Version: next

JavaScript Environment

JavaScript Runtime

When using React Native, you're going to be running your JavaScript code in two environments:

  • In most cases, React Native will use JavaScriptCore, the JavaScript engine that powers Safari. Note that on iOS, JavaScriptCore does not use JIT due to the absence of writable executable memory in iOS apps.
  • When using Chrome debugging, all JavaScript code runs within Chrome itself, communicating with native code via WebSockets. Chrome uses V8 as its JavaScript engine.

While both environments are very similar, you may end up hitting some inconsistencies. We're likely going to experiment with other JavaScript engines in the future, so it's best to avoid relying on specifics of any runtime.

JavaScript Syntax Transformers

Syntax transformers make writing code more enjoyable by allowing you to use new JavaScript syntax without having to wait for support on all interpreters.

React Native ships with the Babel JavaScript compiler. Check Babel documentation on its supported transformations for more details.

A full list of React Native's enabled transformations can be found in metro-react-native-babel-preset.

ES5

  • Reserved Words: promise.catch(function() { });

ES6

ES8

Stage 3

Specific

  • JSX: <View style={{color: 'red'}} />
  • Flow: function foo(x: ?number): string {};
  • TypeScript: function foo(x: number | undefined): string {};
  • Babel Template: allows AST templating

Polyfills

Many standard functions are also available on all the supported JavaScript runtimes.

Browser

ES6

ES7

ES8

Specific

  • __DEV__