npm package discovery and stats viewer.

Discover Tips

  • General search

    [free text search, go nuts!]

  • Package details

    pkg:[package-name]

  • User packages

    @[username]

Sponsor

Optimize Toolset

I’ve always been into building performant and accessible sites, but lately I’ve been taking it extremely seriously. So much so that I’ve been building a tool to help me optimize and monitor the sites that I build to make sure that I’m making an attempt to offer the best experience to those who visit them. If you’re into performant, accessible and SEO friendly sites, you might like it too! You can check it out at Optimize Toolset.

About

Hi, 👋, I’m Ryan Hefner  and I built this site for me, and you! The goal of this site was to provide an easy way for me to check the stats on my npm packages, both for prioritizing issues and updates, and to give me a little kick in the pants to keep up on stuff.

As I was building it, I realized that I was actually using the tool to build the tool, and figured I might as well put this out there and hopefully others will find it to be a fast and useful way to search and browse npm packages as I have.

If you’re interested in other things I’m working on, follow me on Twitter or check out the open source projects I’ve been publishing on GitHub.

I am also working on a Twitter bot for this site to tweet the most popular, newest, random packages from npm. Please follow that account now and it will start sending out packages soon–ish.

Open Software & Tools

This site wouldn’t be possible without the immense generosity and tireless efforts from the people who make contributions to the world and share their work via open source initiatives. Thank you 🙏

© 2024 – Pkg Stats / Ryan Hefner

@cdev38399/nativescript-keyboard-toolbar

v4.0.2

Published

NativeScript Keyboard Toolbar plugin

Downloads

89

Readme

NativeScript Keyboard Toolbar

Build Status NPM version Downloads Twitter Follow

iOS and Android running the included demo - much better framerate on YouTube!

What The Keyboard!?

Glad you asked 😅!

  • ⌨️ Mobile keyboards are a compromise at best. Let's make them easier to work with by attaching a toolbar on top of it.
  • 🥅 Design goal = declare any NativeScript layout and stick it on top of the soft keyboard.
  • 🏒 Make the toolbar stick to the keyboard, no matter its shape or form.
  • 🙅‍♀️ No third party dependencies; use only stuff from tns-core-modules (which your app already has).
  • ♾ Allow multiple toolbar designs on one page.

Installation

tns plugin add nativescript-keyboard-toolbar

General usage instructions

The plugin works by grabbing your declared toolbar layout and moving it off-screen.

Then, whenever the related TextField or TextView received focus, the plugin animates the toolbar to the top of the keyboard and keeps it there until the field loses focus.

For this to behave properly you'll need to grab any layout you currently have and wrap it in a GridLayout as show in the examples below. The GridLayout allows for stacking multiple child layout on top of each other when their row and col properties are equal (or omitted).

So if your layout structure is currently this:

<ActionBar/>
<StackLayout/>

Change it to this:

<ActionBar/>
<GridLayout>
    <StackLayout/>
    <Toolbar/>
</GridLayout>

Not too bad, right? That will make the Toolbar stack on top of the StackLayout you already had.

Note that the plugin could have done this for you, or take some other approach entirely, but many hours of tinkering has convinced me this is the best solution.

Usage with NativeScript Core

Mind the comments in the example below.

<Page xmlns="http://schemas.nativescript.org/tns.xsd" xmlns:kt="nativescript-keyboard-toolbar">

    <!-- This GridLayout wrapper is required; it wraps the visible layout and the Toolbar layout(s) -->
    <GridLayout>

        <StackLayout>
            <Label text="Some text"/>
            <!-- Add an 'id' property that we can reference below -->
            <TextField id="priceTextField" hint="Enter the price" keyboardType="number"/>
        </StackLayout>

        <!-- The 'forId' and 'height' properties are mandatory -->
        <kt:Toolbar forId="priceTextField" height="44">
            <GridLayout columns="*, *, *" class="toolbar">
                <Label col="0" text="👍" tap="{{ appendToTextView }}"/>
                <Label col="1" text="👎" tap="{{ appendToTextView }}"/>
                <Label col="2" text="😄" tap="{{ appendToTextView }}"/>
            </GridLayout>
        </kt:Toolbar>

    </GridLayout>
</Page>

Core demo app

Check the source in the demo folder, or run it on your own device:

git clone https://github.com/EddyVerbruggen/nativescript-keyboard-toolbar
cd nativescript-keyboard-toolbar/src
npm i
npm run demo.ios # or .android

Usage with NativeScript-Angular

Register the plugin in a specific module, or globally in the app module:

import { registerElement } from "nativescript-angular";
registerElement("KeyboardToolbar", () => require("nativescript-keyboard-toolbar").Toolbar);

In this example, we're adding a TextField to the ActionBar. Note that we still need to wrap the rest of the page in a GridLayout:

<ActionBar>
  <TextField #textField1 id="tf1"></TextField>
</ActionBar>

<!-- Our Toolbar wrapper - no need for 'columns' / 'rows' properties because we want the children to stack -->
<GridLayout>

  <!-- Add whatever visible layout you need here -->
  <ListView [items]="items">
    <ng-template let-item="item">
      <Label [nsRouterLink]="['/item', item.id]" [text]="item.name" class="list-group-item"></Label>
    </ng-template>
  </ListView>

  <!-- Use 'KeyboardToolbar' because that's what we registered in our module (see above).
   The 'forId' and 'height' properties are mandatory -->
  <KeyboardToolbar forId="tf1" height="44">
    <GridLayout columns="*, *, *, auto" class="toolbar">
      <Label col="0" text="👍" (tap)="appendToTextField(textField1, '👍')"></Label>
      <Label col="1" text="👎" (tap)="appendToTextField(textField1, '👎')"></Label>
      <Label col="2" text="😄" (tap)="appendToTextField(textField1, '😄')"></Label>
      <Label col="3" text="Close️" (tap)="closeKeyboard(textField1)"></Label>
    </GridLayout>
  </KeyboardToolbar>
</GridLayout>

Angular demo app

Check the source in the demo-ng folder, or run it on your own device:

git clone https://github.com/EddyVerbruggen/nativescript-keyboard-toolbar
cd nativescript-keyboard-toolbar/src
npm i
npm run demo-ng.ios # or .android

Usage with NativeScript-Vue

Register the plugin in app.js (or depending on your app's setup: app.ts, or main.js, etc):

import Vue from "nativescript-vue";
Vue.registerElement('KeyboardToolbar', () => require('nativescript-keyboard-toolbar').Toolbar);
<template>
  <Page class="page">
    <ActionBar class="action-bar">
      <Label class="action-bar-title" text="Home"></Label>
    </ActionBar>

    <!-- Our Toolbar wrapper - no need for 'columns' / 'rows' properties because we want the children to stack -->
    <GridLayout>

      <StackLayout>
        <TextView id="tv2" text="Say it with emoji!"/>
      </StackLayout>

      <!-- Use 'KeyboardToolbar' because that's what we registered in our module (see above).
         The 'forId' and 'height' properties are mandatory -->
      <KeyboardToolbar forId="tv2" height="44">
        <GridLayout columns="*, *, *" class="toolbar">
          <Label col="0" text="👍" @tap="appendToTextView2"/>
          <Label col="1" text="👎" @tap="appendToTextView2"/>
          <Label col="2" text="😄" @tap="appendToTextView2"/>
        </GridLayout>
      </KeyboardToolbar>

    </GridLayout>
  </Page>
</template>

<script>
  import { topmost } from "tns-core-modules/ui/frame";

  export default {
    methods: {
      appendToTextView2(args) {
        const textView = topmost().currentPage.getViewById("tv2");
        textView.text += args.object.text;
      }
    }
  }
</script>

Vue demo app

Check the source in the demo-vue folder, or run it on your own device:

git clone https://github.com/EddyVerbruggen/nativescript-keyboard-toolbar
cd nativescript-keyboard-toolbar/src
npm i
npm run demo-vue.ios # or .android

What about IQKeyboardManager?

If you have IQKeyboardManager installed for better keyboard behavior on iOS, then this plugin will detect it and add the height of your custom toolbar to the scroll offset IQKeyboardManager applies. You can see this in action in the NativeScript Core demo app.

You may want to suppress IQKeyboardManager's own toolbar in this case (to avoid a double toolbar), as shown here.

Future work

  • Orientation-change support.
  • Dismiss keyboard on iOS when tapping outside the keyboard (configurable). Fot the time being you can add and configure IQKeyboardManager as mentioned above.
  • Auto-scroll the view if the keyboard overlaps the text field (on iOS you can already do that with IQKeyboardManager).
  • Modal support on Android (currently you can't use the toolbar in a modal because the toolbar is behind the modal)