With Storybook for React Native you can design and develop individual React Native components without running your app.
For more information visit: storybook.js.org
The storybook
CLI tool can be used to add Storybook to your React Native app. Install the storybook
tool if necessary and run it from your project directory with these commands:
cd my-rn-app
npx -p @storybook/cli sb init
During installation it will ask if you want to install storybook server. It allows you to control the storybook from your web browser.
The next thing you need to do is make Storybook UI visible in your app.
The easiest way to use Storybook is to simply replace your App with the Storybook UI, which is possible by replacing App.js
with a single line of code:
export default from './storybook';
This will get you up and running quickly, but then you lose your app! There are multiple options here. for example, you can export conditionally:
import StorybookUI from './storybook';
import App from './app';
module.exports = __DEV__ ? StorybookUI : App;
StorybookUI
is simply a RN View
component that can be embedded anywhere in your RN application, e.g. on a tab or within an admin screen.
If you want to control storybook from browser/VS Code/websockets you need install and start the server.
npm run storybook
Now, you can open <http://localhost:7007>
to view your storybook menus in the browser.
To see your Storybook stories on the device, you should start your mobile app for the <platform>
of your choice (typically ios
or android
). (Note that due to an implementation detail, your stories will only show up in the left pane of your browser window after your device has connected to this storybook server.)
For CRNA apps:
npm run <platform>
For RN apps:
react-native run-<platform>
Once your app is started, changing the selected story in web browser will update the story displayed within your mobile app.
If you are using Android and you get the following error after running the app: 'websocket: connection error', 'Failed to connect to localhost/127.0.0.1:7007'
, you have to forward the port 7007 on your device/emulator to port 7007 on your local machine with the following command:
adb reverse tcp:7007 tcp:7007
The following parameters can be passed to the start command:
-h, --host <host>
host to listen on
-p, --port <port>
port to listen on
--https
whether server is running on https
-c, --config-dir [dir-name]
storybook config directory
-e, --environment [environment]
DEVELOPMENT/PRODUCTION environment for webpack
-i, --manual-id
allow multiple users to work with same storybook
--smoke-test
Exit after successful start
You can pass these parameters to getStorybookUI call in your storybook entry point:
{
onDeviceUI: Boolean (true)
-- display navigator and addons on the device
disableWebsockets: Boolean (false)
-- allows to display stories without running storybook server. Should be used with onDeviceUI
secured: Boolean (false)
-- use wss/https instead of ws/http
host: String (NativeModules.SourceCode.scriptURL)
-- host to use
port: Number (7007)
-- port to use
query: String ("")
-- additional query string to pass to websockets
isUIHidden: Boolean (false)
-- should the ui be closed initialy.
tabOpen: Number (0)
-- which tab should be open. -1 Navigator, 0 Preview, 1 Addons
initialSelection: Object (null)
-- initialize storybook with a specific story. In case a valid object is passed, it will take precedence over `shouldPersistSelection. ex: `{ kind: 'Knobs', story: 'with knobs' }`
shouldPersistSelection: Boolean (true)
-- initialize storybook with the last selected story.
shouldDisableKeyboardAvoidingView: Boolean (false)
-- Disable KeyboardAvoidingView wrapping Storybook's view
keyboardAvoidingViewVerticalOffset: Number (0)
-- With shouldDisableKeyboardAvoidingView=true, this will set the keyboardverticaloffset (https://facebook.github.io/react-native/docs/keyboardavoidingview#keyboardverticaloffset) value for KeyboardAvoidingView wrapping Storybook's view
}
Check the docs
directory in this repo for more advanced setup guides and other info.