Enlargement of size of the device font will sometimes break (Styling wise).
if (Text.defaultProps == null) {
Text.defaultProps = {};
Text.defaultProps.allowFontScaling = false;
}
I kept this piece of code inside the constructor of index.js
.It really worked well. By the I am using react native version 0.59.9
FYI.
Create an <AppText>
component and use it with your presets instead of the original one, with your own default, including font scaling false. This is better because you can enrich it with your own API.
For example, my AppText permit to do things like:
<AppText id="some.translation.key" color="primary" size="l" underline italic bold/>
For React native 0.58+
Preferable to keep font scaling but you can limit it by using Text new prop maxFontSizeMultiplier
For React native 0.56+ use Levi's answer
Text.defaultProps = Text.defaultProps || {};
Text.defaultProps.allowFontScaling = false;
For React native 0.55 and lower
Add Text.defaultProps.allowFontScaling=false
at the beginning of the app (e.g. main.js or app.js etc ...) to apply this prop on all Text components through out the whole app.
In another file, import the actual Text
component as ScaledText
so as a backup, and then redefine Text
, overriding the allowFontScaling
prop.
export function Text(props) {
return <ScaledText {...props} allowFontScaling={false} />;
}
Then, import your locally defined Text
component, instead of the built-in React Native Text
. This is also useful if you want to elegantly disable font scaling on only certain parts of your app.
Disabling font scaling can hurt the accessibility of your app, ideally if you want to limit scaling for Apps using React native 0.58.0 and above; use the maxFontSizeMultiplier prop on specific Text
components.
However if you absolutely want to disable font scaling across your entire Application, you can do so by globally setting the allowFontScaling prop in the defaultProps
of Text
.
For React Native 0.56.0+
Text.defaultProps = Text.defaultProps || {};
Text.defaultProps.allowFontScaling = false;
For earlier versions of React Native you should only need the second line, but having both won't hurt. The first line just protects against the Text
component not having defaultProps
which is the case for React Native 0.56.0 and above.
Add the above lines in the entry point file of your React Native application (usually index.js
, app.js
or main.js
) to apply this prop to all Text
components in your application.
This prop will only affect Text
components and you may want to apply the same changes to TextInput
which can be done with a similar snippet:
TextInput.defaultProps = TextInput.defaultProps || {};
TextInput.defaultProps.allowFontScaling = false;
Also note that some components wont obey font scaling settings, for example: Alert
, PickerIOS
, DatePickerIOS
, TabBarIOS
, SegmentedControlIOS
as these are all natively drawn and don't rely on the Text
component.