npm package discovery and stats viewer.

Discover Tips

  • General search

    [free text search, go nuts!]

  • Package details

    pkg:[package-name]

  • User packages

    @[username]

Sponsor

Optimize Toolset

I’ve always been into building performant and accessible sites, but lately I’ve been taking it extremely seriously. So much so that I’ve been building a tool to help me optimize and monitor the sites that I build to make sure that I’m making an attempt to offer the best experience to those who visit them. If you’re into performant, accessible and SEO friendly sites, you might like it too! You can check it out at Optimize Toolset.

About

Hi, 👋, I’m Ryan Hefner  and I built this site for me, and you! The goal of this site was to provide an easy way for me to check the stats on my npm packages, both for prioritizing issues and updates, and to give me a little kick in the pants to keep up on stuff.

As I was building it, I realized that I was actually using the tool to build the tool, and figured I might as well put this out there and hopefully others will find it to be a fast and useful way to search and browse npm packages as I have.

If you’re interested in other things I’m working on, follow me on Twitter or check out the open source projects I’ve been publishing on GitHub.

I am also working on a Twitter bot for this site to tweet the most popular, newest, random packages from npm. Please follow that account now and it will start sending out packages soon–ish.

Open Software & Tools

This site wouldn’t be possible without the immense generosity and tireless efforts from the people who make contributions to the world and share their work via open source initiatives. Thank you 🙏

© 2024 – Pkg Stats / Ryan Hefner

recyclerlistview

v4.2.0

Published

The listview that you need and deserve. It was built for performance, uses cell recycling to achieve smooth scrolling.

Downloads

1,564,870

Readme

RecyclerListView

npm version appveyor License

If this project has helped you out, please support us with a star :star2:.

This is a high performance listview for React Native and Web with support for complex layouts. JS only with no native dependencies, inspired by both RecyclerView on Android and UICollectionView on iOS.

npm install --save recyclerlistview

For latest beta:
npm install --save recyclerlistview@beta

Note: Documentation will be upgraded soon, for now check code comments for clarity and exploring features. This component is actively tested with React Native Web as well.

Overview and features

RecyclerListView uses "cell recycling" to reuse views that are no longer visible to render items instead of creating new view objects. Creation of objects is very expensive and comes with a memory overhead which means as you scroll through the list the memory footprint keeps going up. Releasing invisible items off memory is another technique but that leads to creation of even more objects and lot of garbage collections. Recycling is the best way to render infinite lists that does not compromise performance or memory efficiency.

Apart from all performance benefits RecyclerListView comes with great features out of the box:

  • Cross Platform, works on Web
  • Supports staggered grid layouts
  • Supports variable height items even if dimensions cannot be predetermined (prop - forceNonDeterministicRendering)
  • Instant layout switching like going from GridView to ListView and vice versa
  • End reach detections
  • Horizontal Mode
  • Viewability Events
  • Initial render offset/index support
  • Footer support
  • Reflow support on container size change with first visible item preservation
  • Scroll position preservation
  • Window scrolling support for web
  • (New) ItemAnimator interface added, customize to your will how RLV handles layout changes. Allows you to modify animations that move cells. You can do things like smoothly move an item to a new position when height of one of the cells has changed.
  • (New) Stable Id support, ability to associate a stable id with an item. Will enable beautiful add/remove animations and optimize re-renders when DataProvider is updated.
  • (New) Sticky recycler items that stick to either the top or bottom.

Why?

RecyclerListView was built with performance in mind which means no blanks while quick scrolls or frame drops. RecyclerListView encourages you to have deterministic heights for items you need to render. This does not mean that you need to have all items of same height and stuff, all you need is a way to look at the data and compute height upfront so that RecyclerListView can compute layout in one pass rather than waiting for the draw to happen. You can still do all sorts of GridViews and ListViews with different types of items which are all recycled in optimal ways. Type based recycling is very easy to do and comes out of the box.

In case you cannot determine heights of items in advance just set forceNonDeterministicRendering prop to true on RecyclerListView. Now, it will treat given dimensions as estimates and let items resize. Try to give good estimates to improve experience.

Demo

Production Flipkart Grocery Demo Video (or try the app): https://youtu.be/6YqEqP3MmoU
Infinite Loading/View Change (Expo): https://snack.expo.io/@naqvitalha/rlv-demo
Mixed ViewTypes: https://snack.expo.io/B1GYad52b
extendedState,stableIDs and ItemAnimator (Expo): https://snack.expo.io/@arunreddy10/19bb8e
Sample project: https://github.com/naqvitalha/travelMate
Web Sample (Using RNW): https://codesandbox.io/s/k54j2zx977, https://jolly-engelbart-8ff0d0.netlify.com/
Context Preservation Sample: https://github.com/naqvitalha/recyclerlistview-context-preservation-demo

Other Video: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Tnv4HMmPgMc

Watch Video

Props

| Prop | Required | Params Type | Description | | --- | --- | --- | --- | | layoutProvider | Yes | BaseLayoutProvider | Constructor function that defines the layout (height / width) of each element | | dataProvider | Yes | DataProvider | Constructor function the defines the data for each element | | contextProvider | No | ContextProvider | Used to maintain scroll position in case view gets destroyed, which often happens with back navigation | | rowRenderer | Yes | (type: string | number, data: any, index: number) => JSX.Element | JSX.Element[] | null | Method that returns react component to be rendered. You get the type, data, index and extendedState of the view in the callback | | initialOffset | No | number | Initial offset you want to start rendering from; This is very useful if you want to maintain scroll context across pages. | | renderAheadOffset | No | number | specify how many pixels in advance you want views to be rendered. Increasing this value can help reduce blanks (if any). However, keeping this as low as possible should be the intent. Higher values also increase re-render compute | | isHorizontal | No | boolean | If true, the list will operate horizontally rather than vertically | | onScroll | No | rawEvent: ScrollEvent, offsetX: number, offsetY: number) => void | On scroll callback function that executes as a user scrolls | | onRecreate | No | (params: OnRecreateParams) => void | callback function that gets executed when recreating the recycler view from context provider | | externalScrollView | No | { new (props: ScrollViewDefaultProps): BaseScrollView } | Use this to pass your on implementation of BaseScrollView | | onEndReached | No | () => void | Callback function executed when the end of the view is hit (minus onEndThreshold if defined) | | onEndReachedThreshold | No | number | Specify how many pixels in advance for the onEndReached callback | | onEndReachedThresholdRelative | No | number | Specify how far from the end (in units of visible length of the list) the bottom edge of the list must be from the end of the content to trigger the onEndReached callback | | onVisibleIndicesChanged | No | TOnItemStatusChanged | Provides visible index; helpful in sending impression events | | onVisibleIndexesChanged | No | TOnItemStatusChanged | (Deprecated in 2.0 beta) Provides visible index; helpful in sending impression events | | renderFooter | No | () => JSX.Element | JSX.Element[] | null | Provide this method if you want to render a footer. Helpful in showing a loader while doing incremental loads | | initialRenderIndex | No | number | Specify the initial item index you want rendering to start from. Preferred over initialOffset if both specified | | scrollThrottle | No | number |iOS only; Scroll throttle duration | | canChangeSize | No | boolean | Specify if size can change | | distanceFromWindow | No | number | (Depricated) Use applyWindowCorrection() API with windowShift. Usage? | | applyWindowCorrection | No | (offset: number, windowCorrection: WindowCorrection) => void | (Enhancement/replacement to distanceFromWindow API) Allows updation of the visible windowBounds to based on correctional values passed. User can specify windowShift; in case entire RecyclerListWindow needs to shift down/up, startCorrection; in case when top window bound needs to be shifted for e.x. top window bound to be shifted down is a content overlapping the top edge of RecyclerListView, endCorrection: to alter bottom window bound for a similar use-case. Usage? | | useWindowScroll | No | boolean | Web only; Layout Elements in window instead of a scrollable div | | disableRecycling | No | boolean | Turns off recycling | | forceNonDeterministicRendering | No | boolean | Default is false; if enabled dimensions provided in layout provider will not be strictly enforced. Use this if item dimensions cannot be accurately determined | | extendedState | No | object | In some cases the data passed at row level may not contain all the info that the item depends upon, you can keep all other info outside and pass it down via this prop. Changing this object will cause everything to re-render. Make sure you don't change it often to ensure performance. Re-renders are heavy. | | itemAnimator | No | ItemAnimator | Enables animating RecyclerListView item cells (shift, add, remove, etc) | | style | No | object | To pass down style to inner ScrollView | | scrollViewProps | No | object | For all props that need to be proxied to inner/external scrollview. Put them in an object and they'll be spread and passed down. | | layoutSize | No | Dimension | Will prevent the initial empty render required to compute the size of the listview and use these dimensions to render list items in the first render itself. This is useful for cases such as server side rendering. The prop canChangeSize has to be set to true if the size can be changed after rendering. Note that this is not the scroll view size and is used solely for layouting. | | onItemLayout | No | number | A callback function that is executed when an item of the recyclerListView (at an index) has been layout. This can also be used as a proxy to itemsRendered kind of callbacks. | | windowCorrectionConfig | No | object | Used to specify is window correction config and whether it should be applied to some scroll events |

For full feature set have a look at prop definitions of RecyclerListView (bottom of the file). All ScrollView features like RefreshControl also work out of the box.

applyWindowCorrection usage

applyWindowCorrection is used to alter the visible window bounds of the RecyclerListView dynamically. The windowCorrection of RecyclerListView along with the current scroll offset are exposed to the user. The windowCorrection object consists of 3 numeric values:

  • windowShift - Direct replacement of distanceFromWindow parameter. Window shift is the offset value by which the RecyclerListView as a whole is displaced within the StickyContainer, use this param to specify how far away the first list item is from window top. This value corrects the scroll offsets for StickyObjects as well as RecyclerListView.
  • startCorrection - startCorrection is used to specify the shift in the top visible window bound, with which user can receive the correct Sticky header instance even when an external factor like CoordinatorLayout toolbar.
  • endCorrection - endCorrection is used to specify the shift in the bottom visible window bound, with which user can receive correct Sticky Footer instance when an external factor like bottom app bar is changing the visible view bound.

As seen in the example below

Alt Text

Typescript

Typescript works out of the box. The only execption is with the inherited Scrollview props. In order for Typescript to work with inherited Scrollview props, you must place said inherited Scrollview props within the scrollViewProps prop.

<RecyclerListView
  rowRenderer={this.rowRenderer}
  dataProvider={queue}
  layoutProvider={this.layoutProvider}
  onScroll={this.checkRefetch}
  renderFooter={this.renderFooter}
  scrollViewProps={{
    refreshControl: (
      <RefreshControl
        refreshing={loading}
        onRefresh={async () => {
          this.setState({ loading: true });
          analytics.logEvent('Event_Stagg_pull_to_refresh');
          await refetchQueue();
          this.setState({ loading: false });
        }}
      />
    )
  }}
/>

Guides

  • Sample Code
  • Performance
  • Sticky Guide
  • Web Support: Works with React Native Web out of the box. For use with ReactJS start importing from recyclerlistview/web e.g., import { RecyclerListView } from "recyclerlistview/web". Use aliases if you want to preserve import path. Only platform specific code is part of the build so, no unnecessary code will ship with your app.
  • Polyfills Needed: requestAnimationFrame, ResizeObserver

License

Apache v2.0

Contact Us

Please open issues for any bugs that you encounter. You can reach out to me on twitter @naqvitalha or, write to [email protected] for any questions that you might have.