Skip to main content
Version: 0.69

Text

A React component for displaying text.

Text supports nesting, styling, and touch handling.

In the following example, the nested title and body text will inherit the fontFamily from styles.baseText, but the title provides its own additional styles. The title and body will stack on top of each other on account of the literal newlines:

Nested text​

Both Android and iOS allow you to display formatted text by annotating ranges of a string with specific formatting like bold or colored text (NSAttributedString on iOS, SpannableString on Android). In practice, this is very tedious. For React Native, we decided to use web paradigm for this where you can nest text to achieve the same effect.

Behind the scenes, React Native converts this to a flat NSAttributedString or SpannableString that contains the following information:

"I am bold and red"
0-9: bold
9-17: bold, red

Containers​

The <Text> element is unique relative to layout: everything inside is no longer using the Flexbox layout but using text layout. This means that elements inside of a <Text> are no longer rectangles, but wrap when they see the end of the line.

<Text>
<Text>First part and </Text>
<Text>second part</Text>
</Text>
// Text container: the text will be inline if the space allowed it
// |First part and second part|

// otherwise, the text will flow as if it was one
// |First part |
// |and second |
// |part |

<View>
<Text>First part and </Text>
<Text>second part</Text>
</View>
// View container: each text is its own block
// |First part and|
// |second part |

// otherwise, the text will flow in its own block
// |First part |
// |and |
// |second part|

Limited Style Inheritance​

On the web, the usual way to set a font family and size for the entire document is to take advantage of inherited CSS properties like so:

html {
font-family: 'lucida grande', tahoma, verdana, arial, sans-serif;
font-size: 11px;
color: #141823;
}

All elements in the document will inherit this font unless they or one of their parents specifies a new rule.

In React Native, we are more strict about it: you must wrap all the text nodes inside of a <Text> component. You cannot have a text node directly under a <View>.

// BAD: will raise exception, can't have a text node as child of a <View>
<View>
Some text
</View>

// GOOD
<View>
<Text>
Some text
</Text>
</View>

You also lose the ability to set up a default font for an entire subtree. Meanwhile, fontFamily only accepts a single font name, which is different from font-family in CSS. The recommended way to use consistent fonts and sizes across your application is to create a component MyAppText that includes them and use this component across your app. You can also use this component to make more specific components like MyAppHeaderText for other kinds of text.

<View>
<MyAppText>
Text styled with the default font for the entire application
</MyAppText>
<MyAppHeaderText>Text styled as a header</MyAppHeaderText>
</View>

Assuming that MyAppText is a component that only renders out its children into a Text component with styling, then MyAppHeaderText can be defined as follows:

class MyAppHeaderText extends Component {
render() {
return (
<MyAppText>
<Text style={{fontSize: 20}}>{this.props.children}</Text>
</MyAppText>
);
}
}

Composing MyAppText in this way ensures that we get the styles from a top-level component, but leaves us the ability to add / override them in specific use cases.

React Native still has the concept of style inheritance, but limited to text subtrees. In this case, the second part will be both bold and red.

<Text style={{fontWeight: 'bold'}}>
I am bold
<Text style={{color: 'red'}}>and red</Text>
</Text>

We believe that this more constrained way to style text will yield better apps:

  • (Developer) React components are designed with strong isolation in mind: You should be able to drop a component anywhere in your application, trusting that as long as the props are the same, it will look and behave the same way. Text properties that could inherit from outside of the props would break this isolation.

  • (Implementor) The implementation of React Native is also simplified. We do not need to have a fontFamily field on every single element, and we do not need to potentially traverse the tree up to the root every time we display a text node. The style inheritance is only encoded inside of the native Text component and doesn't leak to other components or the system itself.


Reference

Props​

accessibilityHint​

An accessibility hint helps users understand what will happen when they perform an action on the accessibility element when that result is not clear from the accessibility label.

Type
string

accessibilityLanguage
iOS
​

A value indicating which language should be used by the screen reader when the user interacts with the element. It should follow the BCP 47 specification.

See the iOS accessibilityLanguage doc for more information.

Type
string

accessibilityLabel​

Overrides the text that's read by the screen reader when the user interacts with the element. By default, the label is constructed by traversing all the children and accumulating all the Text nodes separated by space.

Type
string

accessibilityRole​

Tells the screen reader to treat the currently focused on element as having a specific role.

On iOS, these roles map to corresponding Accessibility Traits. Image button has the same functionality as if the trait was set to both 'image' and 'button'. See the Accessibility guide for more information.

On Android, these roles have similar functionality on TalkBack as adding Accessibility Traits does on Voiceover in iOS

Type
AccessibilityRole

accessibilityState​

Tells the screen reader to treat the currently focused on element as being in a specific state.

You can provide one state, no state, or multiple states. The states must be passed in through an object. Ex: {selected: true, disabled: true}.

Type
AccessibilityState

accessibilityActions​

Accessibility actions allow an assistive technology to programmatically invoke the actions of a component. The accessibilityActions property should contain a list of action objects. Each action object should contain the field name and label.

See the Accessibility guide for more information.

TypeRequired
arrayNo

onAccessibilityAction​

Invoked when the user performs the accessibility actions. The only argument to this function is an event containing the name of the action to perform.

See the Accessibility guide for more information.

TypeRequired
functionNo

accessible​

When set to true, indicates that the view is an accessibility element.

See the Accessibility guide for more information.

TypeDefault
booleantrue

adjustsFontSizeToFit​

Specifies whether fonts should be scaled down automatically to fit given style constraints.

TypeDefault
booleanfalse

allowFontScaling​

Specifies whether fonts should scale to respect Text Size accessibility settings.

TypeDefault
booleantrue

android_hyphenationFrequency
Android
​

Sets the frequency of automatic hyphenation to use when determining word breaks on Android API Level 23+.

TypeDefault
enum('none', 'normal','full')'none'

dataDetectorType
Android
​

Determines the types of data converted to clickable URLs in the text element. By default, no data types are detected.

You can provide only one type.

TypeDefault
enum('phoneNumber', 'link', 'email', 'none', 'all')'none'

disabled
Android
​

Specifies the disabled state of the text view for testing purposes.

TypeDefault
boolfalse

ellipsizeMode​

When numberOfLines is set, this prop defines how the text will be truncated. numberOfLines must be set in conjunction with this prop.

This can be one of the following values:

  • head - The line is displayed so that the end fits in the container and the missing text at the beginning of the line is indicated by an ellipsis glyph. e.g., "...wxyz"
  • middle - The line is displayed so that the beginning and end fit in the container and the missing text in the middle is indicated by an ellipsis glyph. "ab...yz"
  • tail - The line is displayed so that the beginning fits in the container and the missing text at the end of the line is indicated by an ellipsis glyph. e.g., "abcd..."
  • clip - Lines are not drawn past the edge of the text container.

On Android, when numberOfLines is set to a value higher than 1, only tail value will work correctly.

TypeDefault
enum('head', 'middle', 'tail', 'clip')tail

maxFontSizeMultiplier​

Specifies the largest possible scale a font can reach when allowFontScaling is enabled. Possible values:

  • null/undefined: inherit from the parent node or the global default (0)
  • 0: no max, ignore parent/global default
  • >= 1: sets the maxFontSizeMultiplier of this node to this value
TypeDefault
numberundefined

minimumFontScale
iOS
​

Specifies the smallest possible scale a font can reach when adjustsFontSizeToFit is enabled. (values 0.01-1.0).

Type
number

nativeID​

Used to locate this view from native code.

Type
string

numberOfLines​

Used to truncate the text with an ellipsis after computing the text layout, including line wrapping, such that the total number of lines does not exceed this number. Setting this property to 0 will result in unsetting this value, which means that no lines restriction will be applied.

This prop is commonly used with ellipsizeMode.

TypeDefault
number0

onLayout​

Invoked on mount and on layout changes.

Type
({ nativeEvent: LayoutEvent }) => void

onLongPress​

This function is called on long press.

Type
({ nativeEvent: PressEvent }) => void

onMoveShouldSetResponder​

Does this view want to "claim" touch responsiveness? This is called for every touch move on the View when it is not the responder.

Type
({ nativeEvent: PressEvent }) => boolean

onPress​

This function is called on press.

Type
({ nativeEvent: PressEvent }) => void

onResponderGrant​

The View is now responding to touch events. This is the time to highlight and show the user what is happening.

Type
({ nativeEvent: PressEvent }) => void

onResponderMove​

The user is moving their finger.

Type
({ nativeEvent: PressEvent }) => void

onResponderRelease​

Fired at the end of the touch.

Type
({ nativeEvent: PressEvent }) => void

onResponderTerminate​

The responder has been taken from the View. Might be taken by other views after a call to onResponderTerminationRequest, or might be taken by the OS without asking (e.g., happens with control center/ notification center on iOS)

Type
({ nativeEvent: PressEvent }) => void

onResponderTerminationRequest​

Some other View wants to become a responder and is asking this View to release its responder. Returning true allows its release.

Type
({ nativeEvent: PressEvent }) => boolean

onStartShouldSetResponderCapture​

If a parent View wants to prevent a child View from becoming a responder on a touch start, it should have this handler which returns true.

Type
({ nativeEvent: PressEvent }) => boolean

onTextLayout​

Invoked on Text layout change.

Type
(TextLayoutEvent) => mixed

pressRetentionOffset​

When the scroll view is disabled, this defines how far your touch may move off of the button, before deactivating the button. Once deactivated, try moving it back and you'll see that the button is once again reactivated! Move it back and forth several times while the scroll view is disabled. Ensure you pass in a constant to reduce memory allocations.

Type
Rect, number

selectable​

Lets the user select text, to use the native copy and paste functionality.

TypeDefault
booleanfalse

selectionColor
Android
​

The highlight color of the text.

Type
color

style​

Type
Text Style, View Style Props

suppressHighlighting
iOS
​

When true, no visual change is made when text is pressed down. By default, a gray oval highlights the text on press down.

TypeDefault
booleanfalse

testID​

Used to locate this view in end-to-end tests.

Type
string

textBreakStrategy
Android
​

Set text break strategy on Android API Level 23+, possible values are simple, highQuality, balanced.

TypeDefault
enum('simple', 'highQuality', 'balanced')highQuality

Type Definitions​

TextLayout​

TextLayout object is a part of TextLayoutEvent callback and contains the measurement data for Text line.

Example​

{
capHeight: 10.496,
ascender: 14.624,
descender: 4,
width: 28.224,
height: 18.624,
xHeight: 6.048,
x: 0,
y: 0
}

Properties​

NameTypeOptionalDescription
ascendernumberNoThe line ascender height after the text layout changes.
capHeightnumberNoHeight of capital letter above the baseline.
descendernumberNoThe line descender height after the text layout changes.
heightnumberNoHeight of the line after the text layout changes.
widthnumberNoWidth of the line after the text layout changes.
xnumberNoLine X coordinate inside the Text component.
xHeightnumberNoDistance between the baseline and median of the line (corpus size).
ynumberNoLine Y coordinate inside the Text component.

TextLayoutEvent​

TextLayoutEvent object is returned in the callback as a result of a component layout change. It contains a key called lines with a value which is an array containing TextLayout object corresponded to every rendered text line.

Example​

{
lines: [
TextLayout,
TextLayout,
// ...
];
target: 1127;
}

Properties​

NameTypeOptionalDescription
linesarray of TextLayoutsNoProvides the TextLayout data for every rendered line.
targetnumberNoThe node id of the element.