Patrick
Patrick

Reputation: 8083

Transparent overlay in React Native

I'm trying to get a transparent overlay sliding down in an app, pretty much like this here (all/filter-by):

transparent slider

So far I found react-native-slider and react-native-overlay. I modified the slider to work from top to bottom, but it always moves down the ListView as well. If using react-native-overlay, the overlay is static and I can't move it.

I added some demo code from the original react-native tutorial in this gist. When clicking the button, the content should stick, and the menu should overlay. The transparency is not that important right now but would be awesome.

What would be the smartest solution?

Upvotes: 63

Views: 157927

Answers (6)

Saqy G
Saqy G

Reputation: 806

I was having same problem I did it this way.

import {View,StyleSheet} from "react-native";
//where you want it to render
 <View style={styles.overlaycontainer}>
      <Text style={{color:"#fff"}}>Locating directions please wait ...</Text>        
 </View> 
// at the bottom of your in styles
const styles = StyleSheet.create({
  overlaycontainer:{
    ...StyleSheet.absoluteFillObject,
    backgroundColor: '#000',
    opacity:0.8,
    justifyContent:"center",
    alignItems:"center" 
  }
});

Upvotes: 5

Naleen Dissanayake
Naleen Dissanayake

Reputation: 181

You can use this example for create overlay.You can change state for visible and invisible for overlay.

import React, { Component } from "react";
import { View, Text, StyleSheet } from "react-native";

class Popup extends Component {
  constructor(props) {
    super(props);
    this.state = {
      isPopupTrue: true
    };
  }

  render() {
    return (
      <View style={styles.container}>
      { this.state.isPopupTrue &&
        (<View style={styles.overlay}>
          <View style={styles.popup}>
            <Text style={styles.text}> Overlay </Text>
          </View>
        </View>)
      }
      </View>
    );
  }
}

export const styles = StyleSheet.create({
  container: {
    flex:1,
    backgroundColor: "#c0d6e4"
  },
  overlay: {
    position: "absolute",
    top: 0,
    right: 0,
    bottom: 0,
    left: 0,
    justifyContent: "center",
    alignItems: "center",
    backgroundColor: "gray",
    opacity: 0.9,
  },
  text: {
    width: "20%",
    fontSize: 15,
    color: "black",
    fontWeight: "bold"
  },
});

Upvotes: 9

suther
suther

Reputation: 13628

Maybe better use ImageBackground-Component.

import {View, ImageBackground, Text} from 'react-native';

const styles = StyleSheet.create({

});
...
<ImageBackground
  style={styles.image}
  source={{uri: props.picture_url}}
>
   <View style={styles.textbox}>
      <Text style={styles.title} >CHILD OF IMAGE_BACKGROUND</Text >
    </View>
 </ImageBackground >
...

Upvotes: 4

Suhail Jain
Suhail Jain

Reputation: 146

Smartest way ??

the smartest way to me is to use Modals from react-native to build a highly customizable responsive experience, you can easily set motion directions of the Modal, set transparency, toggle visibility etc etc, i personally have never user existing npm modules for implementing side drawers or navigation bars, i do this using Modals.
If you wish i can give a sample code snippet which realizes a navigation drawer using Modals

Upvotes: 1

Dorian
Dorian

Reputation: 23999

background image with overlay

import React, { Component } from 'react';
import { Image, StyleSheet, View } from 'react-native';

export default class App extends Component {
  render() {
    return (
      <Image source={{uri: 'http://i.imgur.com/IGlBYaC.jpg'}} style={s.backgroundImage}>
        <View style={s.overlay}/>
      </Image>
    );
  }
}

const s = StyleSheet.create({
  backgroundImage: {
      flex: 1,
      width: null,
      height: null,
  },
  overlay: {
    position: 'absolute',
    top: 0,
    right: 0,
    bottom: 0,
    left: 0,
    backgroundColor: 'red',
    opacity: 0.3
  }
});

Live demo: https://sketch.expo.io/S15Lt3vjg

Source repo: https://github.com/Dorian/sketch-reactive-native-apps

Upvotes: 21

Thomas
Thomas

Reputation: 8013

The key to your ListView not moving down, is to set the positioning of the overlay to absolute. By doing so, you can set the position and the width/height of the view manually and it doesn't follow the flexbox layout anymore. Check out the following short example. The height of the overlay is fixed to 360, but you can easily animate this or make it dynamic.

'use strict';

var React = require('react-native');
var Dimensions = require('Dimensions');

// We can use this to make the overlay fill the entire width
var { width, height } = Dimensions.get('window');

var {
  AppRegistry,
  StyleSheet,
  Text,
  View,
} = React;

var SampleApp = React.createClass({
  render: function() {
    return (
      <View style={styles.container}>
        <Text style={styles.welcome}>
          Welcome to the React Native Playground!
        </Text>
        <View style={[styles.overlay, { height: 360}]} />
      </View>
    );
  }
});

var styles = StyleSheet.create({
  container: {
    flex: 1,
    justifyContent: 'center',
    alignItems: 'center',
    backgroundColor: '#F5FCFF',
  },
  welcome: {
    fontSize: 20,
    textAlign: 'center',
    margin: 10,
  },
  // Flex to fill, position absolute, 
  // Fixed left/top, and the width set to the window width
  overlay: {
    flex: 1,
    position: 'absolute',
    left: 0,
    top: 0,
    opacity: 0.5,
    backgroundColor: 'black',
    width: width
  }  
});

AppRegistry.registerComponent('SampleApp', () => SampleApp);

module.exports = SampleApp;

Upvotes: 96

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