How does one debug their React code with React Native while the app is running in app simulator?
50 Answers
Best way to debug react native android and ios app using visual code studio
Step 1.
Install React Native - Full Pack extension
Step 2.
Connect mobile device using USB debugging mode or open emulator from the android studio.
Step 3.
Click on debugging option from the left menu in visual code studio Click on Add configuration and select React Native then create launch.json
Step 4.
Open dev option in the phone on the long back press or shake the phone and Enable Debug js remotely
Step 5.
Final step click on play button and select Debug android or Debug ios
For more information refer this link
https://medium.com/@tunvirrahmantusher/android-debug-with-vscode-for-react-native-96f54d73462a
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Step 4 is not clear to me. I understand we need to do that with our app right? My app has some issue that closes the app when I run it on my phone.– DaniApr 15, 2019 at 7:56
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Leaving default functions on
index
I can see this: dl2.pushbulletusercontent.com/NUYTgl6Fgi6978eL8DehOSSQdO5SFqu1/…– DaniApr 15, 2019 at 8:35 -
1your react redux is not properly installed remove node_module and install npm again Apr 15, 2019 at 8:44
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It was related to some deprecated library I had to install manually. Thanks for pointing– DaniApr 15, 2019 at 14:57
It's actually pretty simple. Just press cmd D (if on mac) and the simulator will create a pop up menu. From there just click "Debug JS Remotely" or something along the lines of that. Beware that running the debugger while executing code related to certain packages has been known to give people problems. I had a problem with react-native-maps and the debugger. But that was fixed. For the most part you should be fine though.
to debug your react native app just go to the following address:
localhost:8081/debugger-ui in your default browser(chrome) and open developer tools to debug your react native app
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Thank you. I can see a page showing some message and instructions as you answered. How to debug the code is not mentioned anywhere, where I can see my code.– manjsNov 16, 2017 at 9:33
- run in terminal
adb logcat *:S ReactNative:V ReactNativeJS:V
- open project in Android Studio, open
logcat
(button on the bottom panel) - run in terminal
react-native run-android
After building, you should see detail logs in Android Studio in logcat
.
You can also use custom lib for that if you don't want to shake your real phone every 2 minutes
I've created a lib that allows you to use 3 fingers touch instead of shake to open dev menu, when in development mode
https://github.com/pie6k/react-native-dev-menu-on-touch
You only have to wrap your app inside:
import DevMenuOnTouch from 'react-native-dev-menu-on-touch'; // or: import { DevMenuOnTouch } from 'react-native-dev-menu-on-touch'
class YourRootApp extends Component {
render() {
return (
<DevMenuOnTouch>
<YourApp />
</DevMenuOnTouch>
);
}
}
It's really useful when you have to debug on real device and you have co-workers sitting next to you.
If you use Nuclide in Atom editor for React Native App Development then you can also "Element Inspector" which helps in observing props and state values changes when app is running on device in development phase.
Know more about it here
Use Flipper or reactotron. each one has its own benefits and none requires you to enable debug mode, so your environment won't get slow!
On the simulator pressing Cmd+D
and selecting Debug will open the browser Debugger
To activate Debugger in React Native cli do the following:
The metro will start running after,
~ npm start
To run project in Emulator or Device
~ npx react-native run-android
To start the Debugger,
~ adb shell input keyevent 82 //debugger command or shake the device to alternate to this command
after press debug which appears in emulator or device to start debugger then,
~ npx react-native run-android //to run the app because adb need this command to start debugger in browser
To Deactivate Debugger:-
~ adb shell input keyevent 82 //debugger command or shake the device to alternate to this command
after press Stop debug which appears in emulator or device to stop debugger.
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Or you can log through your vscode where you typed npm start. After executing the app the vscode debugger will console the errors and logs there by default when chrome debugger is not started.– Ashif ALOct 4, 2023 at 15:08
In Windows and using the android emulator you can do this steps:
- After the emulator is running and the app on it, press the Menu button and then select "Debug JS Remotely" or "Debug in Chrome" (It depends the emulator using). You can see the next image as reference: emulator with steps image
- A new Chrome Tab will appears. You must press Ctrl + ⇧J to show the Developer tools and start tracking the debug steps. See this image as reference
Additionally you should us the console.log()
feature to make the debugging process more descriptive.
You can install React Native Debugger from brew. it's more comfortable to use than debugger in chrome
It really depends on what I am doing. If I am making UI changes or debugging UI, I typically turn on live and hot reloading and make changes then get instant feedback on it. If it's something more technical, I turn on JS debugging to look at the state of the app. However because reloading is so quick in react native, if the state is too messy, I just console log.
If you run your app on real devices, which is connected to the laptop, you can debug it via terminal using react-native log-ios
or react-native log-android
(It works also for simulators)
You can use expo for debugging: https://expo.io/
Expo lets web developers build truly native apps that work across both iOS and Android by writing them once in just JavaScript. It's open source, free and uses React Native.
This is a great tool and you can watch this workshop at React Europe conf:
A technique that I use that very similar to a debugging tactic in Android is to include a global variable called TAG in all my .js files.
const TAG = 'APP_NAME+SCREEN_NAME';
Then where needed, I'll do: console.log(TAG + 'ACTION');
This way, I can track actions and see where the log statements are coming from.
In new version of react-native you can use react-native log-android
or react-native log-android
to see logs of your application in dev mode.
I use this library to debug react-native projects
https://github.com/jhen0409/react-native-debugger It includes
- Includes React Inspector from react-devtools-core.
- Includes Redux DevTools, made the same API with redux-devtools-extension.
or you can use
For IOS $ react-native log-ios
For Android $ react-native log-android
if you want know about inspect network traffic and understand the native UI view hierarchy. With its extensible plugin API then React Native Update version provide developer tool for debugging mobile apps.
Flipper is a great developer tool for debugging mobile apps. This tool is shipped with react-native 62
1. Run your application in the Android simulator.
2. Press Ctrl + D and a webpage should open up at http://localhost:8081/debugger-ui. (Chrome only for now)
3. Enable Pause On Caught Exceptions for a better debugging experience.
4. Press F12 to open the Chrome Developer tools, or open it via View -> Developer -> Developer Tools.