Next.js for Expo & React Native
Customizable, fast, and lightweight drop-in support for Next.js on native platforms
Visit https://pilot.waveplay.dev/docs to view the full documentation.
Create a new Pilot.js app via our interactive CLI:
npx create-pilot-app
This will guide you through a short customization process and create a fully working template.
Install the package:
npm install @waveplay/pilot
We assume you already have a working project with Expo and Next.js. If not, follow their respective guides:
You can either let Pilot.js manage your app's entry or you can use the <PilotArea>
component directly. The latter is useful if you need additional customization.
Edit your app.json
to include the following:
{
"expo": {
"entryPoint": "node_modules/@waveplay/pilot/AppEntry.js"
}
}
Update your App.js
entry component to render PilotArea
.
import { loadEnv } from '@waveplay/pilot/env'
import { PilotArea } from '@waveplay/pilot/ui'
// Loads public environment variables
loadEnv()
const App = () => {
// ... your code
return (
<PilotArea/>
)
}
export default App
You're now ready to use Pilot.js! Use it like you would use Next.js.
Pilot.js relies on the built-in CLI to detect pages and routes.
The build
command will prepare your project. You must run this before you can use the start
command or routing may not work.
pilot build
The dev
command will start a development server on native + web.
pilot dev
This will:
- Start a Next.js development server
- Build Pilot.js & link to your local Next.js server
- Start an Expo development server
You can use Pilot.js the same way as Next.js, except it now also works on React Native and Expo projects!
// const router = useRouter();
const pilot = usePilot();
// router.push('/dashboard');
pilot.fly('/dashboard'); // or pilot.push('/dashboard');
This project was originally developed as an internal router for WavePlay.
The MIT License.