How to prevent layout from overlapping with iOS status bar

IosReact Native

Ios Problem Overview


I am working on tutorial for React Native navigation. I found out that all layout starts loading from top of screen instead of below of the status bar. This causes most layouts to overlap with the status bar. I can fix this by adding a padding to the view when loading them. Is this the actual way to do it? I don' think manually adding padding is an actual way to solve it. Is there a more elegant way to fix this?

import React, { Component } from 'react';
import { View, Text, Navigator } from 'react-native';

export default class MyScene extends Component {
    static get defaultProps() {
            return {
                    title : 'MyScene'    
            };  
    }   
    render() {
            return (
                    <View style={{padding: 20}}> //padding to prevent overlap
                            <Text>Hi! My name is {this.props.title}.</Text>
                    </View> 
            )   
    }    
}

Below shows the screenshots before and after the padding is added. enter image description here

Ios Solutions


Solution 1 - Ios

Now you can use SafeAreaView which is included in React Navigation:

<SafeAreaView>
    ... your content ...
</SafeAreaView>

Solution 2 - Ios

There is a very simple way to fix this. Make a component.

You can create a StatusBar component and call it first after the first view wrapper in your parent components.

Here is the code for the one I use:

'use strict'
import React, {Component} from 'react';
import {View, Text, StyleSheet, Platform} from 'react-native';

class StatusBarBackground extends Component{
  render(){
    return(
      <View style={[styles.statusBarBackground, this.props.style || {}]}> //This part is just so you can change the color of the status bar from the parents by passing it as a prop
      </View>
    );
  }
}

const styles = StyleSheet.create({
  statusBarBackground: {
    height: (Platform.OS === 'ios') ? 18 : 0, //this is just to test if the platform is iOS to give it a height of 18, else, no height (Android apps have their own status bar)
    backgroundColor: "white",
  }

})

module.exports= StatusBarBackground

After doing this and exporting it to your main component, call it like this:

import StatusBarBackground from './YourPath/StatusBarBackground'

export default class MyScene extends Component {
  render(){
    return(
      <View>
        <StatusBarBackground style={{backgroundColor:'midnightblue'}}/>
      </View>
    )
  }
}

 

Solution 3 - Ios

I tried a more simple way for this.

We can get the height of Status Bar on android and use SafeAreaView along with it to make the code work on both platforms.

import { SafeAreaView, StatusBar, Platform } from 'react-native';

If we log out Platform.OS and StatusBar.currentHeight we get the logs,

console.log('Height on: ', Platform.OS, StatusBar.currentHeight);

Height on: android 24 and Height on: android 24

We can now optionally add margin/padding to our container view using

paddingTop: Platform.OS === "android" ? StatusBar.currentHeight : 0

The final code in App.js is below:

export default class App extends React.Component {
  render() {
    return (
      <SafeAreaView style={{ flex: 1, backgroundColor: "#fff" }}>
        <View style={styles.container}>
          <Text>Hello World</Text>
        </View>
      </SafeAreaView>
    );
  }
}

const styles = StyleSheet.create({
  container: {
    flex: 1,
    backgroundColor: "#fff",
    paddingTop: Platform.OS === "android" ? StatusBar.currentHeight : 0
  }
});

Solution 4 - Ios

@philipheinser solution does work indeed.

However, I would expect that React Native's StatusBar component will handle that for us.

It doesn't, unfortunately, but we can abstract that away quite easily by creating our own component around it:

./StatusBar.js

import React from 'react';
import { View, StatusBar, Platform } from 'react-native';

// here, we add the spacing for iOS
// and pass the rest of the props to React Native's StatusBar

export default function (props) {
    const height = (Platform.OS === 'ios') ? 20 : 0;
    const { backgroundColor } = props;

    return (
        <View style={{ height, backgroundColor }}>
            <StatusBar { ...props } />
        </View>
    );
}

./index.js

import React from 'react';
import { View } from 'react-native';

import StatusBar from './StatusBar';

export default function App () {
    return (
      <View>
        <StatusBar backgroundColor="#2EBD6B" barStyle="light-content" />
        { /* rest of our app */ }
      </View>
    )
}
Before:

https://i.stack.imgur.com/1G2TM.png" width="500">

After:

https://i.stack.imgur.com/h6oPk.png" width="500" >

Solution 5 - Ios

The react-navigation docs have a great solution for this. First off, they recommend not to use the SafeAreaView included with React Native because:

> While React Native exports a SafeAreaView component, it has some > inherent issues, i.e. if a screen containing safe area is animating, > it causes jumpy behavior. In addition, this component only supports > iOS 10+ with no support for older iOS versions or Android. We > recommend to use the react-native-safe-area-context library to handle > safe areas in a more reliable way.

Instead, they recommend react-native-safe-area-context - with which it would look like this:

import React, { Component } from 'react';
import { View, Text, Navigator } from 'react-native';
import { useSafeArea } from 'react-native-safe-area-context';

export default function MyScene({title = 'MyScene'}) {
    const insets = useSafeArea();

    return (
        <View style={{paddingTop: insets.top}}>
            <Text>Hi! My name is {title}.</Text>
        </View> 
    )   
}

I would like to note that it's probably a better idea to use the SafeAreaView that this library offers though, since phones these days may also have elements at the bottom that can overlap UI elements. It all depends on your app of course. (For more detail on that, see the react-navigation docs I linked to in the beginning.)

Solution 6 - Ios

Here is a way that works for iOS:

<View style={{height: 20, backgroundColor: 'white', marginTop: -20, zIndex: 2}}>
   <StatusBar barStyle="dark-content"/></View>

Solution 7 - Ios

You can handle this by adding a padding to you navigation bar component or just ad a view that has the same hight as the statusbar at the top of your view tree with a backgroundcolor like the facebook app does this.

Solution 8 - Ios

Just Simple User React native Default StatusBar to achieve this funcationality.

<View style={styles.container}>
    <StatusBar backgroundColor={Color.TRANSPARENT} translucent={true} />
    <MapView
      provider={PROVIDER_GOOGLE} // remove if not using Google Maps
      style={styles.map}
      region={{
        latitude: 37.78825,
        longitude: -122.4324,
        latitudeDelta: 0.015,
        longitudeDelta: 0.0121,
      }}
    />
  </View>

Solution 9 - Ios

If you combine SaveAreaView and StatusBar, you get it.

https://reactnative.dev/docs/statusbar https://reactnative.dev/docs/safeareaview

Just do this:

<SafeAreaView>
  <View style={{flex: 1}}>
    <StatusBar translucent={false} backgroundColor="#fff" />

    // Your dark magic here
  </View>
</SafeAreaView>

Attributions

All content for this solution is sourced from the original question on Stackoverflow.

The content on this page is licensed under the Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 International (CC BY-SA 4.0) license.

Content TypeOriginal AuthorOriginal Content on Stackoverflow
QuestionCliffView Question on Stackoverflow
Solution 1 - IosGreg EnnisView Answer on Stackoverflow
Solution 2 - IosLuis RizoView Answer on Stackoverflow
Solution 3 - IosGaurav SalujaView Answer on Stackoverflow
Solution 4 - IosAsaf KatzView Answer on Stackoverflow
Solution 5 - IosAndyOView Answer on Stackoverflow
Solution 6 - Iosedu_shinView Answer on Stackoverflow
Solution 7 - IosphilipheinserView Answer on Stackoverflow
Solution 8 - IosSafi DeraiyaView Answer on Stackoverflow
Solution 9 - IosBroda NoelView Answer on Stackoverflow