/expo-and-typescript

Demo app using Expo and TypeScript & Type definitions for the Expo SDK.

Primary LanguageTypeScriptMIT LicenseMIT

React Native using Expo and Typescript

This repository is a React Native demo app using the Expo framework and written in TypeScript. It used to also contain a type definition file for Expo, but that work has been merged into the @types/expo package.

The app is published on Expo: Expo and TypeScript on Expo. It is not published to the app stores, but you can run it on a device, if install the free Expo client.

Screen shot

Prerequisites

Install expo-cli globally.

# Install expo-cli globally using Yarn.
yarn global add expo-cli

If you prefer to use npm the command is npm install --global expo-cli.

Warnings When Installing Packages

There are a surprising amout of of warnings when building and running the app, because of peer dependecies not being correct. My guess is that the Expo team has a tough time getting all the added React Native libraries to play well together, and this app seems to run fine, so I believe it's safe to ignore the warnings.

Running the App

Start the local server. This will give you a QR code that you can scan using the Expo Client app on your mobile divice.

yarn start

If you're on a Mac and have Xcode installed, you can run the app using the iOS Simulator with the following command. I am sure you can do something similar with Android.

yarn ios

Setting up Expo with TypeScript

This guide show how to transform and Expo app written in JavaScript in to TypeScript. While Expo supports TypeScript since version 31, it is still a work in progress, and namely the type definition files are not yet included.

Setting breakpoints in TypeScript files works, and hot reloading works, so it's a pretty solid development experience as long as you're lucky enough to not hit a missing type definition.

Since version 31 Expo supports TypeScript natively. If you're using that version, 1) don't add the react-native-typescript-transformer package, 2) don't specify sourceExt and transformer in app.json and 3) don't mention babel-preset-expo and transform-react-jsx-source in your .babelrc, i.e. delete the file if those were the only two things in it.

Add TypeScript

Add TypeScript and the helper library, tslib, to the project. I prefer micro managing the version of the packages that I'm using so I add --exact, but this is optional. You can, of course, also use npm instead of yarn.

yarn add --dev --exact typescript react-native-typescript-transformer
yarn add --exact tslib

Configure TypeScript by adding a tsconfig.json file in the root of your project. If you are stating a new project, I would definitetly recommend including "strict": true and some of the other compiler checks. If you are converting a JavaScript project to TypeScript, you might want to loosen up the rules to start with, and apply them gradually.

Main App Component in TypeScript

Create a src folder, move App.js to that folder, and rename the file to App.tsx. Since TypeScript has a syntax that is very similar to JavaScript it is probably not necessary to make any modifications to App.tsx to make it valid TypeScript. It is not required to put the sources files in a src folder, but that is the de facto standard.

Create a new App.js in the root of the project, and insert the following lines. Expo will still be looking for App.js in the root of the project, and these lines simply loads src/App.tsx.

import App from './src/App'
export default App

Add Type Definitions

Finally add the type definitions for React, React Native, Expo and the Expo icons.

yarn add --dev --exact @types/react @types/react-native @types/expo @types/expo__vector-icons

Since Expo is evolving quickly it is not uncommon that the type definitions are outdated or simply missing. AudioScreen.tsx line 59 shows how to deal with an incorrect type definition and [MapViewScreen.tsx line 5] show how to deal with missing type definitions.

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