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React Native By Example

You're reading from   React Native By Example Native mobile development with React

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Product type Paperback
Published in Apr 2017
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781786464750
Length 414 pages
Edition 1st Edition
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Tools
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Author (1):
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 Kho Kho
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Kho
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Toc

Table of Contents (17) Chapters Close

Title Page
Credits
Foreword
About the Author
About the Reviewer
www.PacktPub.com
Customer Feedback
Preface
1. First Project - Creating a Basic To-Do List App FREE CHAPTER 2. Advanced Functionality and Styling the To-Do List App 3. Our Second Project - The Budgeting App 4. Advanced Functionality with the Expenses App 5. Third Project - The Facebook Client 6. Advanced Facebook App Functionality 7. Redux 8. Deploying Your Applications 9. Additional React Native Components

DatePickerAndroid and TimePickerAndroid


Setting a time and date on Android is much different from iOS. With iOS, you have a DatePickerIOS component that includes both the date and time. On Android, this is split into two native modals, DatePickerAndroid for the date and TimePickerAndroid for the time. It's not a component to render either, it's an asynchronous function that opens the modal and waits for a natural conclusion before applying logic to it.

To open one of these, wrap an asynchronous function around it:

async renderDatePicker () { 
  const { action, year, month, day } = await DatePickerAndroid.open({ 
    date: new Date() 
  }); 

  if (action === DatePickerAndroid.dismissedAction) { 
    return; 
  } 

  // do something with the year, month, and day here 
} 

Both the DatePickerAndroid and TimePickerAndroid components return an object, and we can grab the properties of each object by using ES6 destructuring assignment, as shown in the preceding snippet.

As these components will render...

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