Reputation: 169
I'm trying to make a simple Pomodoro timer. I need to make the pause and stop buttons work. I defined a separate component called 'Timer' and added two buttons: 'Pause' and 'Stop' which obviously have to affect the state of the Timer.
How do I call the stop and pause method of Timer when the respective Buttons are pressed?
I understand that I can do this by simply including the buttons within the Timer class but I want to learn how to achieve something similar in the future and I'd like to keep the counter part of the Timer independent.
Here is the code:
import React from 'react'
import { Text, View, Button, StyleSheet } from 'react-native';
import { Constants } from 'expo';
class Timer extends React.Component{
constructor (props){
super(props)
this.state = {
minutes: props.minutes,
seconds: props.seconds,
count: 0,
}
}
dec = () => {
this.setState(previousState => {
if (previousState.seconds==0){
return {
minutes: previousState.minutes-1,
seconds: 59,
count: previousState.count+1,
}
}
else{
return{
minutes: previousState.minutes,
seconds: previousState.seconds-1,
count: previousState.count+1,
}
}
});
}
componentDidMount (){
setInterval(this.dec,1000);
}
render (){
return(
<View style = {{flexDirection: 'row'}}>
<Text style = {styles.timerCount}> {this.state.minutes}</Text>
<Text style = {styles.timerCount}>:</Text>
<Text style = {styles.timerCount}> {this.state.seconds} </Text>
</View>
)
}
stop (){
console.log('stop')
}
pause (){
console.log('pause')
}
}
export default class App extends React.Component {
stop (){
console.log('stop')
}
render() {
return(
<View style={styles.container}>
<Timer style = {styles.timer} minutes={25} seconds = {0}/>
<View style = {styles.buttonContainer}>
<Button title = 'Pause' style = {styles.timerButton} color = 'white' onPress = {()=>{console.log("call the timer's pause method here")}}/>
<Button title = 'Stop' style = {styles.timerButton} color = 'white' onPress = {()=>{console.log("call the timer's stop method here")}}/>
</View>
</View>
);
}
}
const styles = StyleSheet.create({
buttonContainer: {
flexDirection: 'row',
},
container: {
flex: 1,
alignItems: 'center',
justifyContent: 'center',
paddingTop: 50,
backgroundColor: '#EC3D40',
},
timer: {
backgroundColor: '#EC3D40',
paddingTop: 50,
},
timerCount: {
fontSize: 48,
color: 'white',
backgroundColor: '#EC3D40',
paddingTop: 10,
paddingBottom: 10,
},
timerButton:{
borderColor: 'white',
backgroundColor: 'transparent',
}
});
Upvotes: 1
Views: 56
Reputation: 7438
Well actually you can do that using ref feature.
You can create a ref
and assign it to your timer component. Then you can call this component's methods.
export default class App extends React.Component {
timerRef = React.createRef();
render() {
return(
<View style={styles.container}>
<Timer style = {styles.timer} minutes={25} seconds = {0} ref={this.timerRef}/>
<View style = {styles.buttonContainer}>
<Button title = 'Pause' style = {styles.timerButton} color = 'white' onPress = {()=>{console.log("call the timer's pause method here"); this.timerRef.current.pause();}}/>
<Button title = 'Stop' style = {styles.timerButton} color = 'white' onPress = {()=>{console.log("call the timer's stop method here"); this.timerRef.current.stop();}}/>
</View>
</View>
);
}
}
But this doesn't seem like a react way of doing things.
Upvotes: 1