A performant interface for rendering simple, flat lists, supporting the most handy features:
If you need section support, use <SectionList>
.
Minimal Example:
More complex example demonstrating PureComponent
usage for perf optimization and avoiding bugs.
onPressItem
handler, the props will remain ===
and PureComponent
will
prevent wasteful re-renders unless the actual id
, selected
, or title
props change, even
if the inner SomeOtherWidget
has no such optimizations.extraData={this.state}
to FlatList
we make sure FlatList
itself will re-render
when the state.selected
changes. Without setting this prop, FlatList
would not know it
needs to re-render any items because it is also a PureComponent
and the prop comparison will
not show any changes.keyExtractor
tells the list to use the id
s for the react keys.This is a convenience wrapper around <VirtualizedList>
,
and thus inherits its props (as well as those of ScrollView
) that aren't explicitly listed
here, along with the following caveats:
PureComponent
which means that it will not re-render if props
remain shallow-
equal. Make sure that everything your renderItem
function depends on is passed as a prop
(e.g. extraData
) that is not ===
after updates, otherwise your UI may not update on
changes. This includes the data
prop and parent component state.key
prop on each item and uses that for the React key.
Alternatively, you can provide a custom keyExtractor
prop.Also inherets ScrollView Props, unless it is nested in another FlatList of same orientation.
Rendered in between each item, but not at the top or bottom. By default, highlighted
and
leadingItem
props are provided. renderItem
provides separators.highlight
/unhighlight
which will update the highlighted
prop, but you can also add custom props with
separators.updateProps
.
Rendered when the list is empty. Can be a React Component Class, a render function, or a rendered element.
Rendered at the bottom of all the items. Can be a React Component Class, a render function, or a rendered element.
Rendered at the top of all the items. Can be a React Component Class, a render function, or a rendered element.
Optional custom style for multi-item rows generated when numColumns > 1.
For simplicity, data is just a plain array. If you want to use something else, like an
immutable list, use the underlying VirtualizedList
directly.
A marker property for telling the list to re-render (since it implements PureComponent
). If
any of your renderItem
, Header, Footer, etc. functions depend on anything outside of the
data
prop, stick it here and treat it immutably.
getItemLayout
is an optional optimizations that let us skip measurement of dynamic content if
you know the height of items a priori. getItemLayout
is the most efficient, and is easy to
use if you have fixed height items, for example:
Adding getItemLayout
can be a great performance boost for lists of several hundred items.
Remember to include separator length (height or width) in your offset calculation if you
specify ItemSeparatorComponent
.
If true, renders items next to each other horizontally instead of stacked vertically.
How many items to render in the initial batch. This should be enough to fill the screen but not much more. Note these items will never be unmounted as part of the windowed rendering in order to improve perceived performance of scroll-to-top actions.
Instead of starting at the top with the first item, start at initialScrollIndex
. This
disables the "scroll to top" optimization that keeps the first initialNumToRender
items
always rendered and immediately renders the items starting at this initial index. Requires
getItemLayout
to be implemented.
Reverses the direction of scroll. Uses scale transforms of -1.
Used to extract a unique key for a given item at the specified index. Key is used for caching
and as the react key to track item re-ordering. The default extractor checks item.key
, then
falls back to using the index, like React does.
Multiple columns can only be rendered with horizontal={false}
and will zig-zag like a
flexWrap
layout. Items should all be the same height - masonry layouts are not supported.
Called once when the scroll position gets within onEndReachedThreshold
of the rendered
content.
How far from the end (in units of visible length of the list) the bottom edge of the
list must be from the end of the content to trigger the onEndReached
callback.
Thus a value of 0.5 will trigger onEndReached
when the end of the content is
within half the visible length of the list.
If provided, a standard RefreshControl will be added for "Pull to Refresh" functionality. Make
sure to also set the refreshing
prop correctly.
Called when the viewability of rows changes, as defined by the viewabilityConfig
prop.
Set this true while waiting for new data from a refresh.
Note: may have bugs (missing content) in some circumstances - use at your own risk.
This may improve scroll performance for large lists.
Takes an item from data
and renders it into the list. Example usage:
Provides additional metadata like index
if you need it, as well as a more generic
separators.updateProps
function which let's you set whatever props you want to change the
rendering of either the leading separator or trailing separator in case the more common
highlight
and unhighlight
(which set the highlighted: boolean
prop) are insufficient for
your use-case.
See ViewabilityHelper
for flow type and further documentation.
Set this when offset is needed for the loading indicator to show correctly.
Scrolls to the end of the content. May be janky without getItemLayout
prop.
Scrolls to the item at the specified index such that it is positioned in the viewable area
such that viewPosition
0 places it at the top, 1 at the bottom, and 0.5 centered in the
middle. viewOffset
is a fixed number of pixels to offset the final target position.
Note: cannot scroll to locations outside the render window without specifying the
getItemLayout
prop.
Requires linear scan through data - use scrollToIndex
instead if possible.
Note: cannot scroll to locations outside the render window without specifying the
getItemLayout
prop.
Scroll to a specific content pixel offset in the list.
Check out scrollToOffset of VirtualizedList
Tells the list an interaction has occured, which should trigger viewability calculations, e.g.
if waitForInteractions
is true and the user has not scrolled. This is typically called by
taps on items or by navigation actions.
Displays the scroll indicators momentarily.
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