React Native Style

With React Native, you don’t use a special language or syntax for defining styles. You just style your application using JavaScript. All of the core components accept a prop named style. The style names and values usually match how CSS works on the web, except names are written using camel casing, e.g backgroundColor rather than background-color.

The style prop can be a plain old JavaScript object. That’s the simplest and what we usually use for example code. You can also pass an array of styles – the last style in the array has precedence, so you can use this to inherit styles.

As a component grows in complexity, it is often cleaner to use StyleSheet.create to define several styles in one place. Here’s an example:

import React, { Component } from ‘react’;

import { AppRegistry, StyleSheet, Text, View } from ‘react-native’;

const styles = StyleSheet.create({

bigBlue: {

color: ‘blue’,

fontWeight: ‘bold’,

fontSize: 30,

},

red: {

color: ‘red’,

},

});

export default class LotsOfStyles extends Component {

render() {

return (

<View>

<Text style={styles.red}>just red</Text>

<Text style={styles.bigBlue}>just bigBlue</Text>

<Text style={[styles.bigBlue, styles.red]}>bigBlue, then red</Text>

<Text style={[styles.red, styles.bigBlue]}>red, then bigBlue</Text>

</View>

);

}

}

// skip this line if using Create React Native App

AppRegistry.registerComponent(‘AwesomeProject’, () => LotsOfStyles);

One common pattern is to make your component accept a style prop which in turn is used to style subcomponents. You can use this to make styles “cascade” the way they do in CSS.

React Native State
Layout with Flexbox

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