Book Image

React Native Cookbook - Second Edition

By : Daniel Ward
4 (1)
Book Image

React Native Cookbook - Second Edition

4 (1)
By: Daniel Ward

Overview of this book

If you are a developer looking to create mobile applications with maximized code reusability and minimized cost, React Native is what you need. With this practical guide, you’ll be able to build attractive UIs, tackle common problems in mobile development, and achieve improved performance in mobile environments. This book starts by covering the common techniques for React Native customization and helps you set up your development platforms. Over the course of the book, you’ll work through a wide variety of recipes that help you create, style, and animate your apps with built-in React Native and custom third-party components. You’ll also develop real-world browser-based authentication, build a fully functional audio player, and integrate Google Maps in your apps. This book will help you explore different strategies for working with data, including leveraging the popular Redux library and optimizing your app’s dataflow. You’ll also learn how to write native device functionality for new and existing React Native projects and how app deployment works. By the end of this book, you'll be equipped with tips and tricks to write efficient code and have the skills to build full iOS and Android applications using React Native.
Table of Contents (17 chapters)

Deploying development builds to an iOS device

During development, you'll likely spend much of your time testing your iOS app using the iOS Simulator that comes installed with Xcode. While the iOS Simulator is by far the best performing and closest method to running our application on an iOS device, it's still not the same as the real thing. The iOS Simulator uses the computer's CPU and GPU to render the simulated OS, so depending on your development machine, it may end up performing better (or worse) than the actual device.

Thankfully, Expo's ability to test running code on an actual device comes one step closer to the real end product, but there are still differences between a final app and a development app running in Expo. And if you're building a pure React Native app, you won't have the luxury of using Expo to easily run the app on a device...