Awesome
React Native Camera Roll
UPDATE:
As of react-native 0.19
, the CameraRoll
API is now available on Android too! You should not use this module anymore and only use the CameraRoll
API from React Native.
Table of contents
Example
Checkout this example of a basic gallery app with infinite scroll:
https://github.com/bamlab/rn-camera-roll/tree/master/example
<img width=300 src=https://raw.githubusercontent.com/bamlab/rn-camera-roll/master/example/screenshot.png />
Setup
First, install the package:
npm install rn-camera-roll
Then, follow those instructions:
iOS
The Camera Roll iOS API is part of react-native
.
You have to import node_modules/react-native/Libraries/CameraRoll/RCTCameraRoll.xcodeproj
by following the libraries linking instructions.
Android
Update your gradle files
For react-native >= v0.15, this command will do it automatically:
react-native link rn-camera-roll
For react-native = v0.14 You will have to update them manually:
In android/settings.gradle
, add:
include ':rn-camera-roll'
project(':rn-camera-roll').projectDir = new File(settingsDir, '../node_modules/rn-camera-roll/android')
In android/app/build.gradle
add:
dependencies {
...
compile project(':rn-camera-roll')
}
Register the package into your MainActivity
package com.example;
import android.app.Activity;
import android.os.Bundle;
import android.view.KeyEvent;
import com.facebook.react.LifecycleState;
import com.facebook.react.ReactInstanceManager;
import com.facebook.react.ReactRootView;
import com.facebook.react.modules.core.DefaultHardwareBackBtnHandler;
import com.facebook.react.shell.MainReactPackage;
import com.facebook.soloader.SoLoader;
// IMPORT HERE
import fr.bamlab.rncameraroll.CameraRollPackage;
// ---
public class MainActivity extends Activity implements DefaultHardwareBackBtnHandler {
private ReactInstanceManager mReactInstanceManager;
private ReactRootView mReactRootView;
@Override
protected void onCreate(Bundle savedInstanceState) {
super.onCreate(savedInstanceState);
mReactRootView = new ReactRootView(this);
mReactInstanceManager = ReactInstanceManager.builder()
.setApplication(getApplication())
.setBundleAssetName("index.android.bundle")
.setJSMainModuleName("index.android")
.addPackage(new MainReactPackage())
// REGISTER PACKAGE HERE
.addPackage(new CameraRollPackage())
// ---
.setUseDeveloperSupport(BuildConfig.DEBUG)
.setInitialLifecycleState(LifecycleState.RESUMED)
.build();
mReactRootView.startReactApplication(mReactInstanceManager, "example", null);
setContentView(mReactRootView);
}
...
Usage
You can use the getPhotos
API as you would with the iOS API with the after
and the first
params.
You can use both the promise
syntax or the callback
syntax.
import CameraRoll from 'rn-camera-roll';
onPhotosFetchedSuccess(data) {
const photos = data.edges.map((asset) => {
return asset.node.image;
});
console.log(photos);
/**
On Android, this should log something like:
[
{
"uri": "file:/storage/emulated/0/DCIM/Camera/IMG_20160120_172426830.jpg",
"width":3006,
"height":5344,
"orientation": 90
},
{
"uri": "file:/storage/emulated/0/DCIM/Camera/IMG_20160116_153526816_TOP.jpg",
"width": 5344,
"height": 3006,
"orientation": 0
}
...
]
**/
}
onPhotosFetchError(err) {
// Handle error here
}
fetchPhotos(count = 10, after) {
CameraRoll.getPhotos({
// take the first n photos after given photo uri
first: count,
// after
after: "file:/storage/emulated/0/DCIM/Camera/IMG_20151126_115520477.jpg",
}, this.onPhotosFetchedSuccess.bind(this), this.onPhotosFetchError.bind(this));
}