Updated to Expo 50.
There are many ways to start a new React Native project. Here we will be using Expo's create-expo-app command line tool because:
- It has nice defaults out of the box.
- It is compatible with Expo packages, which are usually very good, well-tested, and have excellent documentation.
- We can easily switch to a "bare" react-native app at any moment with one
npx expo eject
command. See the docs to learn the difference between managed and bare workflows.
Also, we will add TypeScript, ESLint, Prettier, and some custom configurations that will make our development process better.
TLDR You can use one command
npx create-expo-app -t expo-ts
to create a new React Native project with all tools already set up for you (see README for details) or follow instructions below. π€
Please refer to the official React Native and Expo documentation for more details. π€©
General setup
We will need Node.js, Git and Yarn before we start.
Please check React Native Setup Guide to ensure that everything is installed on your machine.
Awesome! ππ»
Now let's create a new app.
- Run
npx create-expo-app
command. - Type your project name.
- Change the directory to your project with
cd <your-project-name>
command. - Run
yarn start
to start Metro Bundler. - Press
i
to start the iOS simulator ora
to run the Android emulator.π±
Tools
TypeScript
Let's add TypeScript support.
- Create an empty
tsconfig.json
file in your project root:touch tsconfig.json
. - Rename
App.js
toApp.tsx
:mv App.js App.tsx
. - Run
yarn start
. It will prompt you to install the required dependencies (typescript
,@types/react
,@types/react-native
), and automatically configure yourtsconfig.json
.
Absolute path imports
To use absolute path imports, e.g. import { ComponentA } from 'src/components/A'
(notice path starts with src
), we need to add baseUrl
and paths
parameters to the compilerOptions
of tsconfig.json
.
{
"compilerOptions": {
"baseUrl": "./",
"paths": {
"src/*": ["src/*"]
},
"strictNullChecks": true
},
...
}
Also, we need to create src/package.json
file.
{
"name": "src"
}
Also, we will need to install the babel-plugin-module-resolver to be able to run our project on the web.
βπ» You can safely skip it, if you targeting only mobile platforms.
yarn add --dev babel-plugin-module-resolver
Specify the plugin configuration in babel.config.js
:
module.exports = function(api) {
api.cache(true);
return {
// ... presets settings goes here
plugins: [
[
'module-resolver',
{
root: ['.'],
alias: {
src: './src'
}
}
],
]
};
};
Move App.tsx to src folder
It's good to have all source files in one folder. So let's move App.tsx
to src
with mv App.tsx src
command.
Next, we need to create a new App.js
file inside our project's folder with touch App.js
. And import our app logic there:
import App from 'src/App'
export default () => <App />
Prettier
Prettier is an opinionated code formatter. Let's install it.
yarn add -D prettier
We will also need .prettierrc.js
config file in the project root.
module.exports = {
semi: false,
trailingComma: 'none',
singleQuote: true,
printWidth: 100,
tabWidth: 2,
useTabs: false,
}
Sort imports
Unsorted imports look ugly. Also, it could be hard to read and add new imports. So why not sort them automatically? We can do it with trivago/prettier-plugin-sort-imports.
yarn add --dev @trivago/prettier-plugin-sort-imports
Add plugin configuration to the Prettier config .prettierrc.js
:
module.exports = {
// ... prettier config here
importOrderSeparation: true,
importOrderSortSpecifiers: true,
importOrderCaseInsensitive: true,
importOrder: [
'<THIRD_PARTY_MODULES>',
// '^(.*)/components/(.*)$', // Add any folders you want to be separate
'^src/(.*)$',
'^(.*)/(?!generated)(.*)/(.*)$', // Everything not generated
'^(.*)/generated/(.*)$', // Everything generated
'^[./]' // Absolute path imports
]
}
Check code for errors
We can use TypeScript compiler and ESLint for this.
TypeScript Compiler
Let's add a new check-typescript
script to our package.json
.
...
"scripts": {
...
"check-typescript": "tsc --noEmit"
},
...
Now we can run yarn check-typescript
command to check our code for errors with the TypeScript compiler.
ESLint
ESLint has a lot of configuration options and rules. Let's start with the Expo eslint-config-universe package.
yarn add --dev eslint-config-universe
yarn add --dev eslint @typescript-eslint/eslint-plugin @typescript-eslint/parser
yarn add --dev eslint-plugin-react-hooks
yarn add --dev eslint-import-resolver-typescript
yarn add --dev eslint-plugin-prettier
Add .eslintrc.js
config file to the project root.
module.exports = {
extends: ['universe', 'universe/shared/typescript-analysis', 'plugin:react-hooks/recommended'],
overrides: [
{
files: ['*.ts', '*.tsx', '*.d.ts'],
parserOptions: {
project: './tsconfig.json'
}
}
],
settings: {
'import/resolver': {
typescript: {} // this loads <rootdir>/tsconfig.json to ESLint
}
},
/* for lint-staged */
globals: {
__dirname: true
},
rules: {
'no-console': 'error'
}
}
Add a new check-eslint
script to our package.json
.
...
"scripts": {
...
"check-eslint": "eslint './src/**/*{js,ts,jsx,tsx}'"
},
...
Now we can run the yarn check-eslint
command to check our code for errors with ESLint. And yarn check-eslint --fix
to fix errors automatically.
Lint script
Let's combine TypeScript and ESLint checks together so we can run both at once.
Add a new lint
script to our package.json
.
...
"scripts": {
...
"lint": "yarn check-typescript && yarn check-eslint"
},
...
Changelog
We can use the standard-version tool to generate a changelog, bump the version of the app and create a new tag automatically.
How It Works:
- Follow the Conventional Commits Specification in your repository.
- When you're ready to release, run
standard-version
.
yarn add --dev standard-version
Create the .versionrc.js
config:
module.exports = {
types: [
{ type: 'feat', section: 'New features' },
{ type: 'fix', section: 'Bug fixes' },
{ type: 'change', section: 'Changes' },
{ type: 'chore', hidden: true },
{ type: 'docs', hidden: true },
{ type: 'style', hidden: true },
{ type: 'perf', hidden: true },
{ type: 'test', hidden: true }
]
}
In this config, we enable the feat
, fix
, and change
commit types. And if you want to enable the other commit types, you can remove the hidden
boolean and replace it with the section
string and provide a title.
Add new release
script to package.json
:
...
"scripts": {
...
"release": "standard-version"
},
...
Now when you are ready to release, just run the yarn release
command.
Husky
Husky improves your commits and more πΆ woof!
We will use Husky to check if our commit messages follow the conventional commits rules, run the lint check, and format staged code with Prettier and ESLint.
yarn add --dev husky
yarn add --dev @commitlint/config-conventional @commitlint/cli
yarn add --dev lint-staged
Create a config for commitlint
with commitlint.config.js
file:
module.exports = {
extends: ['@commitlint/config-conventional']
}
Setup lint-staged with package.json > lint-staged
configuration:
...
"lint-staged": {
"**/*.{js,jsx,ts,tsx}": [
"eslint './src/**/*{js,ts,jsx,tsx}' --fix",
"prettier --write './src/**/*{js,ts,jsx,tsx}'"
]
},
...
Configure Husky with:
npx husky init
The
init
command simplifies setting up husky in a project. It creates apre-commit
script in.husky/
and updates the prepare script inpackage.json
.
To add a pre-commit hook we need to replace everything inside the .husky/pre-commit
file with:
npx --no-install lint-staged
To add a commit message hook we need to create the .husky/commit-msg
file with:
yarn lint && npx --no-install commitlint --edit "$1"
SafeAreaContext
react-native-safe-area-context provides a flexible API for accessing device-safe area inset information.
npx expo install react-native-safe-area-context
Wrap your App
component with SafeAreaProvider
:
import { SafeAreaProvider } from 'react-native-safe-area-context'
function App() {
return <SafeAreaProvider>...</SafeAreaProvider>
}
And now we can use the SafeAreaView
component.
SafeAreaView
is a regularView
component with the safe area insets applied as padding or margin.
Test with Jest and React Native Testing Library
Jest is a delightful JavaScript Testing Framework with a focus on simplicity.
npx expo install jest-expo jest
yarn add --dev @types/jest
Update the package.json
to include:
"scripts": {
...
"test": "jest"
}
Jest has a number of globally-available functions, so we need to introduce these functions to ESLint with eslint-plugin-jest.
yarn add --dev eslint-plugin-jest
Add 'jest'
to the plugins
section of the .eslintrc.js
configuration file. We can omit the eslint-plugin-
prefix:
module.exports = {
...
plugins: ['jest']
}
The React Native Testing Library helps you to write better tests with less effort and encourages good testing practices.
The jest-native library provides a set of custom jest matchers that you can use to extend jest. These will make your tests more declarative, clear to read, and maintain.
yarn add --dev @testing-library/react-native
yarn add --dev @testing-library/jest-native
yarn add --dev @testing-library/dom
Now it is time to add the jest.config.js
configuration file:
/** @type {import('jest').Config} */
const path = require('path')
const config = {
preset: 'jest-expo',
setupFilesAfterEnv: [path.join(__dirname, 'setup-testing.js')],
transformIgnorePatterns: [
'node_modules/(?!((jest-)?react-native|@react-native(-community)?)|expo(nent)?|@expo(nent)?/.*|@expo-google-fonts/.*|react-navigation|@react-navigation/.*|@unimodules/.*|unimodules|sentry-expo|native-base|react-native-svg)'
]
}
module.exports = config
And setup-testing.js
configuration file to make the jest-native
library work:
import '@testing-library/jest-native/extend-expect'
Let's also add eslint-plugin-testing-library and eslint-plugin-jest-dom. Both are ESLint plugins that help to follow best practices and anticipate common mistakes when writing tests with Testing Library. For more info, see the excellent Common mistakes with React Testing Library article by Kent C. Dodds. π€
yarn add --dev eslint-plugin-testing-library
yarn add --dev eslint-plugin-jest-dom
Add 'testing-library'
to the plugins
section and 'plugin:testing-library/react'
to the extends
section of our .eslintrc.js
configuration file:
module.exports = {
...
extends: ['plugin:testing-library/react', 'plugin:jest-dom/recommended'],
plugins: ['testing-library']
}
Now we can write our first test to the src/App.test.tsx
file:
import { render, screen } from '@testing-library/react-native'
import App from 'src/App'
describe('App', () => {
it('should mount without errors', () => {
expect(() => render(<App />)).not.toThrow()
})
it('should unmount without errors', () => {
render(<App />)
expect(() => screen.unmount()).not.toThrow()
})
})
And run it with the yarn test
command.
What to add next?
Credits
You can find the π΄π» 2022 version of this article here.
Please post your favorite tools in the comments, press the π button, and happy hacking! ππ»
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