107

I've made a timestamped versionName in build.gradle like 20150707.1125. I want to show the version of the package in react-native app in about window. How I could get versionName in code?

1

12 Answers 12

149

I've successfully used the React Native Device Info component to get the build details as specified in the Gradle config.

Once installed you can use:

DeviceInfo.getVersion()

To output the version, and:

DeviceInfo.getBuildNumber()

To get the build number.

4
  • 7
    It's a big package with useless gcm need! I removed it from my project. May 31, 2018 at 11:45
  • I would downvote the deviceInfo too. My story is I integrated the react-native-firebase and got it work in android. after that, I installed this react-native-device-info and it seems to work fine in android. Except what AlirezaXX said, it's real a big package and took a long time to install. The nightmare came to the IOS part. I use podfile to install firebase and no matter how, it always fails to build. I google the error code and find lots of "solutions" that didn't work for me. The worst part is that I didn't even know the deviceInfo link is the culprit.
    – Nero
    May 30, 2019 at 0:24
  • until early this morning 5:30AM, I got it works but very mad to also find react-native-device-info is the bad guy. and the solution i found somewhere else that works for me is also here github.com/react-native-community/react-native-device-info/…
    – Nero
    May 30, 2019 at 0:30
  • There is a method DeviceInfo.getReadableVersion() that will give you a single string containing both the version and build number. Perhaps this didn't exist when the answer was originally written. Source: github.com/react-native-device-info/… states "Gets the application human readable version (same as getVersion() + '.' + getBuildNumber())"
    – Fitter Man
    Apr 27, 2021 at 2:43
91

If you want the version number in your package.json, you can also do:

var pkg = require('./package.json');
console.log(pkg.version);
8
  • this is the easiest solution, without installing any module
    – yernarun
    Oct 25, 2017 at 10:58
  • 2
    FYI "package is a reserved word in strict mode"
    – pstanton
    Nov 9, 2017 at 2:10
  • 1
    and then automate versioning using npm version like this: medium.com/@andr3wjack/…
    – mvandillen
    Nov 16, 2017 at 11:52
  • i am getting "package is a reserved word in strict mode" .what to do ?
    – Anuj
    Dec 14, 2018 at 7:48
  • 2
    Apparently this is a bit of a security risk since you are exposing all of your dependencies. As well, you are loading the entirety of package.json just to fetch the version. I would recommend using something like import { version } from "./package.json" if your project allows you to. Nov 3, 2021 at 22:14
65

The right answer:

DeviceInfo.getVersion();

If you want to get it from your package.json:

import { version } from './package.json';
1
  • 1
    the question is about how to read it from build.gradle file not from package.json
    – upender
    Mar 30, 2023 at 11:18
21

I couldn't get the package react-native-device-info to work. Ran into this issue Might need some gradle and java changes to make it fly.

Anyhow I got what I needed react-native-version-number. And I am happy with it.

import VersionNumber from 'react-native-version-number';

console.log('appVersion:', VersionNumber.appVersion)

Oh, and as it relates to gleaning the version from package.json. It feels wrong to me. I mean I had to try it just to see if it would work. I didn't realize that resource would be available at runtime on the device. It does work, but I also have some buildTypes debug foo going on in my build.gradle I learned here. So its nice to be getting the versionName like 0.1.7-debug straight from the horses mouth.

4
  • This is not working for iOS, It is working for Android only. Jul 26, 2019 at 8:58
  • 1
    Works for both Android + iOS for me.
    – Sampo
    Apr 7, 2020 at 4:43
  • Showing null value in Android Jul 9, 2020 at 14:12
  • Make sure you are rebuilding your project after installing if you get null values.
    – cumanzor
    Jul 13, 2021 at 22:10
9

I used as reference the answer by @Marcos Demetrio

But I was using expo, so I did this:

import {expo} from '../../app.json'

And in the Component:

<Label>{expo.version}</Label>          

No package install needed.

3
9

You can use react-native-device-info

And you can get app version for both iOS and Android by calling following method.

const version = DeviceInfo.getVersion();

// iOS: "1.0"
// Android: "1.0"

Hope this will help.

2
  • I have Android versionName as "2.0.1". Still, it shows, "2.0" Jul 9, 2020 at 14:13
  • @KushalDesai third number is buildNumber, not app version :) Dec 4, 2020 at 12:07
5

If you are using expo and you want lighter lib, use expo-application:

import * as Application from 'expo-application';

Application.nativeApplicationVersion //returns a string
// or
Application.nativeBuildVersion //returns a string
1
  • I received incorrect version number for some reason with expo-application
    – LamaTo
    Jun 14, 2023 at 13:46
2

react-native-version-number library works for both Android and iOS. You can find installation instructions here. Remember that in current versions of ReactNative linking libraries is not needed anymore (omit linking while installing - it was not written in the instruction)

https://github.com/APSL/react-native-version-number

import VersionNumber from 'react-native-version-number';

...

    render() {
        var versionNumber = `${VersionNumber.appVersion}.${VersionNumber.buildVersion}`;

        return (
            <Text style={ styles.versionText }>v. {versionNumber}</Text>
        )
    }
...
0

I tried most of the thing to fix this nicely and I and happy to see detailed description for doing everything that I needed react-native-version-check

import { Linking } from 'react-native';
import VersionCheck from 'react-native-version-check';

VersionCheck.needUpdate()
  .then(async res => {
    console.log(res.isNeeded);    // true
    if (res.isNeeded) {
      Linking.openURL(await VersionCheck.getStoreUrl());  // open store if update is needed.
    }
  });
0

If you use Expo Framework, you can use expo-constants package as documented in https://docs.expo.dev/versions/latest/sdk/constants/.

For me, this is working: grabs the version and description from the app.json: https://github.com/marcoXbresciani/TKCompanionApp/blob/0.1.12/screens/about/Version.tsx

So, only one point where to store things.

0
* react-native-cli
import VersionInfo from 'react-native-version-info';

const appVersion = VersionInfo.appVersion;
const buildVersion = VersionInfo.buildVersion;
const bundleIdentifier = VersionInfo.bundleIdentifier


* Expo
import Constants from "expo-constants";

const version = Constants.manifest.version
-11

I think the easiest way is to set a version number in App.js just like a variable, and ensure it is global (gettable from the whole app)

const version = "1.0.0"

and do this i every build

1
  • 3
    This does not answersthe original question: how to GET the version that is set in the gradle file.
    – NicoPaez
    Apr 6, 2022 at 15:05

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