Action Bar
The ActionBar is NativeScript’s abstraction over
the Android ActionBar and iOS
NavigationBar. It represents a toolbar at the top
of the activity window, and can have a title, application-level
navigation, as well as other custom interactive items.
Usage
The ActionBar provides a
title property and can be extended by using one or
more ActionItem components and a single
NavigationButton. The ActionBar also
supports entirely custom views (see the
Tips and Tricks section below).
<Page.actionBar>
<ActionBar title="ActionBar Title" icon="">
<NavigationButton icon="res://ic_arrow_back_black_24dp" tap="goBack" />
<ActionBar.actionItems>
<ActionItem icon="font://" class="fas" ios.position="right" tap="openSettings" />
</ActionBar.actionItems>
</ActionBar>
</Page.actionBar>
const frameModule = require("tns-core-modules/ui/frame");
function goBack() {
frameModule.Frame.topmost().goBack();
}
function openSettings() {
// implement the custom logic
}
exports.goBack = goBack;
exports.openSettings = openSettings;
import { Frame } from "tns-core-modules/ui/frame";
export function goBack() {
Frame.topmost().goBack();
}
export function openSettings() {
// implement the custom logic
}
ActionItem
The ActionItem components are supporting the
platform-specific position and
systemIcon for iOS and Android.
<Page.actionBar>
<ActionBar title="Action Items">
<ActionItem tap="onShare"
ios.systemIcon="9" ios.position="left"
android.systemIcon="ic_menu_share" android.position="actionBar"></ActionItem>
<ActionItem tap="onDelete" text="delete"
ios.systemIcon="16" ios.position="right"
android.position="popup"></ActionItem>
</ActionBar>
</Page.actionBar>
-
Android sets position via
android.position:-
actionBar: Puts the item in theActionBar. Action item can be rendered both as text or icon. -
popup: Puts the item in the options menu. Items will be rendered as text. -
actionBarIfRoom: Puts the item in theActionBarif there is room for it. Otherwise, puts it in the options menu.
-
-
iOS sets position via
ios.position:-
left: Puts the item on the left side of theActionBar. -
right: Puts the item on the right side of theActionBar.
-
NavigationButton
The NavigationButton component is a common
abstraction over the iOS back button and the Android navigation
button.
iOS Specifics: The default text of the navigation button is the title of the previous page. In iOS, the back button is used explicitly for navigation. It navigates to the previous page and you can't handle the tap event to override this behavior. If you want to place a button on the left side of the ActionBar and handle the tap event (e.g., show slide-out), you can use ActionItem with
ios.position="left". Values forios.systemIconare numbers from theUIBarButtonItem.SystemItemenumeration:
| Value | Icon | Value | Icon | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 0 | Done | 12 | Search | |
| 1 | Cancel | 13 | Refresh | |
| 2 | Edit | 14 | Stop | |
| 3 | Save | 15 | Camera | |
| 4 | Add | 16 | Trash | |
| 5 | FlexibleSpace | 17 | Play | |
| 6 | FixedSpace | 18 | Pause | |
| 7 | Compose | 19 | Rewind | |
| 8 | Reply | 20 | FastForward | |
| 9 | Action | 21 | Undo | |
| 10 | Organize | 22 | Redo | |
| 11 | Bookmarks | 23 | PageCurl |
Android Specifics: In Android, you can't set text inside the navigation button. You can use the icon property to set an image (e.g.,
~\images\nav-image.pngorres:\\ic_nav). You can useandroid.systemIconto set one of the system icons available in Android. In this case, there is no default behaviour forNavigationButtontap event, and we should define manually the callback function, which will be executed. You can use theandroid.systemIconandios.systemIconproperties to show system icons. If you define a system icon, it will be used instead oficonandtextproperties. Values forandroid.systemIconcorrespond to the resources names of the built-in Android system icons. For a full list of Android drawable names, you may visit Android Developer Site.
Styling
To style the ActionBar, you can use only
background-color and color properties.
Alternatively, you can use
nativescript-theme-core and use the default styles
for each different theme. The icon property of
ActionItem can use Icon Fonts with the
font:// prefix. By setting up this prefix, a new
image will be generated, which will be set as an ActionItem's
icon resource. While using this functionality, we
need to specify the font-size, which will calculate
the size of the generated image base on the device's dpi.
<Page.actionBar>
<ActionBar>
<!-- Explicitly hiding the NavigaitonBar to prevent the default one on iOS-->
<NavigationButton text="Back" visibility="collapsed" />
<ActionBar.actionItems>
<!-- Using the icon property and Icon Fonts -->
<ActionItem position="left" icon="font://" class="fas" tap="goBack"/>
<!-- Creating custom views for ActionItem-->
<ActionItem ios.position="right">
<!-- <GridLayout rows="*" columns="*" width="100"> -->
<Button row="0" col="0" text="Theme" />
<!-- </GridLayout> -->
</ActionItem>
</ActionBar.actionItems>
</ActionBar>
</Page.actionBar>
Note: In iOS, the
colorproperty affects the color of the title and the action items. In Android, thecolorproperty affects only the title text. However, you can set the default color of the text in the action items by adding anactionMenuTextColoritem in the Android theme (insideApp_Resources\Android\values\styles.xml).
Tips And Tricks
Setting App Icon For Android
You can set the application icon only for Android. By default, the application icon is hidden. You can show it by setting the android.iconVisibility property to always.
<Page.actionBar>
<ActionBar title="App Icon Demo" android.icon="res://icon" android.iconVisibility="always"></ActionBar>
</Page.actionBar>
Hiding Action Items
You can use the visibility property of the
ActionItem to dynamically hide and show items. You
can also use binding for the visibility.
Here is an example of showing different action items when the app is in "editing" mode:
<Page xmlns="http://www.nativescript.org/tns.xsd" navigatingTo="onNavigatingTo">
<Page.actionBar>
<ActionBar title="Action Items Visibility">
<ActionItem tap="onEdit" ios.systemIcon="2" android.systemIcon="ic_menu_edit" ios.position="right"
visibility="{{ isEditing ? 'collapse' : 'visible' }}"/>
<ActionItem tap="onSave" ios.systemIcon="3" android.systemIcon="ic_menu_save" ios.position="right"
visibility="{{ isEditing ? 'visible' : 'collapse' }}"/>
<ActionItem tap="onCancel" ios.systemIcon="1" android.systemIcon="ic_menu_close_clear_cancel"
visibility="{{ isEditing ? 'visible' : 'collapse' }}"/>
</ActionBar>
</Page.actionBar>
</Page>
const fromObject = require("tns-core-modules/data/observable").fromObject;
function onNavigatingTo(args) {
const page = args.object;
page.bindingContext = fromObject({
isEditing: false
});
}
exports.onNavigatingTo = onNavigatingTo;
function onEdit(args) {
const page = args.object.page;
page.bindingContext.set("isEditing", true);
}
exports.onEdit = onEdit;
function onSave(args) {
const page = args.object.page;
page.bindingContext.set("isEditing", false);
}
exports.onSave = onSave;
function onCancel(args) {
const page = args.object.page;
page.bindingContext.set("isEditing", false);
}
exports.onCancel = onCancel;
import { EventData, fromObject } from "tns-core-modules/data/observable";
import { ActionItem } from "tns-core-modules/ui/action-bar";
import { Page } from "tns-core-modules/ui/page";
import { GestureEventData } from "tns-core-modules/ui/gestures";
export function onEdit(args: GestureEventData) {
const page = (<ActionItem>args.object).page;
page.bindingContext.set("isEditing", true);
}
export function onSave(args: GestureEventData) {
const page = (<ActionItem>args.object).page;
page.bindingContext.set("isEditing", false);
}
export function onCancel(args: GestureEventData) {
const page = (<ActionItem>args.object).page;
page.bindingContext.set("isEditing", false);
}
Hide Show ActionBar
You can explicitly control the visibility of the
ActionBar by setting the
actionBarHidden property of the Pageor
setting the Frame's
actionBarVisibility
property.
<Page actionBarHidden="{{ abHidden }}" xmlns="http://www.nativescript.org/tns.xsd" navigatingTo="onNavigatingTo">
<Page.actionBar>
<ActionBar title="ActionBar"></ActionBar>
</Page.actionBar>
</Page>
const Observable = require("tns-core-modules/data/observable").Observable;
let value = false;
function onNavigatingTo(args) {
const page = args.object;
const vm = new Observable();
vm.set("abHidden", value);
page.bindingContext = vm;
}
exports.onNavigatingTo = onNavigatingTo;
function onTap(args) {
const page = args.object.page;
const vm = page.bindingContext;
value = !value;
vm.set("abHidden", value);
}
exports.onTap = onTap;
import { EventData, Observable } from "tns-core-modules/data/observable";
import { Button } from "tns-core-modules/ui/button";
import { Page } from "tns-core-modules/ui/page";
import { GestureEventData } from "tns-core-modules/ui/gestures";
let value: boolean = false;
export function onNavigatingTo(args: EventData) {
const page = <Page>args.object;
const vm = new Observable();
vm.set("abHidden", value);
page.bindingContext = vm;
}
export function onTap(args: GestureEventData) {
const page = (<Button>args.object).page;
const vm = page.bindingContext;
value = !value;
vm.set("abHidden", value);
}
In Android, the application bar is visible by default and shows the name of the application as title. The navigation button is visible only when it is explicitly defined in the application.
In iOS, if the application bar is empty (e.g., no title or action items are defined), it is hidden on the first page and automatically shown after navigation to host the navigation button. If the ActionBar is not empty (e.g., there is a title or action items defined) it will be shown on first page, too.
Custom Title View
You could set a custom view, which will be rendered instead of the ActionItem text. The example below demonstrates, how to load to separate labels inside the item.
<Page.actionBar>
<ActionBar title="test">
<StackLayout orientation="horizontal"
ios:horizontalAlignment="center"
android:horizontalAlignment="left">
<Image src="res://icon" class="action-image"></Image>
<Label text="ativeScript" class="action-label"></Label>
</StackLayout>
</ActionBar>
</Page.actionBar>
Creating SideDrawer Button
This example shows how to implement a "show side-drawer button" functionality.
<Page.actionBar>
<ActionBar title="SideDrawer Button">
<android>
<NavigationButton icon="res://menu" tap="showSideDrawer" />
</android>
<ios>
<ActionItem icon="res://menu" ios.position="left" tap="showSideDrawer" />
</ios>
</ActionBar>
</Page.actionBar>
For Android, this example uses the
NavigationButton because
ActionItems are shown on the right side of the
ActionBar.
For iOS, this code adds a regular ActionItem with
position set to left. Using the
NavigationButton as a side-drawer button in iOS is
not possible, because its function is to always navigate back in
the application.
Note: The
<android>and<ios>tags are used inside the XML to define platform-specific elements. Important: The platform specific tags (<android>and<ios>) will work only in non-Angular based project.
Creating ActionBar via Code-Behind
The ActionBar can be dynamically created and
controlled. The property navigationButton allows us
to overwrite the default navigation button (if one is present).
To explicitly show/hide an action bar on your page, use the
actionBarHidden property of the current page.
const ActionBar = require("tns-core-modules/ui/action-bar").ActionBar;
const NavigationButton = require("tns-core-modules/ui/action-bar").NavigationButton;
function onLoaded(args) {
const page = args.object;
const newActionBar = new ActionBar();
newActionBar.title = "Code-Behind ActionBar";
const newNavigaitonButton = new NavigationButton();
// for ios
newNavigaitonButton.text = "Go Back";
// for android
newNavigaitonButton.android.systemIcon = "ic_menu_back";
// or newNavigaitonButton.icon = "~\images\nav-image.png";
newActionBar.navigationButton = newNavigaitonButton;
page.actionBar = newActionBar;
page.actionBarHidden = false;
}
exports.onLoaded = onLoaded;
import { EventData } from "tns-core-modules/data/observable";
import { ActionBar, NavigationButton } from "tns-core-modules/ui/action-bar";
import { Page } from "tns-core-modules/ui/page";
export function onLoaded(args: EventData) {
const page = <Page>args.object;
const newActionBar = new ActionBar();
newActionBar.title = "Code-Behind ActionBar";
const newNavigaitonButton = new NavigationButton();
newNavigaitonButton.text = "Go Back";
newActionBar.navigationButton = newNavigaitonButton;
page.actionBar = newActionBar;
page.actionBarHidden = false;
}
iOS Specifics: The default text of the button is the title of the previous page; you can change it by setting the
textproperty as shown in the example Setting the Text Title. In iOS, the back button is used explicitly for navigation. It navigates to the previous page and you cannot handle thetapevent to override this behavior. If you want to place a button on the left side of theActionBarand handle the tap event (e.g., show slide-out), you can useActionItemwithios.position="left".Android Specifics: In Android, you cannot set text inside the navigation button. You can use the
iconproperty to set an image (e.g.,~\images\nav-image.pngorres:\\ic_nav). You can useandroid.systemIconto set one of the system icons available in Android. In this case, there is no default behaviour for NavigationButton'stapevent, and we should define manually the callback function, which will be executed.
Properties
ActionBar Properties
| Name | Type | Description |
|---|---|---|
title |
string |
Gets or sets the action bar title. |
titleView |
View | Gets or sets the title view. When set - replaces the title with a custom view. |
ActionItem Properties
| Name | Type | Description |
|---|---|---|
text |
string |
Gets or sets the text of the action item. |
icon |
string |
Gets or sets the icon of the action item. Supports local
images (~/), resources (res://)
and icon fonts (fonts://)
|
ios.position |
enum: "left", "right"
|
Sets the position of the item (default value is
left).
|
android.position |
enum: "actionBar", "popup",
"actionBarIfRoom"
|
Sets the position of the item (default value is
actionBar).
|
ios.systemIcon |
number |
iOS only Sets the icon of the action item while using UIBarButtonSystemIcon enumeration. |
android.systemIcon |
string |
Android only Sets a path to a resource icon ( see the list of Android system drawables) |
NavigationButton Properties
| Name | Type | Description |
|---|---|---|
text |
string |
Gets or sets the text of the action item. |
icon |
string |
Gets or sets the icon of the action item. |
Events
| Name | Description |
|---|---|
loaded |
Emitted when the view is loaded. |
unloaded |
Emitted when the view is unloaded. |
layoutChanged |
Emitted when the layout bounds of a view changes due to layout processing. |
API References
| Name | Type |
|---|---|
| ActionBar | Module |
| ActionBar | Class |
| ActionItem | Class |
| ActionItems | Class |
| NavigationButton | Class |
Native Component
| Android | iOS |
|---|---|
| android.widget.Toolbar | UIView |
See Also
Detailed documentation article about
ActionBar functionalities.