React Navigation is born from the React Native community's need for an extensible yet easy-to-use navigation solution based on JavaScript.
See: https://reactnavigation.org/docs/en/getting-started.html
- The best way to learn is to follow the Getting started guide. It guides you through the fundamentals of React Navigation.
- The documentation includes solutions for common use cases in the "How do I do ...?" section, such as tab navigation and Redux integration.
- If you need to build your own navigator, there's a section for that too.
- The API reference lists all public APIs.
- The Community Resources document lists some other resources submitted to us by people who use React Navigation. Feel free to open a pull request to add your resource to the list.
- You can contribute improvements to the documentation in the website repository.
The changes for each release are outlined on the GitHub releases page.
You can also try out the Navigation Playground app to get a sense for some of the tools built in to React Navigation. The "Fundamentals" in the documentation also include examples you can play with.
See the help page.
See our Contributing Guide!
Certainly not! There are other libraries - which, depending on your needs, can be better or worse suited for your project. Read more in the alternative libraries documentation, and read React Navigation's pitch & anti-pitch to understand the tradeoffs.
Web support was not a priority for the 1.0 release, but the architecture of this library allows for it (and it has worked in the past). If you would like to lead this charge, please reach out with your ideas for how to move forward on the RFCs repository and we would be happy to discuss.
This library has adopted a Code of Conduct that we expect project participants to adhere to. Please read the full text so that you can understand what actions will and will not be tolerated.
React Navigation is licensed under the MIT.