Snapshot a React Native view and save it to an image.
For React Native version between
0.30.x
and0.39.x
, you should use[email protected]
.
import RNViewShot from "react-native-view-shot";
RNViewShot.takeSnapshot(viewRef, {
format: "jpeg",
quality: 0.8
})
.then(
uri => console.log("Image saved to", uri),
error => console.error("Oops, snapshot failed", error)
);
Checkout react-native-view-shot-example
Returns a Promise of the image URI.
view
is a reference to a React Native component.options
may include:width
/height
(number): the width and height of the image to capture.format
(string): eitherpng
orjpg
/jpeg
orwebm
(Android). Defaults topng
.quality
(number): the quality. 0.0 - 1.0 (default). (only available on lossy formats like jpeg)result
(string), the method you want to use to save the snapshot, one of:"file"
(default): save to a temporary file (that will only exist for as long as the app is running)."base64"
: encode as base64 and returns the raw string. Use only with small images as this may result of lags (the string is sent over the bridge). N.B. This is not a data uri, usedata-uri
instead."data-uri"
: same asbase64
but also includes the Data URI scheme header.
filename
(string): the name of the generated file if any (Android only). Defaults toReactNative_snapshot_image_${timestamp}
.snapshotContentContainer
(bool): if true and when view is a ScrollView, the "content container" height will be evaluated instead of the container height. (Android only)
Snapshots are not guaranteed to be pixel perfect. It also depends on the platform. Here is some difference we have noticed and how to workaround.
- Support of special components like Video / GL views remains untested.
- It's preferable to use a background color on the view you rasterize to avoid transparent pixels and potential weirdness that some border appear around texts.
- you need to make sure
collapsable
is set tofalse
if you want to snapshot a View. Otherwise that view won't reflect any UI View. (found by @gaguirre) - if you want to share out the screenshoted file, you will have to copy it somewhere first so it's accessible to an Intent, see comment: gre#11 (comment) .
- if you implement a third party library and want to get back a File, you must first resolve the
Uri
. thefile
result returns anUri
so it's consistent with iOS and you can give it toImage.getSize
for instance.
npm install --save react-native-view-shot
react-native link react-native-view-shot
- In XCode, in the project navigator, right click
Libraries
➜Add Files to [your project's name]
- Go to
node_modules
➜react-native-view-shot
and addRNViewShot.xcodeproj
- In XCode, in the project navigator, select your project. Add
libRNViewShot.a
to your project'sBuild Phases
➜Link Binary With Libraries
- Run your project (
Cmd+R
)<
- Open up
android/app/src/main/java/[...]/MainActivity.java
- Add
import fr.greweb.reactnativeviewshot.RNViewShotPackage;
to the imports at the top of the file - Add
new RNViewShotPackage()
to the list returned by thegetPackages()
method
- Append the following lines to
android/settings.gradle
:include ':react-native-view-shot' project(':react-native-view-shot').projectDir = new File(rootProject.projectDir, '../node_modules/react-native-view-shot/android')
- Insert the following lines inside the dependencies block in
android/app/build.gradle
:compile project(':react-native-view-shot')
No support yet. Feel free to PR.
- To initial iOS work done by @jsierles in https://github.com/jsierles/react-native-view-snapshot
- To React Native implementation of takeSnapshot in iOS by @nicklockwood