view-transitions VS react-native-web

Compare view-transitions vs react-native-web and see what are their differences.

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view-transitions react-native-web
16 62
786 21,345
0.6% -
7.3 6.7
about 1 month ago 3 days ago
HTML JavaScript
GNU General Public License v3.0 or later MIT License
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view-transitions

Posts with mentions or reviews of view-transitions. We have used some of these posts to build our list of alternatives and similar projects. The last one was on 2023-02-16.
  • I created a website to upload and showcase desk setups & office workspaces, with clickable featured products in the image!
    1 project | /r/webdev | 11 Mar 2023
  • How to use View Transitions in Hotwire Turbo
    10 projects | dev.to | 16 Feb 2023
    So let’s add the following CSS to the index template (Slim recognizes a css: block that just renders a normal tag):

    / app/views/counter/index.html.slim
    / (anywhere outside the Turbo Frame tag)
    css:
      /* (1) */
      #counter {
        view-transition-name: counter;
        contain: layout;
      }
    
      /* (2) */
      @keyframes rotate-out {
        to {
          transform: rotate(90deg);
        }
      }
    
      @keyframes rotate-in {
        from {
          transform: rotate(-90deg);
        }
      }
    
      /* (3) */
      ::view-transition-old(counter) {
        animation-duration: 200ms;
        animation-name: -ua-view-transition-fade-out, rotate-out;
      }
      ::view-transition-new(counter) {
        animation-duration: 200ms;
        animation-name: -ua-view-transition-fade-in, rotate-in;
      }
    
    Enter fullscreen mode Exit fullscreen mode

    Let’s break this code down a bit:

    1. The CSS selector #counter matches the counter div and the view-transition-name property names this area of the screen, for the purpose of View Transitions, as counter. This name will be used in the animation declarations below.

      The clone property currently must be added here for some reasons internal to the current View Transitions implementation in Chrome and must be set to paint or layout. This restriction is planned to be removed from the specification, though, and in fact I’ve heard that it is not needed in Chrome Canary any more.

    2. The rotation animation keyframes are defined here. Note that while the transition also uses fade-in and fade-out animations, they don’t have to be defined here because the spec requires browsers to implement them natively under the name -ua-view-transition-fade-in/out.

    3. The CSS animations for the counter (the View Transition area named counter) are configured here. The CSS selectors here are some of the pseudo-elements automatically created during the transition. The -old pseudo-element represents a screenshot of the old DOM state that should somehow disappear or ”go away“ from the viewport and the -new pseudo-element represents a live version of the final DOM state that should be brought into sight.

    So, overall, this code selects a portion of the page and animates it independently from the rest of the page during Turbo Frames DOM updates. Behind the scenes, the default cross-fade for the rest of the page still also takes place, it just is not visible because all its elements are visually identical. The result looks like this:

    A few initial tips & tricks

    Does this work for Turbo Drive visits, too?

    Sure it does and it’s actually pretty easy! All we have to do is define the same event handler as we did above but attach it to the turbo:before-render event instead. By default we’ll get a cross-fade animation of the whole page during Turbo Drive page visits.

    Do not try to ”name“ the Turbo Frame itself

    When playing with Turbo Frame View Transitions I first tried to use a custom animation for the whole Turbo Frame element by naming it via the view-transition-name property. For some reason, this does not work and you end up with a very cryptic and misleading error message in the console (yes I did have the contain property in the CSS declaration):

    Aborting transition. Element must contain paint or layout for view-transition-name : counter

    So, when using custom animations, an element from inside the Frame must be selected and named.

    Debugging View Transitions

    Since View Transitions are technically just normal CSS animations, they can be inspected with the Animations panel in the Dev Tools. Also, the automatically created pseudo-elements are visible in the Elements tab during the transitions:

    Conclusions

    I confess I am quite excited about the new View Transitions API. Among the things I particularly like about it are the following:

    • It is surprisingly easy to plug this inside Hotwire Turbo and you get the default cross-fade transition animation immediately for free (in latest Chrome-like browsers, that is).
    • Since this is implemented natively in the browser, the animations are highly optimized and performant.
    • View Transitions should allow (today or in the future) building highly interactive transitions similar to those in Material Design.
    • There is some initial support for Multi-Page Applications, too, which is great news because we can bring transition animations declared in CSS to our old but gold apps.
    • It should be possible to use a different animation based on the ”direction“ of the visit (Back/Forward) using the Navigation API (also still experimental and not very well supported, though).

    Things I am still concerned about:

    • Browser support: the Firefox team evaluates it, the Safari team is silent. This will be a log run and making a polyfill is probably too difficult. For web sites where transition animations are critical, this is still a no go.
    • If you’re not careful enough, the transition feels more fluid but also a little bit slower. The reason for it is that View Transitions start the animations at the moment when both the old and new DOM states are already rendered. This means that the exit animation is delayed until new content is available and until that time, nothing happens. Also, the entry animations for the new state usually delay its appearance a little bit more.

      This is not a problem of View Transitions themselves but rather a more generic one. If the exit animation (e.g. a fade out) started immediately after user interaction (e.g. a link click), sometimes the user would have to stare at a blank page until the new page content is grabbed, rendered and run through an entry animation. Still, some kind of support for this scenario (possibly with custom loaders or skeletons) would be nice.

    • Tailwind support: I think the current Tailwind syntax does not allow targeting the HTML document-connected pseudo-elements so we have to resort to custom CSS (which is not a big problem, actually).

    • All transitions target the whole page, there is currently no option to make, say, two components (Frames) animate totally independently. An initial proposal for ”scoped transitions“ can be found here.

    Overall, I like this feature and wish it matures enough and gets wider support soon!

  • Is there any js library to add fluid "app-like" animations to a website?
    2 projects | /r/webdev | 28 Dec 2022
  • HTML is all you need to make a website
    4 projects | news.ycombinator.com | 17 Nov 2022
    true, but HTML-only websites are often pretty clunky

    infuriatingly, if HTML had just a bit more oomph, we could make a lot better websites with it, but they haven't been moving HTML forward as a hypermedia for decades now (see https://htmx.org for what I mean, they could implement this concept in the browser in a week, and it would change web development dramatically)

    the upcoming view transitions API will help:

    https://github.com/WICG/view-transitions

    but, still, there are some really obvious and simple things that could be done to make HTML much more compelling (let's start by making PUT, PATCH and DELETE available in HTML!)

  • Can you achieve the same behaviour with JS?
    1 project | /r/webdev | 18 Oct 2022
    Cool answer: Look at shared element transition. this is gonna be really cool one day, sadly not yet out of the proposal state... https://github.com/WICG/shared-element-transitions
  • The different strategies to building a cross-platform app
    36 projects | dev.to | 6 Oct 2022
    Native features faster: Quickest path to utilizing native features/UX improvements once they are released, no need to wait for a third party implementation. Example: shared element transitions first came to native, then were replicated on the web.
  • Barba.js – Create fluid and smooth transitions between your website’s pages
    2 projects | news.ycombinator.com | 18 Sep 2022
    Lol yes, can’t edit now sorry.

    1: https://github.com/WICG/shared-element-transitions

  • Assorted Svelte demos: conditional wrappers, page transitions, actions
    2 projects | dev.to | 8 Jul 2022
    I took the experimental page transition API (a.k.a. shared element transitions) for a test drive with SvelteKit, and the result was pretty slick. You’ll need Chrome Canary with the chrome://flags/#document-transition flag enabled if you want to try this one out yourself — the original tweet has a video if you don’t want to jump through those hoops. There’s a live demo and a GitHub repo if you want to see how it was accomplished.
  • SPAs: theory versus practice
    8 projects | /r/javascript | 27 Jun 2022
    Here is link number 1 - Previous text "yet"
  • I played around with Chrome's new "Shared Element Transitions"
    2 projects | /r/webdev | 27 May 2022
    There's also the developer guide https://github.com/WICG/shared-element-transitions/blob/main/developer-guide.md.

react-native-web

Posts with mentions or reviews of react-native-web. We have used some of these posts to build our list of alternatives and similar projects. The last one was on 2023-06-17.
  • NextJS on iOS & Android????? How???
    5 projects | /r/nextjs | 17 Jun 2023
    maybe https://necolas.github.io/react-native-web/? https://github.com/vercel/next.js/blob/canary/examples/with-react-native-web/README.md
  • What version of react native is compatible with react native web?
    1 project | /r/reactnative | 15 Jun 2023
    I am following a tutorial that is 4 years old that states that react native 0.55.4 is last compatible with react native web and anything later is not compatible yet. He showed the documentation page in the video as his source.
  • Rust and Next.js everywhere?
    2 projects | /r/rust | 26 Apr 2023
    Personally, if you're trying to find a stack that can be applied everywhere with Next.js as your chosen framework, best bet would be React Native Web or similar. Which would let you share the maximum amount of frontend code between Web, iOS, and Android. Then you could reach for electron (barf) or something to bundle it for desktop if that was a requirement.
  • Here's what I'd like to do as a hobby project... what should I learn?
    1 project | /r/learnprogramming | 13 Mar 2023
    Some of the top cross-platform frameworks do have support for web targets. React-Native-Web and Flutter on the Web are both ways to target the web with your cross-platform app.
  • How do i intergrate vite.js with my current react-native project?
    1 project | /r/reactjs | 9 Mar 2023
    https://github.com/necolas/react-native-web/discussions/2201 it can be done.
  • Which is the best lib/framework option for a single code base for web, Android & iOS?
    3 projects | /r/webdev | 25 Feb 2023
    If you want a single codebase for web and mobile I would look into react-native and react-native-web. You could probably code the web app with react-native-web, make it responsive and build it through react-native for mobile. Designing an app for mobile and for web can lead to significant difference though since the experience is quite different. Some things might make sense for a mobile and not for a desktop or the opposite. So I wouldn't discard completely the idea of having separate codebases. Highly depends on the app though, totally valid for many use cases.
  • Need an advice for frontend framework (beginner in frontend development)
    5 projects | /r/Frontend | 25 Feb 2023
    Another fun thing you could do is build it for mobile + web using React-Native through Expo or manually with https://necolas.github.io/react-native-web/
  • I lost $209,640 of my own money trying to start a business
    1 project | news.ycombinator.com | 31 Jan 2023
    If you're using Expo (which I assume most are on RN) they have web support. This is via React Native Web, which is a separate project if you wanted to use that directly too.

    Personally though, I've found the DX of Flutter far above RN. I always had random packages break on RN that I had to fix every time, while with Flutter most of what you need is already included in the framework, including a component UI library for Android and iOS.

    [0] https://docs.expo.dev/workflow/web/

    [1] https://github.com/necolas/react-native-web

  • I made a template for making full-stack universal(web + mobile) apps! (tRPC, Expo, Next, Solito, Tamagui, Clerk Auth, Prisma!)
    7 projects | /r/reactnative | 7 Jan 2023
    So the RN-R part is done by https://necolas.github.io/react-native-web/ and it's really good! However, there are some code that is kind of outside of the scope of React. Ie. Navigation, that's more in the realm of Next.
  • No, React Native is not the future
    4 projects | news.ycombinator.com | 31 Dec 2022
    I don't have personal experience with this, but React Native Web claims to solve this issue: https://necolas.github.io/react-native-web/, not sure if anyone has had experience with this. Of course, you will have issues with dependency hell/package maintenance.

    Another great option seems to be Flutter web. I was really impressed by the "batteries included" approach to Flutter, and Dart has a pretty comprehensive standard library. This is in contrast to React's "just find a random package on npm and pray it doesn't bite you in the future."

    Obviously rewrites are expensive, but I personally think both approaches are worth considering versus abandoning native components completely. WebView isn't without problems (and also, you don't need React Native to use WebView).

What are some alternatives?

When comparing view-transitions and react-native-web you can also consider the following projects:

Svelte - Cybernetically enhanced web apps

react-native-keyboard-aware-scroll-view - A ScrollView component that handles keyboard appearance and automatically scrolls to focused TextInput.

vue-flip-starport

craco - Create React App Configuration Override, an easy and comprehensible configuration layer for Create React App.

vue-starport - 🛰 Shared component across routes with animations

sciter-js-sdk - Sciter.JS - Sciter but with QuickJS on board instead of my TIScript

msw - Seamless REST/GraphQL API mocking library for browser and Node.js.

metro - 🚇 The JavaScript bundler for React Native

sveltekit-view-transitions - Page transitions in SvelteKit with the View Transition API.

react-native-elements - Cross-Platform React Native UI Toolkit

flipjs - A helper library for doing FLIP animations.

react-native-material-ui - Highly customizable material design components for React Native