Create, build, and run native apps for iOS and Android using JavaScript or TypeScript
The NativeScript CLI lets you create, build, and deploy NativeScript-based projects on iOS and Android devices.
- What is NativeScript
- Supported Platforms
- System Requirements
- Installation
- Quick Start
- Troubleshooting
- Known Issues
- How to Contribute
- License
NativeScript is a cross-platform JavaScript framework that lets you develop native iOS and Android apps from a single code base. The framework provides JavaScript access to the native APIs, user interface, and rendering engines of iOS and Android. By using JavaScript or TypeScript, you can create one project that builds into an iOS or Android app with completely native user experience.
To learn more about NativeScript, you can check the following resources:
- The NativeScript web page
- NativeScript - a Technical Overview
- Development with NativeScript
- Announcing NativeScript - cross-platform framework for building native mobile applications
- The NativeScript Documentation Wiki
- The NativeScript API Reference
- The NativeScript FAQ
- On NativeScript for Android
With the NativeScript CLI, you can target the following mobile platforms.
- Android 4.2 or a later stable official release
- iOS 7.0 or later stable official release
You can install and run the NativeScript CLI on Windows or OS X.
On Windows systems, you can develop, build, and deploy NativeScript projects that target Android.
- Windows Vista or later
- Node.js 0.10.26 or a later stable official release
- (Optional) Chocolatey
- JDK 8 or a later stable official release
- Apache Ant 1.8 or a later stable official release
- Android SDK 19 or a later stable official release
- (Optional) Genymotion
If you want to develop for Android, verify that you have added the following paths in the PATH
system environment variable.
Path to the bin directory in the Apache Ant installation folder
Path to tools directory in the Android SDK installation folder
Path to platform-tools directory in the Android SDK installation folder
For example: PATH=...;...;C:\tools\apache-ant-1.9.4\bin;C:\Users\MyUser\AppData\Local\Android\android-sdk\tools;C:\Users\MyUser\AppData\Local\Android\android-sdk\platform-tools;
If you have installed Chocolatey, you can complete these steps to set up JDK, Apache Ant, and Android SDK.
-
Run a Windows command prompt.
-
To install JDK, run the following command.
choco install java.jdk
-
If not present, create the following environment variable.
JAVA_HOME=Path to the jdk* install folder
For example: JAVA_HOME=C:\Program Files\Java\jdk1.8.0_11
-
To install Apache Ant, run the following command.
choco install ant
-
If not present, add the following file path to the
PATH
system environment variable.Path to the bin directory in the Apache Ant installation folder
For example: PATH=...;...;C:\tools\apache-ant-1.9.4\bin
-
To install the Android SDK, run the following command.
choco install android-sdk
-
If not present, add the following file path to the
PATH
system environment variable.Path to tools directory in the Android SDK installation folder Path to platform-tools directory in the Android SDK installation folder
For example: PATH=...;...;C:\Users\MyUser\AppData\Local\Android\android-sdk\tools;C:\Users\MyUser\AppData\Local\Android\android-sdk\platform-tools
-
To update the Android SDK to 19 or later, run the following command.
android update sdk
-
Select all packages for the Android 19 SDK and any other SDKs that you want to install, click Install and wait for the installation to complete.
On OS X systems, you can develop, build, and deploy NativeScript projects that target iOS and Android.
- OS X Mavericks
- Node.js 0.10.26 or a later stable official release
- For iOS development
- For Android development
- JDK 8 or a later stable official release
- Apache Ant 1.8 or a later stable official release
- Android SDK 19 or a later stable official release
- (Optional) Genymotion
If you want to develop for Android, verify that you have added the following paths in your PATH
in ~/.bash_profile
.
Path to the bin subdirectory in the Apache Ant installation directory
Path to the tools subdirectory in the Android SDK installation directory
Path to the platform-tools subdirectory in the Android SDK installation directory
For example:
export PATH=${PATH}:/ant/apache-ant-1.9.4/bin:/Applications/Android\ Studio.app/sdk/tools:/Applications/Android\ Studio.app/sdk/platform-tools
On Linux systems, you can develop, build, and deploy NativeScript projects that target Android.
-
Ubuntu 14.04 LTS
-
Node.js 0.10.26 or a later stable official release
TIP: You can follow the instructions provided here to install Node.js on your system.
-
G++ compiler
sudo apt-get install g++
-
On 64-bit systems only
-
The runtime libraries for the ia32/i386 architecture.
sudo apt-get install lib32z1 lib32ncurses5 lib32bz2-1.0 libstdc++6:i386
-
-
JDK 8 or a later stable official release
-
Apache Ant 1.8 or a later stable official release
-
Android SDK 19 or a later stable official release
-
(Optional) Genymotion
Verify that you have added the following paths in your PATH
.
Path to the bin subdirectory in the Apache Ant installation directory
Path to the tools subdirectory in the Android SDK installation directory
Path to the platform-tools subdirectory in the Android SDK installation directory
For example:
export PATH=${PATH}:/ant/apache-ant-1.9.4/bin:/Applications/Android Studio.app/sdk/tools:/Applications/Android Studio.app/sdk/platform-tools
The NativeScript CLI is available for installing as an npm package.
In the command prompt, run the following command.
OS | Node.js installed from http://nodejs.org/ | Node.js installed via package manager |
---|---|---|
Windows | npm install nativescript -g |
npm install nativescript -g |
OS X | sudo npm install nativescript -g --unsafe-perm |
npm install nativescript -g |
Linux | sudo npm install nativescript -g --unsafe-perm |
npm install nativescript -g |
To check if your system is configured properly, run the following command.
tns doctor
If you are working with the NativeScript CLI behind a web proxy, you might need to configure your proxy settings.
- On your file system, locate the directory where the nativescript npm package is installed.
- In a text editor, open
config
→config.json
. - Set
USE_PROXY
totrue
. - Set
PROXY_PORT
. - Set
PROXY_HOSTNAME
.
Make sure to preserve the quotation marks and commas as in the initial
config.json
file.
- The Commands
- Create Project
- Add Platforms
- Develop Your Project
- Prepare for Build
- Build Your Project
- Deploy Your Project
- Emulate Your Project
- Run Your Project
Run tns help
to view all available commands in the browser. Run tns help <Command>
to view more information about a selected command in the browser.
help
opens a new browser window and lists all available commands.create <App Name> [--path <Directory>] [--appid <App ID>] [--copy-from <Directory>]
creates a new project with the specified settings.init
initializes an existing project and prompts for project configuration.platform list
lists the current target platforms for your project.platform add <Platform>
adds a new target platform to your project.platform remove <Platform>
removes the selected platform from the target platforms of the project.platform update <Platform>
updates the NativeScript runtime for the specified platform.library add <Platform> <Library Path>
adds a locally stored native library to the current project.prepare <Platform>
copies cross-platform and selected platform-specific content to the subdirectory for the target platform.build <Platform>
builds the project for the selected target platform.emulate <Platform>
builds the project for the selected target platform and runs it in the native emulator, if configured.deploy <Platform> [--device <Device ID>]
deploys an already built application on connected device.run <Platform> [--device <Device ID>]
executesprepare
,build
, anddeploy
.livesync <Platform>
synchronizes changes from your project to an already deployed application on device.device
lists connected devices, including any running Android Virtual Devices or Genymotion virtual devices.device log
opens the log stream for the selected device.device run
runs a selected application on a connected device.device list-applications
lists the installed applications on all connected devices.usage-reporting
configures anonymous usage reporting.error-reporting
configures anonymous error tracking.doctor
checks for configuration issues.autocomplete
lets you configure your command-line completion settings for zsh and bash profiles.
To create a new cross-platform project from the default template, run the following command.
tns create MyApp
To create a new cross-platform project from an existing NativeScript project, run the following command.
tns create MyApp --copy-from <Directory>
Where is the complete path to the directory that contains your existing project. You can use any NativeScript project, created with the Telerik AppBuilder clients.
The NativeScript creates a new project based on the JavaScript built-in template and sets the application identifier to org.nativescript.myapp
.
The CLI places the project in a new directory in the current directory. The newly created directory has the following structure.
MyApp/
├── app
│ ├── app.css
│ ├── app.js
│ ├── bootstrap.js
│ ├── main-page.js
│ ├── main-page.xml
│ ├── App_Resources
│ │ └── ...
│ └── tns_modules
│ └── ...
└── platforms
└── ...
- The
app
directory is the development space for your application. You should modify all common and platform-specific code within this directory. When you runprepare <Platform>
, the NativeScript CLI copies relevant content to the platform-specific folders for each target platform. - The
platforms
directory is created empty. When you add a target platform to your project, the NativeScript CLI creates a new subdirectory with the platform name. The subdirectory contains the ready-to-build resources of your app. When you runprepare <Platform>
, the NativeScript CLI copies relevant content from theapp
directory to the platform-specific subdirectory for each target platform.
In theplatforms
directory, you can safely modify configuration files such asAndroidManifest.xml
andInfo.plist
.
After you have created your project, you can start adding target platforms to it. To be able to build your project into an application package for a selected target platform, you need to add the platform to your project first. Currently, you can target Android and iOS with your NativeScript projects.
Navigate to the directory that contains your newly created project and run the following commands.
tns platform add android
tns platform add ios
platform add
creates the android
and the ios
subdirectories in the platforms
directory. These subdirectories have the platform-specific project structure required for native development with the native SDKs for the platform.
...
platforms/
|-- android/
|-- |-- assets/
|-- |-- gen/
|-- |-- libs/
|-- |-- node_modules/
|-- |-- res/
|-- |-- src/
|-- |-- .project
|-- |-- AndroidManifest.xml
|-- |-- build.xml
|-- |-- local.properties
|-- |-- proguard-project.txt
|-- `-- project.properties
|-- ios/
|-- |-- libTNSBridge.a
|-- |-- node_modules
`-- |-- MyApp/
`-- MyApp.xcodeproj
...
For more information about the structure of Android native projects, see Android Projects.
For more information about the structure iOS native projects, see Code Organization in Xcode Projects.
TIP: The NativeScript team provides experimental support for the latest versions of iOS and Android. You can choose which platform runtime to use in your project by running
tns platform add <platform>@<Version>
To list all available versions for android, run $ npm view tns-android versions
To list only experimental versions for android, run $ npm view tns-android dist-tags To list all available versions for ios, run $ npm view tns-ios versions
To list only experimental versions for ios, run $ npm view tns-ios dist-tags
For more information about working with NativeScript, see the following resources.
The app
directory in the root of the project is the development space for your project. Place all your common and platform-specific code in this directory. When you run prepare <Platform>
, the NativeScript CLI copies relevant content to the platform-specific folders for each target platform.
In the app
directory, you can use platform-specific files to provide customized functionality and design for each target platform. To indicate that a file is platform-specific, make sure that the file name is in the following format: name.ios.extension
or name.android.extension
. For example: main.ios.js
or main.android.js
.
You can develop shared functionality or design in common files. To indicate that a file is common, make sure that the file name does not contain a .android.
or .ios.
string.
In platforms
, you can safely modify files which are part of the native project structure and do not have a corresponding source located in the app
directory in the root. For example, AndroidManifest.xml
and Info.plist
.
Do not modify files and resources that have a corresponding file in the app
directory in the root, such as application scripts, icons, and splash screens. The NativeScript CLI overrides such files during the prepare <Platform>
operation with the content from app
.
When you run build
, the NativeScript CLI uses the resources from the platform-specific subdirectory in the platforms
directory. To populate the platform-specific subdirectory with the correct application assets, you need to run prepare
.
tns prepare android
tns prepare ios
prepare <Platform>
takes content from app
, analyzes it and copies it to the platform-specific subdirectory in platforms
. This operation copies common and relevant platform-specific content that applies to the selected platform. This ensures that your Android or iOS application contain only the correct assets.
Keep in mind that prepare
overrides changes made to the platform-specific subdirectory in platforms
. For more information, see Development in platforms.
IMPORTANT: Always run
prepare <Platform>
before runningbuild <Platform>
,deploy <Platform>
, oremulate <Platform>
. This ensures that the NativeScript CLI will build an application package with your latest code and resources.
After you have prepared your project, you can build it for your target mobile platforms.
tns build android
tns build ios
The NativeScript CLI calls the SDK for the selected target platform and uses it to build your app locally.
When you build for Android, the NativeScript CLI saves the application package as an APK
in platforms
→ android
→ bin
.
When you build for iOS, if the --device
flag is not set, the NativeScript CLI builds your project for the native emulator and saves the application package as an APP
in platforms
→ ios
→ build
→ emulator
. If the --device
flag is set, the NativeScript CLI builds your project for device and saves the application package as an IPA
in platforms
→ ios
→ build
→ device
.
IMPORTANT: To build your app for an iOS device, you must configure a valid certificate and provisioning profile pair, and have that pair present on your system for code signing your application package. For more information, see iOS Code Signing - A Complete Walkthrough.
You can test your work in progress on connected Android or iOS devices.
To verify that the NativeScript CLI recognizes your connected devices, run the following command.
tns device
The NativeScript CLI lists all connected physical devices and running Android Virtual Devices.
After you have listed the available devices, you can deploy your app on all devices from the selected target platform.
tns deploy android
tns deploy ios
The NativeScript CLI calls the SDK for the selected target platform and uses it to build your app locally. After the build is complete, the NativeScript CLI downloads and installs the application package on your connected devices.
On Android devices, the app runs automatically.
On iOS devices, the app does not run automatically. To run the app, tap the app icon.
IMPORTANT: To deploy your app on iOS devices, you need to configure a valid pair of certificate and provisioning profile for code signing your application package. For more information, see iOS Code Signing - A Complete Walkthrough.
If you do not have any physical devices on which to test your app or if you have not configured any certificates and provisioning profiles for iOS, you can run your app in the native emulator of your target platform.
tns emulate android
tns emulate ios
This operation calls the SDK for the selected target platform, builds your app locally, launches the native device emulator for the selected target platform, and runs your project on the virtual device.
For Android, the NativeScript CLI runs your app in the earliest created virtual device or the currently running Android Virtual Device. Before running your app in the Android native emulator, make sure that you have configured at least one virtual device in the Android Virtual Device manager.
For iOS, the NativeScript CLI runs your app in the iOS Simulator.
You can quickly run your app on connected devices, including all running Android Virtual Devices. The following command is shorthand for prepare
, build
, and deploy
.
tns run android
tns run ios
You can quickly deploy your app in the native emulators. The following command is shorthand for prepare
, build
, and emulate
.
tns run android --emulator
tns run ios --emulator
If the NativeScript CLI does not behave as expected, you might be facing a configuration issue. For example, a missing JAVA
path. To check if your system is configured properly for the NativeScript CLI, run the following command.
tns doctor
This command prints warnings about current configuration issues and provides basic information about how to resolve them.
If addressing the configuration issues does not resolve your problem, you can report an issue or post in the NativeScript page in Google Groups.
-
You cannot synchronize changes to apps on Android 4.3 devices and on some Samsung devices using the
livesync android
command.
Workaround: Upgrade to a later version of Android to be able to use thelivesync
command. If you need to develop for Android 4.3 devices, re-build and re-deploy your app to get your latest changes on device. -
On OS X systems with configured firewall or web proxy, when you run a command, the operation might not release the command line and you might not be able to run other commands until you break the current operation.
If you have enabled feature usage tracking for the NativeScript CLI, but you have not authenticated with the firewall or web proxy on your OS X system, the NativeScript CLI might not release the command line after you run a command. To continue working with the NativeScript CLI, you need to break the current operation by pressingCtrl+C
.
Workaround: Authenticate with the firewall or web proxy.- Close the terminal.
- Run Safari.
- Attempt to open a web page.
- Provide your authentication credentials for accessing the Internet.
- Run the terminal and continue working with the NativeScript CLI.
To learn how to log a bug that you just discovered, click here.
To learn how to suggest a new feature or improvement, click here.
To learn how to contribute to the code base, click here.
This software is licensed under the Apache 2.0 license, quoted here.