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Version: 0.63

AppState

AppState can tell you if the app is in the foreground or background, and notify you when the state changes.

AppState is frequently used to determine the intent and proper behavior when handling push notifications.

App States​

  • active - The app is running in the foreground
  • background - The app is running in the background. The user is either:
    • in another app
    • on the home screen
    • [Android] on another Activity (even if it was launched by your app)
  • [iOS] inactive - This is a state that occurs when transitioning between foreground & background, and during periods of inactivity such as entering the Multitasking view or in the event of an incoming call

For more information, see Apple's documentation

Basic Usage​

To see the current state, you can check AppState.currentState, which will be kept up-to-date. However, currentState will be null at launch while AppState retrieves it over the bridge.

If you don't want to see the AppState update from active to inactive on iOS you can remove the state variable and use the appState.current value.

This example will only ever appear to say "Current state is: active" because the app is only visible to the user when in the active state, and the null state will happen only momentarily. If you want to experiment with the code we recommend to use your own device instead of embedded preview.


Reference

Events​

change​

This event is received when the app state has changed. The listener is called with one of the current app state values.

memoryWarning​

This event is used in the need of throwing memory warning or releasing it.

focus​

[Android only] Received when the app gains focus (the user is interacting with the app).

blur​

[Android only] Received when the user is not actively interacting with the app. Useful in situations when the user pulls down the notification drawer. AppState won't change but the blur event will get fired.

Methods​

addEventListener()​

addEventListener(type, handler);

Add a handler to AppState changes by listening to the change event type and providing the handler

TODO: now that AppState is a subclass of NativeEventEmitter, we could deprecate addEventListener and removeEventListener and use addListener and listener.remove() directly. That will be a breaking change though, as both the method and event names are different (addListener events are currently required to be globally unique).


removeEventListener()​

removeEventListener(type, handler);

Remove a handler by passing the change event type and the handler

Properties​

currentState​

AppState.currentState;