A library with a flexible API for accessing the device's safe area inset information.
This library is listed in the Expo SDK reference because it is included in Expo Go. You may use any library of your choice with development builds.
react-native-safe-area-context
provides a flexible API for accessing device safe area inset information. This allows you to position your content appropriately around notches, status bars, home indicators, and other such device and operating system interface elements. It also provides a SafeAreaView
component that you can use in place of View
to automatically inset your views to account for safe areas.
Android Device | Android Emulator | iOS Device | iOS Simulator | Web |
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npx expo install react-native-safe-area-context
If you're installing this in a bare React Native app, you should also follow these additional installation instructions.
import {
SafeAreaView,
SafeAreaProvider,
SafeAreaInsetsContext,
useSafeAreaInsets,
initialWindowMetrics,
} from 'react-native-safe-area-context';
SafeAreaView
is a regular View
component with the safe area edges applied as padding.
If you set your own padding on the view, it will be added to the padding from the safe area.
If you are targeting web, you must set up SafeAreaProvider
as described in the hooks section. You do not need to for native platforms.
import { SafeAreaView } from 'react-native-safe-area-context';
function SomeComponent() {
return (
<SafeAreaView>
<View />
</SafeAreaView>
);
}
All props are optional.
emulateUnlessSupported
true
(default) or false
On iOS 10, emulate the safe area using the status bar height and home indicator sizes.
edges
Array of top
, right
, bottom
, and left
. Defaults to all.
Sets the edges to apply the safe area insets to.
Hooks give you direct access to the safe area insets. This is a more advanced use-case, and might perform worse than SafeAreaView
when rotating the device.
First, add SafeAreaProvider
in your app root component. You may need to add it in other places too, including at the root of any modals any any routes when using react-native-screen
.
import { SafeAreaProvider } from 'react-native-safe-area-context';
function App() {
return <SafeAreaProvider>...</SafeAreaProvider>;
}
You use the useSafeAreaInsets
hook to get the insets in the form of { top: number, right: number, bottom: number: number, left: number }
.
import { useSafeAreaInsets } from 'react-native-safe-area-context';
function HookComponent() {
const insets = useSafeAreaInsets();
return <View style={{ paddingTop: insets.top }} />;
}
Usage with consumer api:
import { SafeAreaInsetsContext } from 'react-native-safe-area-context';
class ClassComponent extends React.Component {
render() {
return (
<SafeAreaInsetsContext.Consumer>
{insets => <View style={{ paddingTop: insets.top }} />}
</SafeAreaInsetsContext.Consumer>
);
}
}
If you can, use SafeAreaView
. It's implemented natively so when rotating the device, there is no delay from the asynchronous bridge.
To speed up the initial render, you can import initialWindowMetrics
from this package and set as the initialMetrics
prop on the provider as described in Web SSR. You cannot do this if your provider remounts, or you are using react-native-navigation
.
import { SafeAreaProvider, initialWindowMetrics } from 'react-native-safe-area-context';
function App() {
return <SafeAreaProvider initialMetrics={initialWindowMetrics}>...</SafeAreaProvider>;
}
If you are doing server side rendering on the web, you can use initialSafeAreaInsets
to inject values based on the device the user has, or simply pass zero. Otherwise, insets measurement will break rendering your page content since it is async.
In a web-only app, you would use CSS environment variables to get the size of the screen's safe area insets.
styles.css
div {
padding-top: env(safe-area-inset-top);
padding-left: env(safe-area-inset-left);
padding-bottom: env(safe-area-inset-bottom);
padding-right: env(safe-area-inset-right);
}
Universally, the hook useSafeAreaInsets()
can provide access to this information.
App.js
import { useSafeAreaInsets } from 'react-native-safe-area-context';
function App() {
const insets = useSafeAreaInsets();
return (
<View
style={{
paddingTop: insets.top,
paddingLeft: insets.left,
paddingBottom: insets.bottom,
paddingRight: insets.right,
}}
/>
);
}