A simple blur view in react native
npm install @danielsaraldi/react-native-blur-view@danielsaraldi/react-native-blur-view 🌫️A simple blur view in react native based in @react-native-community/blur.
Support the animation transitions with react-native-screens, react-native-navigation and Modals 😁.
> [!NOTE]
> This package supports only new architecture.
> [!WARNING]
> This package will migrate the blur core to the QmBlurView library. We decided remove Dimezis's BlurView library because it introduced more complexing structure in React Native Blur View. This migration is very necessary for Android devices and it removed to use of the BlurTarget component. The QmBlurView is a high-performance Android UI library that provides real-time, dynamic blur effects.
height="756px"
hspace="8"
src="./.github/previews/ios.gif"
alt="React Native Blur View on iOS"
/>
height="756px"
hspace="8"
src="./.github/previews/android.gif"
alt="React Native Blur View on Android"
/>
- Installation
- Usage
- Using ScrollView/FlatList
- Using @react-navigation/bottom-tabs
- Using ImageBackground
- Components
- BlurView
- Properties
- BlurTarget
- Properties
- VibrancyView
- Properties
- Types
- Blur Types
- Platform Differences
- Android
- iOS
- Expo
- TypeScript Support
- Contributing
- License
``sh`
npm install @danielsaraldi/react-native-blur-viewor
yarn add @danielsaraldi/react-native-blur-view
Install native dependencies (iOS only):
`sh`
cd ios && pod install && cd ..
`tsx
import {
BlurView,
BlurTarget,
VibrancyView,
} from '@danielsaraldi/react-native-blur-view';
// ...
export default function App() {
// ...
return (
<>
contentContainerStyle={styles.content}
showsVerticalScrollIndicator={false}
>
{/ ... /}
>
);
}
export const styles = StyleSheet.create({
blurView: {
position: 'absolute',
top: 0,
width: '100%',
height: 256,
justifyContent: 'center',
alignItems: 'center',
},
vibrancyView: {
position: 'absolute',
top: 256,
width: '100%',
height: 256,
justifyContent: 'center',
alignItems: 'center',
},
title: {
fontSize: 24,
fontWeight: 'bold',
color: 'white',
},
main: {
flex: 1,
},
content: {
padding: 20,
gap: 8,
},
});
`
You must add BlurView elements inside of the list (ScrollView/FlatList), and the content behind should be added as child of the BlurTarget component. Check it below:
`tsx
import { BlurView, BlurTarget } from '@danielsaraldi/react-native-blur-view';
// ...
export function MyScreen() {
// ...
return (
source={BACKGROUND}
resizeMode="cover"
/>
contentContainerStyle={styles.contentContainer}
showsVerticalScrollIndicator={false}
>
{/ ... /}
);
}
`
If you are using @react-navigation/bottom-tabs with blur, all screens that the bottom tabs will navigate must contain a BlurTarget as a parent component on them. An example below:
`tsx
// screens/MyScreen.tsx
import { useNavigation } from '@react-navigation/native';
import { BlurTarget } from '@danielsaraldi/react-native-blur-view';
// ...
export function MyScreen() {
const { getState } = useNavigation();
const pageIndex = getState()?.index || 0;
const id = getState()?.routeNames[pageIndex] || 'MyScreen';
// ...
return (
{/ ... /}
);
}
`
`tsx
// components/MyCustomTabs.tsx
import type { BottomTabBarProps } from '@react-navigation/bottom-tabs';
import { BlurView } from '@danielsaraldi/react-native-blur-view';
// ...
export function MyCustomTabs(props: BottomTabBarProps) {
const { state } = props;
const pageIndex = state.index || 0;
const targetId = state.routeNames[pageIndex] || 'MyScreen';
// ...
return (
{/ ... /}
);
}
`
The MyCustomTabs component must be used in the tabBar property of the Navigator's bottom tabs. Notice that the targetId of the MyScreen screen references the id in the custom bottom tab component.
The target value must be updated every time a new screen is rendered, so we've used the route name in this example. However, you can explore other approaches, so feel free to do so.
Note: We don't yet have full support for nested tabs.
You must add BlurTarget as a parent of ImageBackground because it will be the target of blur, the BlurView component must be to used as brother of BlurTarget to blur effect works correctly.
`tsx
import { BlurTarget, BlurView } from '@danielsaraldi/react-native-blur-view';
// ...
export function MyScreen() {
// ...
return (
<>
{/ ... /}
source={{ uri: 'https://picsum.photos/seed/picsum/600/900' }}
resizeMode="cover"
/>
>
);
}
`
The BlurView component is an extends the same properties of the a View component.
#### Properties
| Property | Description | Default | Platform |
| ---------------------------------- | --------------------------------------------- | ----------- | -------- |
| targetId | Id of the target that will be blurred. | undefined | Android |type
| | Blur type of the overlay. | light | All |radius
| | Blur radius 0 - 100. | 10 | All |reducedTransparencyFallbackColor
| | Fallback color to reduced transparency color. | undefined | All |
An important detail, when a value less than 0 or greater than 100 are provided for radius property, the radius is clipped.
The BlurTarget component is an extends the same properties of the a View component.
This component is exclusive and mandatory for Android. It's useful because we use Dimezis's 3v library to apply the blur effect, so its implementation is slightly different than on iOS. On iOS the BlurTarget component is a common View.
The BlurTarget may not contain a BlurView that targets the same BlurTarget. The BlurTarget may contain other BlurTargets and BlurViews though.
#### Properties
| Property | Description | Platform |
| -------- | ------------------------------------------------- | -------- |
| id | Id of this target to be identified by BlurView. | Android |
The VibrancyView component is an extends the same properties of the a View component.
This component is available for iOS only. It apply a vibrancy effect in children content. On Android the VibrancyView component is a common View. It's available for iOS >= 13.
#### Properties
| Property | Description | Default | Platform |
| ---------------------------------- | --------------------------------------------- | ----------- | -------- |
| type | Blur type of the overlay. | light | All |radius
| | Blur radius 0 - 100. | 10 | All |reducedTransparencyFallbackColor
| | Fallback color to reduced transparency color. | undefined | All |
An important detail, when a value less than 0 or greater than 100 are provided for radius property, the radius is clipped.
These are all types of available.
On iOS all types are supported, but, on Android is simulated the types using RGBA colors.
| Property | Description | Platform |
| --------------------------- | --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- | -------- |
| x-light | The area of the view is lighter than the underlying view. | All |light
| | The area of the view is the same approximate lightness of the underlying view. | All |dark
| | The area of the view is darker than the underlying view. | All |regular
| | A regular blur style that adapts to the user interface style. Radius doesn't apply to this. (iOS >= 10) | All |prominent
| | A blur style for making content more prominent that adapts to the user interface style. Radius doesn't apply to this. (iOS >= 10) | All |chrome-material
| | An adaptable blur effect that creates the appearance of the system chrome. Radius doesn't apply to this. (iOS >= 13) | All |material
| | An adaptable blur effect that creates the appearance of a material with normal thickness. Radius doesn't apply to this. (iOS >= 13) | All |thick-material
| | An adaptable blur effect that creates the appearance of a material that’s thicker than normal. Radius doesn't apply to this. (iOS >= 13) | All |thin-material
| | An adaptable blur effect that creates the appearance of a thin material. Radius doesn't apply to this. (iOS >= 13) | All |ultra-thin-material
| | An adaptable blur effect that creates the appearance of an ultra-thin material. Radius doesn't apply to this. (iOS >= 13) | All |chrome-material-light
| | A blur effect that creates the appearance of the system chrome and is always light. Radius doesn't apply to this. (iOS >= 13) | All |material-light
| | A blur effect that creates the appearance of a material with normal thickness and is always light. Radius doesn't apply to this. (iOS >= 13) | All |thick-material-light
| | A blur effect that creates the appearance of a material that’s thicker than normal and is always light. Radius doesn't apply to this. (iOS >= 13) | All |thin-material-light
| | A blur effect that creates the appearance of a thin material and is always light. Radius doesn't apply to this. (iOS >= 13) | All |ultra-thin-material-light
| | A blur effect that creates the appearance of an ultra-thin material and is always light. Radius doesn't apply to this. (iOS >= 13) | All |chrome-material-dark
| | A blur effect that creates the appearance of the system chrome and is always dark. Radius doesn't apply to this. (iOS >= 13) | All |material-dark
| | A blur effect that creates the appearance of a material with normal thickness and is always dark. Radius doesn't apply to this. (iOS >= 13) | All |thick-material-dark
| | A blur effect that creates the appearance of a material that’s thicker than normal and is always dark. Radius doesn't apply to this. (iOS >= 13) | All |thin-material-dark
| | A blur effect that creates the appearance of a thin material and is always dark. Radius doesn't apply to this. (iOS >= 13) | All |ultra-thin-material-dark
| | A blur effect that creates the appearance of an ultra-thin material and is always dark. Radius doesn't apply to this. (iOS >= 13) | All |
On Android platforms, the component utilizes the BlurView library to offer native blur effects with hardware-accelerated rendering.
On iOS all types are supported by default. However, on Android they are RGBA colors to simulate the same blur color.
In Expo, you need to convert to a custom development build or use prebuild. You can use also React Native without Expo.
Full TypeScript support with proper type definitions!
`ts
import {
BlurViewType,
VibrancyViewType,
BlurViewProps,
BlurTargetProps,
VibrancyProps,
} from '@danielsaraldi/react-native-blur-view';
export const INITIAL_BLUR_TYPE: BlurViewType = 'light';
export const INITIAL_VIBRANCY_TYPE: VibrancyViewType = 'light';
export interface CustomBlurViewProps extends BlurViewProps {
// ...
}
export interface CustomBlurTargetProps extends BlurTargetProps {
// ...
}
export interface CustomVibrancyViewProps extends VibrancyProps {
// ...
}
``
See the contributing guide to learn how to contribute to the repository and the development workflow.
MIT
---
Made with create-react-native-library ❤️