Navigation prop reference
Each screen
component in your app is provided with the navigation
prop automatically. The prop contains various convenience functions that dispatch navigation actions. It looks like this:
navigation
navigate
- go to the given screen, this will behave differently based on the navigatorgoBack
- go back to the previous screen, this will pop the current screen when used in a stackreset
- replace the navigation state of the navigator with the given statesetParams
- merge new params onto the route's paramsdispatch
- send an action object to update the navigation statesetOptions
- update the screen's optionsisFocused
- check whether the screen is focusedcanGoBack
- check whether it's possible to go back from the current screengetState
- get the navigation state of the navigatorgetParent
- get the navigation object of the parent screen, if anyaddListener
- subscribe to events for the screenremoveListener
- unsubscribe from events for the screen
It's important to highlight the navigation
prop is not passed in to all components; only screen
components receive this prop automatically! React Navigation doesn't do any magic here. For example, if you were to define a MyBackButton
component and render it as a child of a screen component, you would not be able to access the navigation
prop on it. If, however, you wish to access the navigation
prop in any of your components, you may use the useNavigation
hook.
setParams
/setOptions
etc. should only be called inuseEffect
/useLayoutEffect
/componentDidMount
/componentDidUpdate
etc. Not during render or in constructor.
Navigator-dependent functions
There are several additional functions present on navigation
prop based on the kind of the current navigator.
If the navigator is a stack navigator, several alternatives to navigate
and goBack
are provided and you can use whichever you prefer. The functions are:
navigation
replace
- replace the current route with a new onepush
- push a new route onto the stackpop
- go back in the stackpopToTop
- go to the top of the stack
If the navigator is a tab navigator, the following are also available:
navigation
jumpTo
- go to a specific screen in the tab navigator
If the navigator is a drawer navigator, the following are also available:
navigation
jumpTo
- go to a specific screen in the drawer navigatoropenDrawer
- open the drawercloseDrawer
- close the drawertoggleDrawer
- toggle the state, ie. switch from closed to open and vice versa
You can find more details about navigator dependent functions in the documentation for the navigator that you're using.
Common API reference
The vast majority of your interactions with the navigation
prop will involve navigate
, goBack
, and setParams
.
navigate
The navigate
method lets us navigate to another screen in your app. It takes the following arguments:
navigation.navigate(name, params)
name
- A destination name of the route that has been defined somewhereparams
- Params to merge into the destination route
function HomeScreen({ navigation: { navigate } }) {
return (
<View>
<Text>This is the home screen of the app</Text>
<Button
onPress={() =>
navigate('Profile', { names: ['Brent', 'Satya', 'Michaś'] })
}
title="Go to Brent's profile"
/>
</View>
);
}
In a stack navigator, calling navigate
with a screen name will result in different behavior based on if the screen is already present or not. If the screen is already present in the stack's history, it'll go back to that screen and remove any screens after that. If the screen is not present, it'll push a new screen.
For example, if you have a stack with the history Home > Profile > Settings
and you call navigate(Profile)
, the resulting screens will be Home > Profile
as it goes back to Profile
and removes the Settings
screen.
By default, the screen is identified by its name. But you can also customize it to take the params into account by using the getId
prop.
For example, say you have specified a getId
prop for Profile
screen:
<Screen
name={Profile}
component={ProfileScreen}
getId={({ params }) => params.userId}
/>
Now, if you have a stack with the history Home > Profile (userId: bob) > Settings
and you call navigate(Profile, { userId: 'alice' })
, the resulting screens will be Home > Profile (userId: bob) > Settings > Profile (userId: alice)
since it'll add a new Profile
screen as no matching screen was found.
goBack
The goBack
method lets us go back to the previous screen in the navigator.
By default, goBack
will go back from the screen that it is called from:
function ProfileScreen({ navigation: { goBack } }) {
return (
<View>
<Button onPress={() => goBack()} title="Go back from ProfileScreen" />
</View>
);
}
Going back from a specific screen
Consider the following navigation stack history:
navigation.navigate({ name: SCREEN, key: SCREEN_KEY_A });
navigation.navigate({ name: SCREEN, key: SCREEN_KEY_B });
navigation.navigate({ name: SCREEN, key: SCREEN_KEY_C });
navigation.navigate({ name: SCREEN, key: SCREEN_KEY_D });
Now you are on screen D and want to go back to screen A (popping D, C, and B).
Then you can use navigate
:
navigation.navigate({ key: SCREEN_KEY_A }); // will go to screen A FROM screen D
Alternatively, as screen A is the top of the stack, you can use navigation.popToTop()
.
reset
The reset
method lets us replace the navigator state with a new state:
navigation.reset({
index: 0,
routes: [{ name: 'Profile' }],
});
The state object specified in reset
replaces the existing navigation state with the new one, i.e. removes existing screens and add new ones. If you want to preserve the existing screens when changing the state, you can use CommonActions.reset
with dispatch
instead.
Note: Consider the navigator's state object to be internal and subject to change in a minor release. Avoid using properties from the navigation state object except
index
androutes
, unless you really need it. If there is some functionality you cannot achieve without relying on the structure of the state object, please open an issue.
setParams
The setParams
method lets us update the params (route.params
) of the current screen. setParams
works like React's setState
- it merges the provided params object with the current params.
function ProfileScreen({ navigation: { setParams } }) {
render() {
return (
<Button
onPress={() =>
setParams({
friends:
route.params.friends[0] === 'Brent'
? ['Wojciech', 'Szymon', 'Jakub']
: ['Brent', 'Satya', 'Michaś'],
title:
route.params.title === "Brent's Profile"
? "Lucy's Profile"
: "Brent's Profile",
})
}
title="Swap title and friends"
/>
);
}
}
setOptions
The setOptions
method lets us set screen options from within the component. This is useful if we need to use the component's props, state or context to configure our screen.
function ProfileScreen({ navigation, route }) {
const [value, onChangeText] = React.useState(route.params.title);
React.useLayoutEffect(() => {
navigation.setOptions({
title: value === '' ? 'No title' : value,
});
}, [navigation, value]);
return (
<View style={{ flex: 1, alignItems: 'center', justifyContent: 'center' }}>
<TextInput
style={{ height: 40, borderColor: 'gray', borderWidth: 1 }}
onChangeText={onChangeText}
value={value}
/>
<Button title="Go back" onPress={() => navigation.goBack()} />
</View>
);
}
Any options specified here are shallow merged with the options specified when defining the screen.
Navigation events
Screens can add listeners on the navigation
prop with the addListener
method. For example, to listen to the focus
event:
function Profile({ navigation }) {
React.useEffect(() => {
const unsubscribe = navigation.addListener('focus', () => {
// do something
});
return unsubscribe;
}, [navigation]);
return <ProfileContent />;
}
See Navigation events for more details on the available events and the API usage.
isFocused
This method lets us check whether the screen is currently focused. Returns true
if the screen is focused and false
otherwise.
const isFocused = navigation.isFocused();
This method doesn't re-render the screen when the value changes and mainly useful in callbacks. You probably want to use useIsFocused instead of using this directly, it will return a boolean a prop to indicating if the screen is focused.
Advanced API Reference
The dispatch
function is much less commonly used, but a good escape hatch if you can't do what you need with the available methods such as navigate
, goBack
etc. We recommend to avoid using the dispatch
method often unless absolutely necessary.
dispatch
The dispatch
method lets us send a navigation action object which determines how the navigation state will be updated. All of the navigation functions like navigate
use dispatch
behind the scenes.
Note that if you want to dispatch actions you should use the action creators provided in this library instead of writing the action object directly.
See Navigation Actions Docs for a full list of available actions.
import { CommonActions } from '@react-navigation/native';
navigation.dispatch(
CommonActions.navigate({
name: 'Profile',
params: {},
})
);
When dispatching action objects, you can also specify few additional properties:
source
- The key of the route which should be considered as the source of the action. For example, thereplace
action will replace the route with the given key. By default, it'll use the key of the route that dispatched the action. You can explicitly passundefined
to override this behavior.target
- The key of the navigation state the action should be applied on. By default, actions bubble to other navigators if not handled by a navigator. Iftarget
is specified, the action won't bubble if the navigator with the same key didn't handle it.
Example:
import { CommonActions } from '@react-navigation/native';
navigation.dispatch({
...CommonActions.navigate('Profile'),
source: 'someRoutekey',
target: 'someStatekey',
});
Custom action creators
It's also possible to pass a action creator function to dispatch
. The function will receive the current state and needs to return a navigation action object to use:
import { CommonActions } from '@react-navigation/native';
navigation.dispatch((state) => {
// Add the home route to the start of the stack
const routes = [{ name: 'Home' }, ...state.routes];
return CommonActions.reset({
...state,
routes,
index: routes.length - 1,
});
});
You can use this functionality to build your own helpers that you can utilize in your app. Here is an example which implements inserting a screen just before the last one:
import { CommonActions } from '@react-navigation/native';
const insertBeforeLast = (routeName, params) => (state) => {
const routes = [
...state.routes.slice(0, -1),
{ name: routeName, params },
state.routes[state.routes.length - 1],
];
return CommonActions.reset({
...state,
routes,
index: routes.length - 1,
});
};
Then use it like:
navigation.dispatch(insertBeforeLast('Home'));
getParent
This method returns the navigation prop from the parent navigator that the current navigator is nested in. For example, if you have a stack navigator and a tab navigator nested inside the stack, then you can use getParent
inside a screen of the tab navigator to get the navigation prop passed from the stack navigator.
It will return undefined
if there is no parent navigator. Be sure to always check for undefined
when using this method.
This is only available in latest versions of @react-navigation/native
. Earlier, it was named dangerouslyGetParent
, which is now deprecated.
getState
Note: Consider the navigator's state object to be internal and subject to change in a minor release. Avoid using properties from the navigation state object except
index
androutes
, unless you really need it. If there is some functionality you cannot achieve without relying on the structure of the state object, please open an issue.
This method returns the state object of the navigator which contains the screen. Getting the navigator state could be useful in very rare situations. You most likely don't need to use this method. If you do, make sure you have a good reason.
This is only available in latest versions of @react-navigation/native
. Earlier, it was named dangerouslyGetState
, which is now deprecated.
If you need the state for rendering content, you should use useNavigationState
instead of this method.