Lottie component for React Native (iOS, Android, and Windows)
Lottie is an ecosystem of libraries for parsing Adobe After Effects animations exported as JSON with bodymovin and rendering them natively!
For the first time, designers can create and ship beautiful animations without an engineer painstakingly recreating it by hand.
Install lottie-react-native
(latest) and lottie-ios
(3.4.0):
yarn add lottie-react-native [email protected]
or
npm i --save lottie-react-native [email protected]
Go to your ios folder and run:
pod install
Install the lottie-react-native
npm package.
Add the following to the end of your project file. For C# apps, this should come after any Microsoft.Windows.UI.Xaml.CSharp.targets
includes. For C++ apps, it should come after any Microsoft.Cpp.targets
includes.
<PropertyGroup Label="LottieReactNativeProps">
<LottieReactNativeDir>$([MSBuild]::GetDirectoryNameOfFileAbove($(MSBuildThisFileDirectory), 'node_modules\lottie-react-native\package.json'))\node_modules\lottie-react-native</LottieReactNativeDir>
</PropertyGroup>
<ImportGroup Label="LottieReactNativeTargets">
<Import Project="$(LottieReactNativeDir)\src\windows\cppwinrt\PropertySheets\LottieGen.Auto.targets" />
</ImportGroup>
Add the LottieReactNative.vcxproj file to your Visual Studio solution to ensure it takes part in the build.
For C# apps, you'll need to install the following packages through NuGet:
- LottieGen.MsBuild
- Microsoft.UI.Xaml
- Win2D.uwp
- Microsoft.Toolkit.Uwp.UI.Lottie
- This package is used for loading JSON dynamically. If you only need codegen animation, you can set
<EnableLottieDynamicSource>false</EnableLottieDynamicSource>
in your project file and omit this reference.
- This package is used for loading JSON dynamically. If you only need codegen animation, you can set
For C++ apps, you'll need these NuGet packages:
- LottieGen.MsBuild
- Microsoft.UI.Xaml
WinUI 2.6 (Microsoft.UI.Xaml 2.6.0) is required by default. Overriding this requires creating a Directory.Build.props file in your project root with a <WinUIVersion>
property.
In your application code where you set up your React Native Windows PackageProviders list, add the LottieReactNative provider:
// C#
PackageProviders.Add(new LottieReactNative.ReactPackageProvider(new AnimatedVisuals.LottieCodegenSourceProvider()));
// C++
#include <winrt/LottieReactNative.h>
#include <winrt/AnimatedVisuals.h>
...
PackageProviders().Append(winrt::LottieReactNative::ReactPackageProvider(winrt::AnimatedVisuals::LottieCodegenSourceProvider()));
Codegen animations are supported by adding LottieAnimation items to your project file. These will be compiled into your application and available at runtime by name. For example:
<!-- .vcxproj or .csproj -->
<ItemGroup>
<LottieAnimation Include="Assets/Animations/MyAnimation.json" Name="MyAnimation" />
</ItemGroup>
// js
<LottieView source={"MyAnimation"} />
Codegen is available to both C# and C++ applications. Dynamic loading of JSON strings at runtime is currently only supported in C# applications.
Depending on which version of React Native your app runs on you might need to install a specific version of lottie-react-native. Here's the compatibility list:
App built in React Native version | Requires lottie-react-native version | Requires lottie-ios version |
---|---|---|
>= 0.59 | 3.0.2 | 3.0.3 |
>= 0.60 | 4.0.2 | 3.2.3 |
>= 0.63 | 4.0.3 | 3.2.3 |
>= 0.64 | 4.1.3 | 3.2.3 |
>= 0.66 | latest | 3.4.0 |
(If you are using TypeScript, please read this first)
Lottie can be used in a declarative way:
import React from 'react';
import Lottie from 'lottie-react-native';
export default function Animation() {
return (
<Lottie source={require('./animation.json')} autoPlay loop />
);
}
Additionally, there is an imperative API which is sometimes simpler.
import React, { useEffect, useRef } from 'react';
import Lottie from 'lottie-react-native';
export default function AnimationWithImperativeApi() {
const animationRef = useRef<Lottie>(null)
useEffect(() => {
animationRef.current?.play()
// Or set a specific startFrame and endFrame with:
animationRef.current?.play(30, 120);
}, [])
return (
<Lottie
ref={animationRef}
source={require('../path/to/animation.json')}
/>
);
}
Lottie's animation progress can be controlled with an Animated
value:
import React, { useEffect } from 'react';
import { Animated, Easing } from 'react-native';
import Lottie from 'lottie-react-native';
export default function ControllingAnimationProgress() {
const animationProgress = useRef(new Animated.Value(0))
useEffect(() => {
Animated.timing(animationProgress.current, {
toValue: 1,
duration: 5000,
easing: Easing.linear,
useNativeDriver: false
}).start();
}, [])
return (
<Lottie
source={require('../path/to/animation.json')}
progress={animationProgress.current}
/>
);
}
Changing color of layers:
import React from 'react';
import Lottie from 'lottie-react-native';
export default function ChangingColorOfLayers() {
return (
<Lottie
source={require('../path/to/animation.json')}
colorFilters={[
{
keypath: 'button',
color: '#F00000',
},
{
keypath: 'Sending Loader',
color: '#F00000',
},
]}
autoPlay
loop
/>
);
}
You can find the full list of props and methods available in our API document. These are the most common ones:
Prop | Description | Default |
---|---|---|
source |
Mandatory - The source of animation. Can be referenced as a local asset by a string, or remotely with an object with a uri property, or it can be an actual JS object of an animation, obtained (for example) with something like require('../path/to/animation.json') . |
None |
style |
Style attributes for the view, as expected in a standard View . |
The aspectRatio exported by Bodymovin will be set. Also the width if you haven't provided a width or height |
loop |
A boolean flag indicating whether or not the animation should loop. | true |
autoPlay |
A boolean flag indicating whether or not the animation should start automatically when mounted. This only affects the imperative API. | false |
colorFilters |
An array of objects denoting layers by KeyPath and a new color filter value (as hex string). | [] |
Not all After Effects features are supported by Lottie. If you notice there are some layers or animations missing check this list to ensure they are supported.
If you have issues linking your iOS project check out this StackOverflow thread on how to fix it.
If your app crashes on Android, means auto linking didn't work. You will need to make the following changes:
android/app/src/main/java/\<AppName\>/MainApplication.java
- add
import com.airbnb.android.react.lottie.LottiePackage;
on the imports section - add
packages.add(new LottiePackage());
inList<ReactPackage> getPackages()
;
android/app/build.gradle
add implementation project(':lottie-react-native')
in the dependencies
block
android/settings.gradle
add:
include ':lottie-react-native'
project(':lottie-react-native').projectDir = new File(rootProject.projectDir, '../node_modules/lottie-react-native/src/android')
View more documentation, FAQ, help, examples, and more at airbnb.io/lottie