When working with a NativeScript application view where a user can enter input, the native application Keyboard Input overlays the TextField
component. While this doesn't stop the user from entering text, it disrupts the UX flow and looks bad from a UI perspective.
How can I get the Keyboard to not overlay the input, but instead appear underneath it like other native applications can do?
Update 2
Now that it no longer overlays, I've noticed that when I leave the application to switch to another one or suspend the NativeScript app, when I come back to it the problem reappears. What can I do to persist the original behavior?
To submit a value use the returnPress event along with the returnKeyType property. To handle a TextField being focused use the focus event. To handle an interaction when the user leaves TextField use the blur event. To explicitly show and hide a keyboard, we can call the methods focus and dismissSoftInput.
The solution works in NativeScript Core, NativeScript Angular and NativeScript Vue. First, let's take a quick look at the demo app we'll be working with: The app contains two TextFields and as you can see both the focused and unfocused TextFields have a bottom border.
The TextField component allows you to type text in your app. The TextField has attributes such as secure for handling password fields, and pipes for specifying the text format the control should use. TextField provides multiple properties and several events for handling the user input and interaction.
And keyboard overlaps text fields only when ScrollView is the root component of the page. Sorry, something went wrong. Sign up for free to join this conversation on GitHub . Already have an account?
I also had the same issue,
TNS Version: 6.3.0
Android Version: 9
Using RadSideDrawer with nativescript angular
Adding the following didn't work for me
<application
...
android:windowSoftInputMode="stateHidden | adjustPan">
Instead of adding android:windowSoftInputMode
in application
, add it in activity
, check the following.
<activity
...
android:windowSoftInputMode="adjustResize">
Also need to update the style.xml
, add the following in LaunchScreenThemeBase
<item name="android:fitsSystemWindows">true</item>
This will fix the keyboard overlay issue but it will create another issue, causing the Status bar / Action Bar to change height when the keyboard is displayed. to resolve that, put the following in style.xml
in AppThemeBase (To correct the color of status bar)
<item name="android:windowBackground">@color/ns_primary</item>
In _app-common.scss (To get rid of extra space)
.action-bar {
margin-top:-22;
}
After stumbling around a few other discussions and resources:
There were a few takeaways from these resources which I'll review below.
First off, you'll need to ensure your page layout mirrors something like below:
ScrollView
> StackLayout
> GridLayout
> SomeElement
> GridLayout
> TextField
This relates to the on-screen keyboard that displays when a text field in the UI receives focus. One trick to ensure the keyboard does not overlay your textfield is to ensure you have the property windowSoftInputMode
set in your AndroidManifest.xml
. You can either use adjustResize
or adjustPan
. I'm not entirely sure of the differences, but some users have reported either or both working so you might need to play around with which works for your case. You can read more about these two flags here.
<?xml version="1.0" encoding="utf-8"?>
<manifest xmlns:android="http://schemas.android.com/apk/res/android"
package="__PACKAGE__"
android:versionCode="10000"
android:versionName="1.0">
...
<application
...
android:windowSoftInputMode="stateHidden | adjustPan">
I believe there is something getting reset within NativeScript which is causing the flag set by android:windowSoftInputMode
to be reset when the application is suspended
and resumed
. To get around this, you'll need to make some adjustments in the controller of the view itself to watch for these events to happen in your app's lifecycle and then retroactively enable the flags again.
import { Component, OnInit } from '@angular/core';
import * as app from "application";
import {
resumeEvent,
suspendEvent,
ApplicationEventData,
on as applicationOn,
run as applicationRun } from "tns-core-modules/application";
declare var android: any; // <- important! avoids namespace issues
@Component({
moduleId: module.id,
selector: 'some-view',
templateUrl: './some-view.component.html',
styleUrls: ['./some-view.component.css']
})
export class SomeViewComponent implements OnInit {
constructor() {
applicationOn(suspendEvent, (args: ApplicationEventData) => {
// args.android is an android activity
if (args.android) {
console.log("SUSPEND Activity: " + args.android);
}
});
applicationOn(resumeEvent, (args: ApplicationEventData) => {
if (args.android) {
console.log("RESUME Activity: " + args.android);
let window = app.android.startActivity.getWindow();
window.setSoftInputMode(
android.view.WindowManager.LayoutParams.SOFT_INPUT_ADJUST_PAN
);
// This can be SOFT_INPUT_ADJUST_PAN
// Or SOFT_INPUT_ADJUST_RESIZE
}
});
}
}
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