React Native component that notifies if the user is active or not (i.e. when the app surface hasn't been touched for more than a certain amount of ms).
As of version 1.1.0, react-native-user-inactivity
resets the timer also when the keyboard appears or disappears.
If you want to avoid this behaviour, you can set the skipKeyboard
property to true
.
As of version 1.0.0, react-native-user-inactivity
has been rebuilt as a functional component that uses the new React Hook API.
Thanks to usetimeout-react-hook
, react-native-user-inactivity
supports timers different
than the standard one (setTimeout
). This has solved some of the most recurrent issues, such as #12, #16, #17.
npm install react-native-user-inactivity
If you are running a version of react < 17 you'll need to include the --legacy-peer-deps
flag.
npm install react-native-user-inactivity --legacy-peer-deps
- π₯ supports generic timers (you're no longer constrained to
setTimeout
) β οΈ optional reset capability of the timer- β¨ super elastic behaviour thanks to the Hooks API
- πͺ written in TypeScript
- βοΈ the core logic of this component is delegated to
usetimeout-react-hook
, which has 100% code coverage
This package primarily exposes a single functional component, UserInactivity.
The signature of the UserInactivity
React props is the following:
interface UserInactivityProps<T = unknown> {
/**
* Number of milliseconds after which the view is considered inactive.
* If it changed, the timer restarts and the view is considered active until
* the new timer expires.
* It defaults to 1000.
*/
timeForInactivity?: number;
/**
* If it's explicitly set to `true` after the component has already been initialized,
* the timer restarts and the view is considered active until the new timer expires.
* It defaults to true.
*/
isActive?: boolean;
/**
* Generic usetimeout-react-hook's TimeoutHandler implementation.
* It defaults to the standard setTimeout/clearTimeout implementation.
* See https://github.com/jkomyno/usetimeout-react-hook/#-how-to-use.
*/
timeoutHandler?: TimeoutHandler<T>;
/**
* Children components to embed inside UserInactivity's View.
* If any children component is pressed, `onAction` is called after
* `timeForInactivity` milliseconds.
*/
children: React.ReactNode;
/**
* If set to true, the timer is not reset when the keyboard appears
* or disappears.
*/
skipKeyboard?: boolean;
/**
* Optional custom style for UserInactivity's View.
* It defaults to { flex: 1 }.
*/
style?: StyleProp<ViewStyle>;
/**
* Callback triggered anytime UserInactivity's View isn't touched for more than
* `timeForInactivity` seconds.
* It's `active` argument is true if and only if the View wasn't touched for more
* than `timeForInactivity` milliseconds.
*/
onAction: (active: boolean) => void;
}
When a native timer is needed (in order to avoid issues such as #12, #16, #17) an implementation of
usetimeout-react-hook's TimeoutHandler should be
passed to the timeoutHandler
prop.
A default one (BackgroundTimer) is optionally provided: in order to use it you must:
- manually run:
npm i -S react-native-background-timer
- manually link the native library:
react-native link react-native-background-timer
In case of doubts, please refer to the official react-native-background-timer
repository.
The default BackgroundTimer
can be used like this:
import UserInactivity from 'react-native-user-inactivity';
import BackgroundTimer from 'react-native-user-inactivity/lib/BackgroundTimer';
export default () => {
return (
<UserInactivity
timeForInactivity={2000}
timeoutHandler={BackgroundTimer}
onAction={isActive => { console.log(isActive); }}
style={{ flex: 1, paddingTop: '10%' }}
>
);
}
Warning: it seems that react-native-background-timer
doesn't work properly with Android 10+ (#41). I'm currently unable to reproduce the problem, but help from the open-source community on this matter is certainly appreciated.
Since the component itself is written in TypeScript, your editor's intellisense system should automagically detect
the typings file (even if you're using plain JS!), thus providing a better developer experience.
In fact, autocomplete capabilities and warning should come for free as you're typing the props to pass to the UserInactivity
component.
import React, { useState } from 'react';
import { View, Text, TextInput, Button } from 'react-native';
import UserInactivity from 'react-native-user-inactivity';
export default () => {
const [active, setActive] = useState(true);
const [timer, setTimer] = useState(2000);
return (
<View style={{ flex: 1 }}>
<UserInactivity
isActive={active}
timeForInactivity={timer}
onAction={isActive => { setActive(isActive); }}
style={{ flex: 1, paddingTop: '10%' }}
>
<Button id="btn-1" title="1 Press this to simulate activity" />
<Button id="btn-2" title="2 Press this to simulate activity" />
<Text id="text-1" style={{ textAlign: 'center' }}>Type below to simulate activity</Text>
<TextInput
id="text-input-1"
style={{height: 40, borderColor: 'gray', borderWidth: 1}}
onChange={() => { setActive(true); }}
textContentType="creditCardNumber"
value={timer.toString(10)}
onChangeText={text => setTimer(Number.parseInt(text || 0, 10))}
/>
</UserInactivity>
<View style={{ flex: 3, backgroundColor: '#fcfcaa', }}>
<Text style={{ textAlign: 'center' }}>{active ? 'ACTIVE' : 'NOT ACTIVE'}</Text>
<Button title="Manually set to Active" onPress={() => { setActive(true); }} />
</View>
</View>
);
}
Also, please checkout the example on Snack/Expo.
This package is built using TypeScript, so the source needs to be converted in JavaScript before being usable by the users. This can be achieved using TypeScript directly:
npm run build
Alberto Schiabel
- Github: @jkomyno
Contributions, issues and feature requests are welcome!
Feel free to check issues page.
The code is short, throughly commented and well tested, so you should feel quite comfortable working on it.
If you have any doubt or suggestion, please open an issue.
Give a βοΈ if this project helped or inspired you!
Built with β€οΈ by Alberto Schiabel.
This project is MIT licensed.