Reputation: 1271
I'm building a simple app in React Native that fetches listings from a remote JSON source and displays them on screen.
So far, using the excellent example here, I've managed to get the results to display using the ListView components in rows (i.e. 1 result per row, see screenshot). I need the results to display in a grid, i.e. 3 to 6 items per row, depending on the screen size and orientation.
What is the best way to get these results into a grid? Can I use ListView for this, or is that only for one-per-row results? I've tried playing around with flexbox styles but, since React doesn't seem to accept % values and ListView doesn't accept styles, I haven't yet had any success.
Upvotes: 73
Views: 80664
Reputation: 297
ScrollView with contentContainerStyle prop worked for me
<ScrollView contentContainerStyle={{ flexDirection: "row", flexWrap: "wrap", alignContent: "center",}}>
{user.posts.map((post, index) => (
<Image
source={require(post.uri)}
key={index}
style={{ width: 100, height: 100 }}
/>
))}
</ScrollView>
Upvotes: 0
Reputation: 2389
ListView is now deprecated and you should use FlatList instead. FlatList has a prop called numColumns
which is exactly what we want to create a scrollable grid.
For example:
const data = [
{id: 'a', value: 'A'},
{id: 'b', value: 'B'},
{id: 'c', value: 'C'},
{id: 'd', value: 'D'},
{id: 'e', value: 'E'},
{id: 'f', value: 'F'},
];
const numColumns = 3;
const size = Dimensions.get('window').width/numColumns;
const styles = StyleSheet.create({
itemContainer: {
width: size,
height: size,
},
item: {
flex: 1,
margin: 3,
backgroundColor: 'lightblue',
}
});
function Grid(props) {
return (
<FlatList
data={data}
renderItem={({item}) => (
<View style={styles.itemContainer}>
<Text style={styles.item}>{item.value}</Text>
</View>
)}
keyExtractor={item => item.id}
numColumns={numColumns} />
);
}
This blog post does a good job explaining the new features of FlatList.
Note: For some reason you have to use keyExtractor
on the FlatList instead of the typical key
prop on each item. Otherwise you'll get a warning. Basic FlatList code throws Warning - React Native
Upvotes: 46
Reputation: 1569
Check the following example using FlatList component of React Native to support infinite scrolling with an excellent performance:
//Resize the grid
onLayout = (event) => {
const {width} = event.nativeEvent.layout;
const itemWidth = 150
const numColumns = Math.floor(width/itemWidth)
this.setState({ numColumns: numColumns })
}
render() {
return (
<Content
contentContainerStyle={{flex:1, alignItems: 'center'}}
onLayout={this.onLayout}>
<FlatList
data={this.state.products}
keyExtractor={(item, index) => index}
key={this.state.numColumns}
numColumns={this.state.numColumns}
renderItem={({item}) =>
<ListThumb //Custom component, it's only an example.
navigation={navigation}
brand={item.brand}
price={item.price}
imageSource={item.image_link}/>
}
/>
</Content>
)
}
The example looks like
Best regards, Nicholls
Upvotes: 0
Reputation: 721
use FlatList instead of Listview in react-native. it has more value added feature and better performance. checkout the example here
Upvotes: 2
Reputation: 1041
You can use FlatList and set numColumns to obtain the result which is the same with grid
Upvotes: 1
Reputation: 1122
I had the same problem and I wrote a component that solves that problem, you can find it here: https://github.com/pavlelekic/react-native-gridview
Also, one other thing this component does is it makes sure that the items width is a whole number, so that the borders of items don't have antialiasing, they are clear and crisp.
Upvotes: 7
Reputation: 5027
Follow Colin Ramsay's answer. And if you want half width for each item, try this way.
...
import { Dimensions } from 'react-native';
const { width, height } = Dimensions.get('window');
const gutter = 0; // You can add gutter if you want
...
const styles = StyleSheet.create({
item: {
width: (width - gutter * 3)/2,
marginBottom: gutter,
flexDirection: 'column',
alignSelf: 'flex-start',
backgroundColor: '#ff0000',
},
list: {
flexDirection: 'row',
justifyContent: 'space-between',
flexWrap: 'wrap',
paddingHorizontal: gutter,
},
});
Upvotes: 6
Reputation: 1861
I'm adding this as an answer because overflow comments are hidden under Colin Ramsay's response: as of React Native 0.28, you also need alignItems: 'flex-start',
in the listview styling or the flexWrap won't work. Thanks to Kerumen on codedump.io for this. So,
var styles = StyleSheet.create({
list: {
flexDirection: 'row',
flexWrap: 'wrap',
alignItems: 'flex-start',
},
...with the rest as in Colin's response.
Upvotes: 37
Reputation: 16477
You need to use a combination of flexbox, and the knowledge that ListView wraps ScrollView and so takes on its properties. With that in mind you can use the ScrollView's contentContainerStyle
prop to style the items.
var TestCmp = React.createClass({
getInitialState: function() {
var ds = new ListView.DataSource({rowHasChanged: (r1, r2) => r1 !== r2});
var data = Array.apply(null, {length: 20}).map(Number.call, Number);
return {
dataSource: ds.cloneWithRows(data),
};
},
render: function() {
return (
<ListView contentContainerStyle={styles.list}
dataSource={this.state.dataSource}
renderRow={(rowData) => <Text style={styles.item}>{rowData}</Text>}
/>
);
}
});
Just a ListView with some dummy data. Note the use of contentContainerStyle
. Here's the style object:
var styles = StyleSheet.create({
list: {
flexDirection: 'row',
flexWrap: 'wrap'
},
item: {
backgroundColor: 'red',
margin: 3,
width: 100
}
});
We tell the container we want items in a wrapping row, and the we set the width of each child object.
Upvotes: 134