

  • A React element. If that element has an onPress prop, that prop will be be used to open the Popover.
  • A ref object created using useRef in function components or createRef in class components.
  • A function that takes two ordered argument, a ref and a showPopover callback, and returns a React element. Pass the ref argument to ref prop of the element that will be the source of the Popover (the view that the arrow will point to), and call showPopover callback to trigger the popover (or pass to the onPress prop or similar of a component). You can also ignore the showPopover argument and control visibility using the isVisible prop.
  • A point: { x: number, y: number }. In React Native coordinate system, (0, 0) is the top left of the screen.
  • A rectangle: { x: number, y: number, width: number, height: number }. The popover arrow will be pinned to the edges of the rectangle.

If no from is provided, the popover will float in the center of the screen.

The Popover can show in three modes:

  • PopoverMode.RN_MODAL ('rn-modal')
  • PopoverMode.JS_MODAL ('js-modal')
  • PopoverMode.TOOLTIP ('tooltip')

RN Modal (Default)

Shows the popover full screen in a React Native Modal Component. The upside is that it is guaranteed to show on top of all other views, regardless of where the Popover component is placed in the view hierarchy. The downside is that you can only have one Modal shown at any one time, so this won't work for nested popovers or if you use a Modal for other reasons. Taps to the area outside the popover will trigger the onRequestClose callback.

JS Modal

Use this if you want to show nested Popovers, or are showing the Popover from a view that is already inside a native modal. Unlike with Tooltip, taps to the area outside the popover will trigger the onRequestClose callback.

Tooltip

Shows the Popover without taking over the screen, no background is faded in and taps to the area around the popover fall are not blocked. The onRequestClose callback will never be called, so the Popover will have to be dismissed some other way.

Tips for using JS Modal and Tooltip

Both JS Modal and Tooltip modes render the Popover into the react component tree instead of in a dedicated native modal. Because of this, you must place the Popover component at the proper place in the component hiearchy for it to show, potentially in a different place than the Touchable that the Popover is anchored to.

The key thing to consider is that the Popover will only be able to render in the space of its immediate parent. If the parent of the Popover is a view with the same dimensions of the Touchable, the Popover will not be able to show. If you can't see the Popover when using these modes, try moving the Popover to the root view, or as close to the root view as possible, so that the Popover's immediate parent fills the screen. If you render the Touchable inside a ScrollView, the Popover should be an immediate child of the ScrollView.

Some devices have notches or other screen features that create zones where you might want to avoid showing a Popover. To do so, follow the instructions to setup react-native-safe-area-context, then use the provided hooks to pass the safe area insets straight to the displayAreaInsets prop:

import { useSafeAreaInsets } from 'react-native-safe-area-context';
import Popover from 'react-native-popover-view';

function PopoverSafeWrapper(props) {
  const insets = useSafeAreaInsets();
  return (
    <Popover {...props} displayAreaInsets={insets} />
  );
}

In all cases, start by passing the debug={true} prop to the Popover, to see if the debug output can help you figure out the issue.

Show from a ref not working

If on an Android device, try adding these props to the component whose ref you passed in to from:

  • renderToHardwareTextureAndroid={true}
  • collapsable={false}

See facebook/react-native#3282 and #28 for more info.

Error when passing a functional component to the from prop

When passing a function component to the Popover from prop, you may see the following error:

Warning: Function components cannot be given refs. Attempts to access this ref will fail. Did you mean to use React.forwardRef()?

This is because the Popover component uses ref to find the position of the from component on the screen, so that it can position the Popover correctly. Functional components don't have a ref like class components did, and thus causes this error.

As the error suggests, modifying your functional component to use React.forwardRef will fix this error. You should forward the ref to the underlying component that represents the bounds from which you want the Popover to show (usually the topmost component).

4.x to 5.0

  • New Props: offset & popoverShift
  • Breaking: Replaces arrowStyle with arrowSize. The only known customization of the arrow was the width, height, and backgroundColor. In version 5.0, arrowSize prop allows customization of width and height (with some tweaks, explained in prop table), and the arrow will inherit the backgroundColor from popoverStyle. To hide arrow, instead of passing backgroundColor: 'transparent', pass an arrowSize of { width: 0, height: 0 }, and then use the offset prop to move popover away from source if desired. The shadow props passed to popoverStyle will apply to the arrow as well.
  • Under-the-hood changes: Refactoring and optimizations may cause slight changes to content handling and placement, review and test your popovers after upgrade to make sure they still look as expected.
  • Simplification: Using a shadow no longer requires popoverStyle to contain overflow: visible (#15)
  • Deprecation: Rect is deprecated and will be removed in the future. Instead of using new Rect(x, y, width, height), just pass in an object of the form { x: number, y: number, width: number, height: number }.

3.x to 4.0

Removed internal safe area view; if you want the Popover to avoid showing behind notches on some devices, follow the instructions: Usage with Safe Area Context.

2.x to 3.0

  • fromRect and fromView have been consolidated into a single from prop, where you can pass a Rect or a Ref. All Refs passed in must now be a RefObject created from React.createRef or React.useRef. All Rects passed in must be an actual Rect object (e.g. from={new Rect(x, y, width, height)}).
  • from prop now supports additional modes, including passing in a React element for simpler usage. See new examples and usage notes above.
  • fromDynamicRect has been removed.

1.x to 2.0

  • onClose has been renamed to onRequestClose (for clarity and consistency with normal RN Modals)
  • New mode prop replaces showInModal. Replace showInModal={false} with mode={Popover.MODE.JS_MODAL}
  • doneClosingCallback has been renamed onCloseComplete
  • New backgroundStyle prop replaces showBackground. Replace showBackground={false} with backgroundStyle={{ backgroundColor: 'transparent' }}
  • Fix in version 2.0 means that verticalOffset may no longer be needed, so if you are using it be sure to test

1.0 to 1.1

This version moved the react-navigation portion of this project to it's own repository: react-navigation-popover. To use with react-navigation, install that npm package change import { createPopoverStackNavigator } from 'react-native-popover-view' to import createPopoverStackNavigator from 'react-navigation-popover'.

0.7 to 1.0

The only breaking change in version 1.0 was renaming PopoverStackNavigator to createPopoverStackNavigator, to match the react-navigation other navigation functions.

0.5 to 0.6

Version 0.6 brought some large changes, increasing efficiency, stability, and flexibility. For React Navigation users, there is a new prop, showInPopover, that you might want to pass to createPopoverStackNavigator if you want to customize when to show stack views in a Popover. This replaces PopoverNavigation.shouldShowInPopover. See the new setup instructions below for details.

Pull requests are welcome; if you find that you are having to bend over backwards to make this work for you, feel free to open an issue or PR! Of course, try to keep the same coding style if possible and I'll try to get back to you as soon as I can.

Use yarn build to build the dist folder (compile TypeScript to JavaScript), and use yarn watch to continuously build on save.

There's a separate package, react-native-popover-view-test-app that can be used during development. In the package, there's a script, (./transfer) that you can adapt to help copy the dist files from this project to the test app while watching for changes.

This is a fork of react-native-popover, originally created by Jean Regisser [email protected] (https://github.com/jeanregisser) but since abandoned.

I have rebuilt most of the library from the ground up for improved handling of changing screen sizes on tablets (split-screen mode), a redesigned automatic placement algorithm, TypeScript, and ES6 compatibility.

Similar forks exist on Github (such as react-native-modal-popover), but this is the first to be published on NPM as far as I know.


MIT Licensed