Commit Graph

523 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Sam Zhou
b59f186011 [flow] Replace $PropertyType with indexed access type in ReactNativeTypes (#32733) 2025-03-24 23:00:47 -04:00
Sebastian Markbåge
3c3696d554 Measure Updated ViewTransition Boundaries (#32653)
This does the same thing for `measureUpdateViewTransition` that we did
for `measureNestedViewTransitions` in
e3cbaffef0.
If a boundary hasn't mutated and didn't change in size, we mark it for
cancellation. Otherwise we add names to it. The different from the
CommitViewTransition path is that the "old" names are added to the
clones so this is the first time the "new" names.

Now we also cancel any boundaries that were unchanged. So now the root
no longer animates. We still have to clone them. There are other
optimizations that can avoid cloning but once we've done all the layouts
we can still cancel the running animation and let them just be the
regular content if they didn't change. Just like the regular
fire-and-forget path.

This also fixes the measurement so that we measure clones by adjusting
their position back into the viewport.

This actually surfaces a bug in Safari that was already in #32612. It
turns out that the old names aren't picked up for some reason and so in
Safari they looked more like a cross-fade than what #32612 was supposed
to fix. However, now that bug is even more apparent because they
actually just disappear in Safari. I'm not sure what that bug is but
it's unrelated to this PR so will fix that separately.
2025-03-17 21:38:13 -04:00
Jack Pope
6aa8254bb7 Add ref to Fragment (#32465)
*This API is experimental and subject to change or removal.*

This PR is an alternative to
https://github.com/facebook/react/pull/32421 based on feedback:
https://github.com/facebook/react/pull/32421#pullrequestreview-2625382015
. The difference here is that we traverse from the Fragment's fiber at
operation time instead of keeping a set of children on the
`FragmentInstance`. We still need to handle newly added or removed child
nodes to apply event listeners and observers, so we treat those updates
as effects.

**Fragment Refs**

This PR extends React's Fragment component to accept a `ref` prop. The
Fragment's ref will attach to a custom host instance, which will provide
an Element-like API for working with the Fragment's host parent and host
children.

Here I've implemented `addEventListener`, `removeEventListener`, and
`focus` to get started but we'll be iterating on this by adding
additional APIs in future PRs. This sets up the mechanism to attach refs
and perform operations on children. The FragmentInstance is implemented
in `react-dom` here but is planned for Fabric as well.

The API works by targeting the first level of host children and proxying
Element-like APIs to allow developers to manage groups of elements or
elements that cannot be easily accessed such as from a third-party
library or deep in a tree of Functional Component wrappers.

```javascript
import {Fragment, useRef} from 'react';

const fragmentRef = useRef(null);

<Fragment ref={fragmentRef}>
  <div id="A" />
  <Wrapper>
    <div id="B">
      <div id="C" />
    </div>
  </Wrapper>
  <div id="D" />
</Fragment>
```

In this case, calling `fragmentRef.current.addEventListener()` would
apply an event listener to `A`, `B`, and `D`. `C` is skipped because it
is nested under the first level of Host Component. If another Host
Component was appended as a sibling to `A`, `B`, or `D`, the event
listener would be applied to that element as well and any other APIs
would also affect the newly added child.

This is an implementation of the basic feature as a starting point for
feedback and further iteration.
2025-03-12 10:32:11 -04:00
Sebastian Markbåge
ca8f91f6f6 Log errors from startViewTransition to onRecoverableError (#32540)
We customize the messages only in DEV to keep it small in prod.

We skip some messages that are not really errors but more like
information.
2025-03-11 23:02:45 -04:00
Sebastian Markbåge
e9252bcdcc During a Swipe Gesture Render a Clone Offscreen and Animate it Onscreen (#32500)
This is really the essence mechanism of the `useSwipeTransition`
feature.

We don't want to immediately switch to the destination state when
starting a gesture. The effects remain mounted on the current state. We
want the current state to be "live". This is important to for example
allow a video to keeping playing while starting a swipe (think
TikTok/Reels) and not stop until you've committed the action. The only
thing that can be live is the "new" state. Therefore we treat the
destination as the "old" state and perform a reverse animation from
there.

Ideally we could apply the old state to the DOM tree, take a snapshot
and then revert it back in the mutation of `startViewTransition`.
Unfortunately, the way `startViewTransition` was designed it always
paints one frame of the "old" state which would lead this to cause a
flicker.

To work around this, we need to create a clone of any View Transition
boundary that might be mutated and then render that offscreen. That way
we can render the "current" state on screen and the "destination" state
offscreen for the screenshots. Being mutated can be either due to React
doing a DOM mutation or if a child boundary resizes that causes the
parent to relayout. We don't have to do this for insertions or deletions
since they only appear on one side.

The worst case scenario is that we have to clone the whole root. That's
what this first PR implements. We clone the container and if it's not
absolutely positioned, we position it on top of the current one. If the
container is `document` or `<html>` we instead clone the `<body>` tag
since it's the only one we can insert a duplicate of. If the container
is deep in the tree we clone just that even though technically we should
probably clone the whole document in that case. We just keep the impact
smaller. Ideally though we'd never hit this case. In fact, if we clone
the document we issue a warning (always for now) since you probably
should optimize this. In the future I intend to add optimizations when
affected View Transition boundaries are absolutely positioned since they
cannot possibly relayout the parent. This would be the ideal way to use
this feature most efficiently but it still works without it.

Since we render the "old" state outside the viewport, we need to then
adjust the animation to put it back into the viewport. This is the
trickiest part to get right while still preserving any customization of
the View Transitions done using CSS. This current approach reapplies all
the animations with adjusted keyframes.

In the case of an "exit" the pseudo-element itself is positioned outside
the viewport but since we can't programmatically update the style of the
pseudo-element itself we instead adjust all the keyframes to put it back
into the viewport. If there is no animation on the group we add one.

In the case of an "update" the pseudo-element is positioned on the new
state which is already inside the viewport. However, the auto-generated
animation of the group has a starting keyframe that starts outside the
viewport. In this case we need to adjust that keyframe.

In the future I might explore a technique that inserts stylesheets
instead of mutating the animations. It might be simpler. But whatever
hacks work to maximize the compatibility is best.
2025-03-04 20:10:08 -05:00
Ricky
e0fe347967 [flags] remove enableOwnerStacks (#32426)
Bassed off: https://github.com/facebook/react/pull/32425

Wait to land internally.

[Commit to
review.](66aa6a4dbb)

This has landed everywhere
2025-03-04 12:34:34 -05:00
Sebastian Markbåge
3607f4838a Add Commit Scaffolding for Gestures (#32451)
This adds a `ReactFiberApplyGesture` which is basically intended to be a
fork of the phases in `ReactFiberCommitWork` except for the fake commit
that `useSwipeTransition` does. So far none of the phases are actually
implemented yet. This is just the scaffolding around them so I can fill
them in later.

The important bit is that we call `startViewTransition` (via the
`startGestureTransition` Config) when a gesture starts. We add a paused
animation to prevent the transition from committing (even if the
ScrollTimeline goes to 100%). This also locks the documents so that we
can't commit any other Transitions until it completes.

When the gesture completes (scroll end) then we stop the gesture View
Transition. If there's no new work scheduled we do that immediately but
if there was any new work already scheduled, then we assume that this
will potentially commit the new state. So we wait for that to finish.
This lets us lock the animation in its state instead of snapping back
and then applying the real update.

Using this technique we can't actually run a View Transition from the
current state to the actual committed state because it would snap back
to the beginning and then run the View Transition from there. Therefore
any new commit needs to skip View Transitions even if it should've
technically animated to that state. We assume that the new state is the
same as the optimistic state you already swiped to. An alternative to
this technique could be to commit the optimistic state when we cancel
and then apply any new updates o top of that. I might explore that in
the future.

Regardless it's important that the `action` associated with the swipe
schedules some work before we cancel. Otherwise it risks reverting
first. So I had to update this in the fixture.
2025-02-27 16:45:18 -05:00
Rubén Norte
9dd378ff12 [RN] Move definition of public instances to ReactNativePrivateInterface (#32446)
## Summary

> [!NOTE]
> This only modifies types, so shouldn't have an impact at runtime.

Some time ago we moved some type definitions from React to React Native
in #26437.

This continues making progress on that so values that are created by
React Native and passed to the React renderer (in this case public
instances) are actually defined in React Native and not in React.

This will allow us to modify the definition of some of these types
without having to make changes in the React repository (in the short
term, we want to refactor PublicInstance from an object to an interface,
and then modify that interface to add all the new DOM methods).

## How did you test this change?

Manually synced `ReactNativeTypes` on top of
https://github.com/facebook/react-native/pull/49602 and verified Flow
passes.
2025-02-24 13:46:06 +00:00
Sebastian Markbåge
662957cc73 Allow passing range option to useSwipeTransition (#32412)
Stacked on #32379

Track the range offsets along the timeline where previous/current/next
is. This can also be specified as an option. This lets you model more
than three states along a timeline by clamping them and then updating
the "current" as you go.

It also allows specifying the "current" offset as something different
than what it was when the gesture started such as if it has to start
after scroll has already happened (such as what happens if you listen to
the "scroll" event).
2025-02-21 11:03:04 -05:00
Sebastian Markbåge
88479c6fc3 Rerender useSwipeTransition when direction changes (#32379)
We can only render one direction at a time with View Transitions. When
the direction changes we need to do another render in the new direction
(returning previous or next).

To determine direction we store the position we started at and anything
moving to a lower value (left/up) is "previous" direction (`false`) and
anything else is "next" (`true`) direction.

For the very first render we won't know which direction you're going
since you're still on the initial position. It's useful to start the
render to allow the view transition to take control before anything
shifts around so we start from the original position. This is not
guaranteed though if the render suspends.

For now we start the first render by guessing the direction such as if
we know that prev/next are the same as current. With the upcoming auto
start mode we can guess more accurately there before we start. We can
also add explicit APIs to `startGesture` but ideally it wouldn't matter.
Ideally we could just start after the first change in direction from the
starting point.
2025-02-20 18:13:09 -05:00
Sam Zhou
70f1d766e8 [flow] Eliminate usage of global React types in ReactNativeTypes.js (#32330) 2025-02-20 12:42:33 -05:00
Jack Pope
885532c124 Revert "Ship enableFabricCompleteRootInCommitPhase (#32318)" (#32434)
This reverts commit 8759c5c8d6 /
https://github.com/facebook/react/pull/32318

We discovered that the experiment setup for this was faulty and we need
to re-run as a back test.
2025-02-20 12:29:01 -05:00
Dawid Małecki
e670e72fa0 Change TouchedViewDataAtPoint type in ReactNativeTypes to use supported by Flow tooling syntax (#32382)
## Summary

The `flow-api-translator` from the `hermes` repo does not support flow
type spreads. It is currently not able to digest the ReactNativeTypes
file as it contains unsupported syntax. The simplest solution is to
change the type of the `TouchedViewDataAtPoint` to equivalent, yet
supported by the Flow tooling. In this case the intersection can be used
as
the `TouchedViewDataAtPoint` and `InspectorData` have no common
property.

## How did you test this change?

Run yarn flow native
2025-02-14 14:10:37 +00:00
Rubén Norte
f83903bfcc [RN] Set up test to create public instances lazily in Fabric (#32363)
## Summary

In React Native, public instances and internal host nodes are not
represented by the same object (ReactNativeElement & shadow nodes vs.
just DOM elements), and the only one that's required for rendering is
the shadow node. Public instances are generally only necessary when
accessed via refs or events, and that usually happens for a small amount
of components in the tree.

This implements an optimization to create the public instance on demand,
instead of eagerly creating it when creating the host node. We expect
this to improve performance by reducing the logic we do per node and the
number of object allocations.

## How did you test this change?

Manually synced the changes to React Native and run Fantom tests and
benchmarks, with the flag enabled and disabled. All tests pass in both
cases, and benchmarks show a slight but consistent performance
improvement.
2025-02-12 13:52:57 +00:00
lauren
cd90a4d8c0 [react-native] Suppress Flow nonstrict-import check in ReactNativeTypes (#32349)
Summary: Unblock internal sync.

Test Plan:

Reviewers:

Subscribers:

Tasks:

Tags:
2025-02-10 15:46:47 -05:00
lauren
3dd2c62770 [react-native] fix divergence in synced code (#32348)
Alternative to #32334
2025-02-10 14:08:44 -05:00
Jack Pope
8759c5c8d6 Ship enableFabricCompleteRootInCommitPhase (#32318) 2025-02-07 11:12:29 -05:00
Dmytro Rykun
bb9a24d9fc Use fastAddProperties in diffing (#32243)
## Summary

`fastAddProperties` has shown some perf benefits when used for creating
props payload for new components. In this PR we'll try to use it for
diffing props for existing components.

It would be good enough if it simply doesn't regress perf. We'll be able
to delete the old `addProperties`, and make `fastAddProperties` the
default behaviour.

## How did you test this change?

```
yarn lint
yarn flow native
yarn test packages/react-native-renderer -r=xplat --variant=false
yarn test packages/react-native-renderer -r=xplat --variant=true
```
2025-01-30 11:16:42 +00:00
Rubén Norte
b2357ecd82 [RN] Add support for document instance in React Native (#32260)
## Summary

We're adding support for `Document` instances in React Native (as
`ReactNativeDocument` instances) in
https://github.com/facebook/react-native/pull/49012 , which requires the
React Fabric renderer to handle its lifecycle.

This modifies the renderer to create those document instances and
associate them with the React root, and provides a new method for React
Native to access them given its containerTag / rootTag.

## How did you test this change?

Tested e2e in https://github.com/facebook/react-native/pull/49012
manually syncing these changes.
2025-01-29 17:07:00 +00:00
Sebastian Markbåge
028c8e6cf5 Add Transition Types (#32105)
This adds an isomorphic API to add Transition Types, which represent the
cause, to the current Transition. This is currently mainly for View
Transitions but as a concept it's broader and we might expand it to more
features and object types in the future.

```js
import { unstable_addTransitionType as addTransitionType } from 'react';

startTransition(() => {
  addTransitionType('my-transition-type');
  setState(...);
});
```

If multiple transitions get entangled this is additive and all
Transition Types are collected. You can also add more than one type to a
Transition (hence the `add` prefix).

Transition Types are reset after each commit. Meaning that `<Suspense>`
revealing after a `startTransition` does not get any View Transition
types associated with it.

Note that the scoping rules for this is a little "wrong" in this
implementation. Ideally it would be scoped to the nearest outer
`startTransition` and grouped with any `setState` inside of it.
Including Actions. However, since we currently don't have AsyncContext
on the client, it would be too easy to drop a Transition Type if there
were no other `setState` in the same `await` task. Multiple Transitions
are entangled together anyway right now as a result. So this just tracks
a global of all pending Transition Types for the next Transition. An
inherent tricky bit with this API is that you could update multiple
roots. In that case it should ideally be associated with each root.
Transition Tracing solves this by associating a Transition with any
updates that are later collected but this suffers from the problem
mentioned above. Therefore, I just associate Transition Types with one
root - the first one to commit. Since the View Transitions across roots
are sequential anyway it kind of makes sense that only one really is the
cause and the other one is subsequent.

Transition Types can be used to apply different animations based on what
caused the Transition. You have three different ways to choose from for
how to use them:

## CSS

It integrates with [View Transition
Types](https://www.w3.org/TR/css-view-transitions-2/#active-view-transition-pseudo-examples)
so you can match different animations based on CSS scopes:

```css
:root:active-view-transition-type(my-transition-type) {
  &::view-transition-...(...) {
    ...
  }
}
```

This is kind of a PITA to write though and if you have a CSS library
that provide View Transition Classes it's difficult to import those into
these scopes.

## Class per Type

This PR also adds an object-as-map form that can be passed to all
`className` properties:

```js
<ViewTransition className={{
  'my-navigation-type': 'hello',
  'default': 'world',
}}>
```

If multiple types match, then they're joined together. If no types match
then the special `"default"` entry is used instead. If any type has the
value `"none"` then that wins and the ViewTransition is disabled (not
assigned a name).

These can be combined with `enter`/`exit`/`update`/`layout`/`share`
props to match based on kind of trigger and Transition Type.

```js
<ViewTransition enter={{
  'navigation-back': 'enter-right',
  'navigation-forward': 'enter-left',
}}
exit={{
  'navigation-back': 'exit-right',
  'navigation-forward': 'exit-left',
}}>
```

## Events

In addition, you can also observe the types in the View Transition Event
callbacks as the second argument. That way you can pick different
imperative Animations based on the cause.

```js
<ViewTransition onUpdate={(inst, types) => {
  if (types.includes('navigation-back')) {
    ...
  } else if (types.includes('navigation-forward')) {
    ...
  } else {
    ...
  }
}}>
```

## Future

In the future we might expose types to `useEffect` for more general
purpose usage. This would also allow non-View Transition based
Animations such as existing libraries to use this same feature to
coordinate the same concept.

We might also allow richer objects to be passed along here. Only the
strings would apply to View Transitions but the imperative code and
effects could do something else with them.
2025-01-21 15:00:02 -05:00
Sebastian Markbåge
0bf1f39ec6 View Transition Refs (#32038)
This adds refs to View Transition that can resolve to an instance of:

```js
type ViewTransitionRef = {
  name: string,
  group: Animatable,
  imagePair: Animatable,
  old: Animatable,
  new: Animatable,
}
```

Animatable is a type that has `animate(keyframes, options)` and
`getAnimations()` on it. It's the interface that exists on Element that
lets you start animations on it. These ones are like that but for the
four pseudo-elements created by the view transition.

If a name changes, then a new ref is created. That way if you hold onto
a ref during an exit animation spawned by the name change, you can keep
calling functions on it. It will keep referring to the old name rather
than the new name.

This allows imperative control over the animations instead of using CSS
for this.

```js
const viewTransition = ref.current;
const groupAnimation = viewTransition.group.animate(keyframes, options);
const imagePairAnimation = viewTransition.imagePair.animate(keyframes, options);
const oldAnimation = viewTransition.old.animate(keyframes, options);
const newAnimation = viewTransition.new.animate(keyframes, options);
```

The downside of using this API is that it doesn't work with SSR so for
SSR rendered animations they'll fallback to the CSS. You could use this
for progressive enhancement though.

Note: In this PR the ref only controls one DOM node child but there can
be more than one DOM node in the ViewTransition fragment and they are
just left to their defaults. We could try something like making the
`animate()` function apply to multiple children but that could lead to
some weird consequences and the return value would be difficult to
merge. We could try to maintain an array of Animatable that updates with
how ever many things are currently animating but that makes the API more
complicated to use for the simple case. Conceptually this should be like
a fragment so we would ideally combine the multiple children into a
single isolate if we could. Maybe one day the same name could be applied
to multiple children to create a single isolate. For now I think I'll
just leave it like this and you're really expect to just use it with one
DOM node. If you have more than one they just get the default animations
from CSS.

Using this is a little tricky due timing. In this fixture I just use a
layout effect plus rAF to get into the right timing after the
startViewTransition is ready. In the future I'll add an event that fires
when View Transitions heuristics fire with the right timing.
2025-01-10 11:51:37 -05:00
Pieter De Baets
74ea0c73a2 Remove enableGetInspectorDataForInstanceInProduction flag (#32033)
## Summary

Callers for this method has been removed in
65bda54232,
so these methods no longer need to be conditionally exported and the
feature flag can be removed.

## How did you test this change?

Flow fabric/native
2025-01-09 15:51:58 +00:00
Sebastian Markbåge
fd9cfa416f Execute layout phase before after mutation phase inside view transition (#32029)
This allows mutations and scrolling in the layout phase to be counted
towards the mutation. This would maybe not be the case for gestures but
it is useful for fire-and-forget.

This also avoids the issue that if you resolve navigation in
useLayoutEffect that it ends up dead locked.

It also means that useLayoutEffect does not observe the scroll
restoration and in fact, the scroll restoration would win over any
manual scrolling in layout effects. For better or worse, this is more in
line with how things worked before and how it works in popstate. So it's
less of a breaking change. This does mean that we can't unify the after
mutation phase with the layout phase though.

To do this we need split out flushSpawnedWork from the flushLayoutEffect
call.

Spawned work from setState inside the layout phase is done outside and
not counted towards the transition. They're sync updates and so are not
eligible for their own View Transitions. It's also tricky to support
this since it's unclear what things like exits in that update would
mean. This work will still be able to mutate the live DOM but it's just
not eligible to trigger new transitions or adjust the target of those.

One difference between popstate is that this spawned work is after
scroll restoration. So any scrolling spawned from a second pass would
now win over scroll restoration.

Another consequence of this change is that you can't safely animate
pseudo elements in useLayoutEffect. We'll introduce a better event for
that anyway.
2025-01-08 19:13:25 -05:00
Sebastian Markbåge
98418e8902 [Fiber] Suspend the commit while we wait for the previous View Transition to finish (#32002)
Stacked on #31975.

View Transitions cannot handle interruptions in that if you start a new
one before the previous one has finished, it just stops and then
restarts. It doesn't seamlessly transition into the new transition.

This is generally considered a bad thing but I actually think it's quite
good for fire-and-forget animations (gestures is another story). There
are too many examples of bad animations in fast interactions because the
scenario wasn't predicted. Like overlapping toasts or stacked layers
that look bad. The only case interrupts tend to work well is when you do
a strict reversal of an animation like returning to the page you just
left or exiting a modal just being opened. However, we're limited by the
platform even in that regard.

I think one reason interruptions have traditionally been seen as good is
because it's hard if you have a synchronous framework to not interrupt
since your application state has already moved on. We don't have that
limitation since we can suspend commits. We can do all the work to
prepare for the next commit by rendering while the animation is going
but then delay the commit until the previous one finishes.

Another technical limitation earlier animation libraries suffered from
is only have the option to either interrupt or sequence animations since
it's modeling just one change set. Like showing one toast at a time.
That's bad. We don't have that limitation because we can interrupt a
previously suspended commit and start working on a new one instead.
That's what we do for suspended transitions in general. The net effect
is that we batch the commits.

Therefore if you get multiple toasts flying in fast, they can animate as
a batch in together all at once instead of overlapping slightly or being
staggered. Interruptions (often) bad. Staggered animations bad. Batched
animations good.

This PR stashes the currently active View Transition with an expando on
the container that's animating (currently always document). This is
similar to what we do with event handlers etc. We reason we do this with
an expando is that if you have multiple Reacts on the same page they
need to wait for each other. However, one of those might also be the SSR
runtime. So this lets us wait for the SSR runtime's animations to finish
before starting client ones. This could really be a more generic name
since this should ideally be shared across frameworks. It's kind of
strange that this property doesn't already exist in the DOM given that
there can only be one. It would be useful to be able to coordinate this
across libraries.
2025-01-08 13:36:57 -05:00
Sebastian Markbåge
3a5496b3f5 [Fiber] Use className on <ViewTransition> to assign view-transition-class (#31999)
Stacked on #31975.

This is the primary way we recommend styling your View Transitions since
it allows for reusable styling such as a CSS library specializing in
View Transitions in a way that's composable and without naming
conflicts. E.g.

```js
<ViewTransition className="enter-slide-in exit-fade-out update-cross-fade">
```

This doesn't change the HTML `class` attribute. It's not a CSS class.
Instead it assign the `view-transition-class` style prop of the
underlying DOM node while it's transitioning.

You can also just use `<div style={{viewTransitionClass: ...}}>` on the
DOM node but it's convenient to control the Transition completely from
the outside and conceptually we're transitioning the whole fragment. You
can even make Transition components that just wraps existing components.
`<RevealTransition><Component /></RevealTransition>` this way.

Since you can also have multiple wrappers for different circumstances it
allows React's heuristics to use different classes for different
scenarios. We'll likely add more options like configuring different
classes for different `types` or scenarios that can't be described by
CSS alone.

## CSS Modules

```js
import transitions from './transitions.module.css';

<ViewTransition className={transitions.bounceIn}>...</ViewTransition>
```

CSS Modules works well with this strategy because you can have globally
unique namespaces and define your transitions in the CSS modules as a
library that you can import. [As seen in the fixture
here.](8b91b37bb8 (diff-b4d9854171ffdac4d2c01be92a5eff4f8e9e761e6af953094f99ca243b054a85R11))

I did notice an unfortunate bug in how CSS Modules (at least in Webpack)
generates class names. Sometimes the `+` character is used in the hash
of the class name which is not valid for `view-transition-class` and so
it breaks. I had to rename my class names until the hash yielded
something different to work around it. Ideally that bug gets fixed soon.

## className, rly?

`className` isn't exactly the most loved property name, however, I'm
using `className` here too for consistency. Even though in this case
there's no direct equivalent DOM property name. The CSS property is
named `viewTransitionClass`, but the "viewTransition" prefix is implied
by the Component it is on in this case. For most people the fact that
this is actually a different namespace than other CSS classes doesn't
matter. You'll most just use a CSS library anyway and conceptually
you're just assigning classes the same way as `className` on a DOM node.

But if we ever rename the `class` prop then we can do that for this one
as well.
2025-01-08 13:22:06 -05:00
Sebastian Markbåge
a4d122f2d1 Add <ViewTransition> Component (#31975)
This will provide the opt-in for using [View
Transitions](https://developer.mozilla.org/en-US/docs/Web/API/View_Transition_API)
in React.

View Transitions only trigger for async updates like `startTransition`,
`useDeferredValue`, Actions or `<Suspense>` revealing from fallback to
content. Synchronous updates provide an opt-out but also guarantee that
they commit immediately which View Transitions can't.

There's no need to opt-in to View Transitions at the "cause" side like
event handlers or actions. They don't know what UI will change and
whether that has an animated transition described.

Conceptually the `<ViewTransition>` component is like a DOM fragment
that transitions its children in its own isolate/snapshot. The API works
by wrapping a DOM node or inner component:

```js
import {ViewTransition} from 'react';

<ViewTransition><Component /></ViewTransition>
```

The default is `name="auto"` which will automatically assign a
`view-transition-name` to the inner DOM node. That way you can add a
View Transition to a Component without controlling its DOM nodes styling
otherwise.

A difference between this and the browser's built-in
`view-transition-name: auto` is that switching the DOM nodes within the
`<ViewTransition>` component preserves the same name so this example
cross-fades between the DOM nodes instead of causing an exit and enter:

```js
<ViewTransition>{condition ? <ComponentA /> : <ComponentB />}</ViewTransition>
```

This becomes especially useful with `<Suspense>` as this example
cross-fades between Skeleton and Content:

```js
<ViewTransition>
  <Suspense fallback={<Skeleton />}>
    <Content />
  </Suspense>
</ViewTransition>
```

Where as this example triggers an exit of the Skeleton and an enter of
the Content:

```js
<Suspense fallback={<ViewTransition><Skeleton /></ViewTransition>}>
  <ViewTransition><Content /></ViewTransition>
</Suspense>
```

Managing instances and keys becomes extra important.

You can also specify an explicit `name` property for example for
animating the same conceptual item from one page onto another. However,
best practices is to property namespace these since they can easily
collide. It's also useful to add an `id` to it if available.

```js
<ViewTransition name="my-shared-view">
```

The model in general is the same as plain `view-transition-name` except
React manages a set of heuristics for when to apply it. A problem with
the naive View Transitions model is that it overly opts in every
boundary that *might* transition into transitioning. This is leads to
unfortunate effects like things floating around when unrelated updates
happen. This leads the whole document to animate which means that
nothing is clickable in the meantime. It makes it not useful for smaller
and more local transitions. Best practice is to add
`view-transition-name` only right before you're about to need to animate
the thing. This is tricky to manage globally on complex apps and is not
compositional. Instead we let React manage when a `<ViewTransition>`
"activates" and add/remove the `view-transition-name`. This is also when
React calls `startViewTransition` behind the scenes while it mutates the
DOM.

I've come up with a number of heuristics that I think will make a lot
easier to coordinate this. The principle is that only if something that
updates that particular boundary do we activate it. I hope that one day
maybe browsers will have something like these built-in and we can remove
our implementation.

A `<ViewTransition>` only activates if:

- If a mounted Component renders a `<ViewTransition>` within it outside
the first DOM node, and it is within the viewport, then that
ViewTransition activates as an "enter" animation. This avoids inner
"enter" animations trigger when the parent mounts.
- If an unmounted Component had a `<ViewTransition>` within it outside
the first DOM node, and it was within the viewport, then that
ViewTransition activates as an "exit" animation. This avoids inner
"exit" animations triggering when the parent unmounts.
- If an explicitly named `<ViewTransition name="...">` is deep within an
unmounted tree and one with the same name appears in a mounted tree at
the same time, then both are activated as a pair, but only if they're
both in the viewport. This avoids these triggering "enter" or "exit"
animations when going between parents that don't have a pair.
- If an already mounted `<ViewTransition>` is visible and a DOM
mutation, that might affect how it's painted, happens within its
children but outside any nested `<ViewTransition>`. This allows it to
"cross-fade" between its updates.
- If an already mounted `<ViewTransition>` resizes or moves as the
result of direct DOM nodes siblings changing or moving around. This
allows insertion, deletion and reorders into a list to animate all
children. It is only within one DOM node though, to avoid unrelated
changes in the parent to trigger this. If an item is outside the
viewport before and after, then it's skipped to avoid things flying
across the screen.
- If a `<ViewTransition>` boundary changes size, due to a DOM mutation
within it, then the parent activates (or the root document if there are
no more parents). This ensures that the container can cross-fade to
avoid abrupt relayout. This can be avoided by using absolutely
positioned children. When this can avoid bubbling to the root document,
whatever is not animating is still responsive to clicks during the
transition.

Conceptually each DOM node has its own default that activates the parent
`<ViewTransition>` or no transition if the parent is the root. That
means that if you add a DOM node like `<div><ViewTransition><Component
/></ViewTransition></div>` this won't trigger an "enter" animation since
it was the div that was added, not the ViewTransition. Instead, it might
cause a cross-fade of the parent ViewTransition or no transition if it
had no parent. This ensures that only explicit boundaries perform coarse
animations instead of every single node which is really the benefit of
the View Transitions model. This ends up working out well for simple
cases like switching between two pages immediately while transitioning
one floating item that appears on both pages. Because only the floating
item transitions by default.

Note that it's possible to add manual `view-transition-name` with CSS or
`style={{ viewTransitionName: 'auto' }}` that always transitions as long
as something else has a `<ViewTransition>` that activates. For example a
`<ViewTransition>` can wrap a whole page for a cross-fade but inside of
it an explicit name can be added to something to ensure it animates as a
move when something relates else changes its layout. Instead of just
cross-fading it along with the Page which would be the default.

There's more PRs coming with some optimizations, fixes and expanded
APIs. This first PR explores the above core heuristic.

---------

Co-authored-by: Sebastian "Sebbie" Silbermann <silbermann.sebastian@gmail.com>
2025-01-08 12:11:18 -05:00
Ricky
26297f5383 [assert helpers] not dom or reconciler (#31862)
converts everything left outside react-dom and react-reconciler
2024-12-20 12:41:13 -05:00
Andrew Clark
c86542b240 Bump next prerelease version numbers (#31676)
Updates the version numbers in the prerelease (canary and experimental)
channels.

---------

Co-authored-by: Jack Pope <jackpope1@gmail.com>
2024-12-12 14:10:46 -05:00
Alex Hunt
92b62f500c Remove comment syntax from ReactNativeTypes (#31457)
# Summary

I'm working to get the main `react-native` package parsable by modern
Flow tooling (both `flow-bundler`, `flow-api-translator`).

This diff trivially removes some redundant Flow comment syntax in
`ReactNativeTypes.js`, which fixes parsing under these newer tools.

## How did you test this change?

Files were pasted into `react-native-github` under fbsource, where Flow
validates .
2024-12-11 16:55:11 +00:00
Sebastian Markbåge
c13986da78 Fix Overlapping "message" Bug in Performance Track (#31528)
When you schedule a microtask from render or effect and then call
setState (or ping) from there, the "event" is the event that React
scheduled (which will be a postMessage). The event time of this new
render will be before the last render finished.

We usually clamp these but in this scenario the update doesn't happen
while a render is happening. Causing overlapping events.

Before:

<img width="1229" alt="Screenshot 2024-11-12 at 11 01 30 PM"
src="https://github.com/user-attachments/assets/9652cf3b-b358-453c-b295-1239cbb15952">

Therefore when we finalize a render we need to store the end of the last
render so when we a new update comes in later with an event time earlier
than that, we know to clamp it.

There's also a special case here where when we enter the
`RootDidNotComplete` or `RootSuspendedWithDelay` case we neither leave
the root as in progress nor commit it. Those needs to finalize too.
Really this should be modeled as a suspended track that we haven't added
yet. That's the gap between "Blocked" and "message" below.

After:

<img width="1471" alt="Screenshot 2024-11-13 at 12 31 34 AM"
src="https://github.com/user-attachments/assets/b24f994e-9055-4b10-ad29-ad9b36302ffc">

I also fixed an issue where we may log the same event name multiple
times if we're rendering more than once in the same event. In this case
I just leave a blank trace between the last commit and the next update.

I also adding ignoring of the "message" event at all in these cases when
the event is from React's scheduling itself.
2024-11-14 16:35:08 -05:00
Sam Zhou
45804af18d [flow] Eliminate usage of more than 1-arg React.AbstractComponent in React codebase (#31314)
<!--
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We appreciate you spending the time to work on these changes. Please
provide enough information so that others can review your pull request.
The three fields below are mandatory.

Before submitting a pull request, please make sure the following is
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1. Fork [the repository](https://github.com/facebook/react) and create
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  2. Run `yarn` in the repository root.
3. If you've fixed a bug or added code that should be tested, add tests!
4. Ensure the test suite passes (`yarn test`). Tip: `yarn test --watch
TestName` is helpful in development.
5. Run `yarn test --prod` to test in the production environment. It
supports the same options as `yarn test`.
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open `chrome://inspect`, and press "Inspect".
7. Format your code with
[prettier](https://github.com/prettier/prettier) (`yarn prettier`).
8. Make sure your code lints (`yarn lint`). Tip: `yarn linc` to only
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  9. Run the [Flow](https://flowtype.org/) type checks (`yarn flow`).
  10. If you haven't already, complete the CLA.

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-->

## Summary

In order to adopt react 19's ref-as-prop model, Flow needs to eliminate
all the places where they are treated differently.
`React.AbstractComponent` is the worst example of this, and we need to
eliminate it.

This PR eliminates them from the react repo, and only keeps the one that
has 1 argument of props.

## How did you test this change?

yarn flow
2024-10-21 16:17:41 -07:00
Timothy Yung
a3d9ea05bf Delete __SECRET_INTERNALS_DO_NOT_USE_OR_YOU_WILL_BE_FIRED from React Native Renderer (#31276)
## Summary

The React Native Renderer exports a
`__SECRET_INTERNALS_DO_NOT_USE_OR_YOU_WILL_BE_FIRED` property with a
single method that has no remaining call sites:
`computeComponentStackForErrorReporting`

This PR cleans up this unused export.

## How did you test this change?

```
$ yarn
$ yarn flow fabric
$ yarn test
```
2024-10-16 11:19:01 -07:00
Jan Kassens
de43d560a8 [cleanup] remove flag enableAddPropertiesFastPath (#31062)
The experiment was tested internally and rolled out, replacing the flag
with `true`.
2024-10-09 16:46:35 -04:00
Timothy Yung
459fd418cf Define HostInstance type for React Native (#31101)
## Summary

Creates a new `HostInstance` type for React Native, to more accurately
capture the intent most developers have when using the `NativeMethods`
type or `React.ElementRef<HostComponent<T>>`.

Since `React.ElementRef<HostComponent<T>>` is typed as
`React.AbstractComponent<T, NativeMethods>`, that means
`React.ElementRef<HostComponent<T>>` is equivalent to `NativeMethods`
which is equivalent to `HostInstance`.


## How did you test this change?

```
$ yarn
$ yarn flow fabric
```
2024-10-01 17:25:59 -07:00
Ruslan Lesiutin
d66fa02a30 fix: use public instance in Fiber renderer and expose it from getInspectorDataForViewAtPoint (#31068)
React DevTools no longer operates with just Fibers, it now builds its
own Shadow Tree, which represents the tree on the Host (Fabric on
Native, DOM on Web).

We have to keep track of public instances for a select-to-inspect
feature. We've recently changed this logic in
https://github.com/facebook/react/pull/30831, and looks like we've been
incorrectly getting a public instance for Fabric case.

Not only this, turns out that all `getInspectorData...` APIs are
returning Fibers, and not public instances. I have to expose it, so that
React DevTools can correctly identify the element, which was selected.

Changes for React Native are in
[D63421463](https://www.internalfb.com/diff/D63421463)
2024-09-26 10:17:16 +01:00
Sebastian Markbåge
d4688dfaaf [Fiber] Track Event Time, startTransition Time and setState Time (#31008)
This tracks the current window.event.timeStamp the first time we
setState or call startTransition. For either the blocking track or
transition track. We can use this to show how long we were blocked by
other events or overhead from when the user interacted until we got
called into React.

Then we track the time we start awaiting a Promise returned from
startTransition. We can use this track how long we waited on an Action
to complete before setState was called.

Then finally we track when setState was called so we can track how long
we were blocked by other word before we could actually start rendering.
For a Transition this might be blocked by Blocking React render work.

We only log these once a subsequent render actually happened. If no
render was actually scheduled, then we don't log these. E.g. if an
isomorphic Action doesn't call startTransition there's no render so we
don't log it.

We only log the first event/update/transition even if multiple are
batched into it later. If multiple Actions are entangled they're all
treated as one until an update happens. If no update happens and all
entangled actions finish, we clear the transition so that the next time
a new sequence starts we can log it.

We also clamp these (start the track later) if they were scheduled
within a render/commit. Since we share a single track we don't want to
create overlapping tracks.

The purpose of this is not to show every event/action that happens but
to show a prelude to how long we were blocked before a render started.
So you can follow the first event to commit.

<img width="674" alt="Screenshot 2024-09-20 at 1 59 58 AM"
src="https://github.com/user-attachments/assets/151ba9e8-6b3c-4fa1-9f8d-e3602745eeb7">

I still need to add the rendering/suspended phases to the timeline which
why this screenshot has a gap.

<img width="993" alt="Screenshot 2024-09-20 at 12 50 27 AM"
src="https://github.com/user-attachments/assets/155b6675-b78a-4a22-a32b-212c15051074">

In this case it's a Form Action which started a render into the form
which then suspended on the action. The action then caused a refresh,
which interrupts with its own update that's blocked before rendering.
Suspended roots like this is interesting because we could in theory
start working on a different root in the meantime which makes this
timeline less linear.
2024-09-20 14:27:12 -04:00
Sam Zhou
e210d08180 [flow] Upgrade Flow to 0.245.2 (#30919)
## Summary

This PR bumps Flow all the way to the latest 0.245.2. 

Most of the suppressions comes from Flow v0.239.0's change to include
undefined in the return of `Array.pop`.

I also enabled `react.custom_jsx_typing=true` and added custom jsx
typing to match the old behavior that `React.createElement` is
effectively any typed. This is necessary since various builtin
components like `React.Fragment` is actually symbol in the React repo
instead of `React.AbstractComponent<...>`. It can be made more accurate
by customizing the `React$CustomJSXFactory` type, but I will leave it to
the React team to decide.

## How did you test this change?

`yarn flow` for all the renderers
2024-09-09 08:41:44 -07:00
Sam Zhou
85fb95cdff [flow] Eliminate a few React.Element type that will be synced to react-native (#30719)
## Summary

Flow will eventually remove the specific `React.Element` type. For most
of the code, it can be replaced with `React.MixedElement` or
`React.Node`.

When specific react elements are required, it needs to be replaced with
either `React$Element` which will trigger a `internal-type` lint error
that can be disabled project-wide, or use
`ExactReactElement_DEPRECATED`.

Fortunately in this case, this one can be replaced with just
`React.MixedElement`.

## How did you test this change?

`flow`
2024-08-16 12:53:52 -04:00
Timothy Yung
23830ea2a1 Unit Test for findNodeHandle Error Behavior (#30669)
## Summary

As promised on https://github.com/facebook/react/pull/29627, this
creates a unit test for the `findNodeHandle` error that prevents
developers from calling it within render methods.

## How did you test this change?

```
$ yarn test ReactFabric-test.internal.js
```
2024-08-12 16:32:40 -07:00
Jan Kassens
5fb67fa25c Cloned flag to avoid extra clones in persistent renderer (#27647)
Persistent renderers used the `Update` effect flag to check if a subtree
needs to be cloned. In some cases, that causes extra renders, such as
when a layout effect is triggered which only has an effect on the JS
side, but doesn't update the host components.

It's been a bit tricky to find the right places where this needs to be
set and I'm not 100% sure I got all the cases even though the tests
passed.
2024-08-01 15:11:19 -04:00
Sebastian Silbermann
88ee14ffa5 [Devtools] Ensure initial read of useFormStatus returns NotPendingTransition (#28728) 2024-08-01 10:55:53 +02:00
Sebastian Markbåge
146df7c311 [Fiber] Make DevTools Config use Static Injection (#30522)
We use static dependency injection. We shouldn't use this dynamic
dependency injection we do for DevTools internals. There's also meta
programming like spreading and stuff that isn't needed.

This moves the config from `injectIntoDevTools` to the FiberConfig so it
can be statically resolved.

Closure Compiler has some trouble generating optimal code for this
anyway so ideally we'd refactor this further but at least this is better
and saves a few bytes and avoids some code paths (when minified).
2024-07-30 15:03:54 -04:00
Jan Kassens
6b82f3c904 [RN] experiment to move Fabric completeWork to the commit phase (#30513)
There is currently a mismatch in how the persistent mode JS API and the
Fabric native code interpret `completeRoot`.

This is a short-lived experiment to see the effect of moving the Fabric
`completeRoot` call from `finalizeContainerChildren` to
`replaceContainerChildren` which in some cases does not get called.
2024-07-29 18:38:55 -04:00
Jan Kassens
b7e7f1a3fa [BE] upgrade prettier to 3.3.3 (#30420)
Mostly just changes in ternary formatting.
2024-07-22 16:09:01 -04:00
Dmytro Rykun
f510ece86d Fix fastAddProperties to properly nullify style props (#30334)
## Summary

This PR fixes the `fastAddProperties` function. Now it nullifies a prop
if it was defined in one of the items of a style array, but then set to
`undefined` or `null` in one of the subsequent items. E.g. `style:
[{top: 0}, {top: undefined}]` should evaluate to `{top: null}`. Also
added a test case for that.

## How did you test this change?
```
yarn test packages/react-native-renderer -r=xplat --variant=false
yarn test packages/react-native-renderer -r=xplat --variant=true
yarn flow native
```
2024-07-15 17:32:04 +01:00
Eric Rozell
a5cc797b88 Updates ViewConfig types to delegate isInAParentText context (#29872)
<!--
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  2. Run `yarn` in the repository root.
3. If you've fixed a bug or added code that should be tested, add tests!
4. Ensure the test suite passes (`yarn test`). Tip: `yarn test --watch
TestName` is helpful in development.
5. Run `yarn test --prod` to test in the production environment. It
supports the same options as `yarn test`.
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open `chrome://inspect`, and press "Inspect".
7. Format your code with
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8. Make sure your code lints (`yarn lint`). Tip: `yarn linc` to only
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## Summary

<!--
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Now that HostContext determination for Fabric is a DEV-only behavior, we
can move the HostContext determination to resolve from the ViewConfig
for a given type. Doing this will allow arbitrary types to register
themselves as potential parents of raw text string children. This is the
first of two diffs for react as we'll:

1. Add the new property to the ViewConfig types
2. Update React Native to include the `supportsRawText` property for
`RCTText`, `RCTVirtualText`, `AndroidTextInput`, etc.
3. Switch the behavior of react to read from the ViewConfig rather than
a static list of types.

## How did you test this change?

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- yarn test
- yarn test --prod
- Pulled change into react-native, added `supportsRawText` props to
RCTText, RCTVirtualText, etc. ViewConfigs and confirmed everything type
checks.
2024-07-11 09:47:20 -07:00
Jan Kassens
378b305958 Warn about legacy context when legacy context is not disabled (#30297)
For environments that still have legacy contexts available, this adds a
warning to make the remaining call sites easier to locate and encourage
upgrades.
2024-07-10 11:53:00 -04:00
Jan Kassens
21129d34a5 Upgrade flow to 0.235.0 (#30118)
See [Flow
changelog](https://github.com/facebook/flow/blob/main/Changelog.md) for
changes in this version.
2024-07-08 14:11:11 -04:00
Jan Kassens
8416ebee38 Update ReactFabric-test.internal to concurrent root (#30103) 2024-06-26 16:04:38 -04:00
Jan Kassens
7045700a6d Run ReactFabric-test.internal.js in xplat variant (#30101)
The explicit mock override in this test was causing it to always run as
native-oss instead of also as xplat. This moves the test to use `//
@gate persistent` instead to run it in all persistent configs.
2024-06-26 12:51:46 -04:00