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expo/expo-dom

expo

expo-dom

Framework (OSS). Use Expo DOM components to run web code in a webview on native and as-is on web. Migrate web code to native incrementally. For the end-to-end migration of a whole web app, use the expo-web-to-native skill.

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v1.0Saved Jul 11, 2026

What are DOM Components?

DOM components allow web code to run verbatim in a webview on native platforms while rendering as-is on web. This enables using web-only libraries like recharts, react-syntax-highlighter, or any React web library in your Expo app without modification.

When to Use DOM Components

Use DOM components when you need:

  • Web-only libraries — Charts (recharts, chart.js), syntax highlighters, rich text editors, or any library that depends on DOM APIs
  • Migrating web code — Bring existing React web components to native without rewriting
  • Complex HTML/CSS layouts — When CSS features aren't available in React Native
  • iframes or embeds — Embedding external content that requires a browser context
  • Canvas or WebGL — Web graphics APIs not available natively

When NOT to Use DOM Components

Avoid DOM components when:

  • Native performance is critical — Webviews add overhead
  • Simple UI — React Native components are more efficient for basic layouts
  • Deep native integration — Use local modules instead for native APIs
  • Layout routes_layout files cannot be DOM components

Basic DOM Component

Create a new file with the 'use dom'; directive at the top:

// components/WebChart.tsx
"use dom";

export default function WebChart({
  data,
}: {
  data: number[];
  dom: import("expo/dom").DOMProps;
}) {
  return (
    <div style={{ padding: 20 }}>
      <h2>Chart Data</h2>
      <ul>
        {data.map((value, i) => (
          <li key={i}>{value}</li>
        ))}
      </ul>
    </div>
  );
}

Rules for DOM Components

  1. Must have 'use dom'; directive at the top of the file
  2. Single default export — One React component per file
  3. Own file — Cannot be defined inline or combined with native components
  4. Serializable props only — Strings, numbers, booleans, arrays, plain objects
  5. Include CSS in the component file — DOM components run in isolated context

The dom Prop

Every DOM component receives a special dom prop for webview configuration. Always type it in your props:

"use dom";

interface Props {
  content: string;
  dom: import("expo/dom").DOMProps;
}

export default function MyComponent({ content }: Props) {
  return <div>{content}</div>;
}

Common dom Prop Options

// Disable body scrolling
<DOMComponent dom={{ scrollEnabled: false }} />

// Flow under the notch (disable safe area insets)
<DOMComponent dom={{ contentInsetAdjustmentBehavior: "never" }} />

// Control size manually
<DOMComponent dom={{ style: { width: 300, height: 400 } }} />

// Combine options
<DOMComponent
  dom={{
    scrollEnabled: false,
    contentInsetAdjustmentBehavior: "never",
    style: { width: '100%', height: 500 }
  }}
/>

Exposing Native Actions to the Webview

Pass async functions as props to expose native functionality to the DOM component:

// app/index.tsx (native)
import { Alert } from "react-native";
import DOMComponent from "@/components/dom-component";

export default function Screen() {
  return (
    <DOMComponent
      showAlert={async (message: string) => {
        Alert.alert("From Web", message);
      }}
      saveData={async (data: { name: string; value: number }) => {
        // Save to native storage, database, etc.
        console.log("Saving:", data);
        return { success: true };
      }}
    />
  );
}
// components/dom-component.tsx
"use dom";

interface Props {
  showAlert: (message: string) => Promise<void>;
  saveData: (data: {
    name: string;
    value: number;
  }) => Promise<{ success: boolean }>;
  dom?: import("expo/dom").DOMProps;
}

export default function DOMComponent({ showAlert, saveData }: Props) {
  const handleClick = async () => {
    await showAlert("Hello from the webview!");
    const result = await saveData({ name: "test", value: 42 });
    console.log("Save result:", result);
  };

  return <button onClick={handleClick}>Trigger Native Action</button>;
}

Using Web Libraries

DOM components can use any web library:

// components/syntax-highlight.tsx
"use dom";

import SyntaxHighlighter from "react-syntax-highlighter";
import { docco } from "react-syntax-highlighter/dist/esm/styles/hljs";

interface Props {
  code: string;
  language: string;
  dom?: import("expo/dom").DOMProps;
}

export default function SyntaxHighlight({ code, language }: Props) {
  return (
    <SyntaxHighlighter language={language} style={docco}>
      {code}
    </SyntaxHighlighter>
  );
}
// components/chart.tsx
"use dom";

import {
  LineChart,
  Line,
  XAxis,
  YAxis,
  CartesianGrid,
  Tooltip,
} from "recharts";

interface Props {
  data: Array<{ name: string; value: number }>;
  dom: import("expo/dom").DOMProps;
}

export default function Chart({ data }: Props) {
  return (
    <LineChart width={400} height={300} data={data}>
      <CartesianGrid strokeDasharray="3 3" />
      <XAxis dataKey="name" />
      <YAxis />
      <Tooltip />
      <Line type="monotone" dataKey="value" stroke="#8884d8" />
    </LineChart>
  );
}

CSS in DOM Components

CSS imports must be in the DOM component file since they run in isolated context:

// components/styled-component.tsx
"use dom";

import "@/styles.css"; // CSS file in same directory

export default function StyledComponent({
  dom,
}: {
  dom: import("expo/dom").DOMProps;
}) {
  return (
    <div className="container">
      <h1 className="title">Styled Content</h1>
    </div>
  );
}

Or use inline styles / CSS-in-JS:

"use dom";

const styles = {
  container: {
    padding: 20,
    backgroundColor: "#f0f0f0",
  },
  title: {
    fontSize: 24,
    color: "#333",
  },
};

export default function StyledComponent({
  dom,
}: {
  dom: import("expo/dom").DOMProps;
}) {
  return (
    <div style={styles.container}>
      <h1 style={styles.title}>Styled Content</h1>
    </div>
  );
}

Expo Router in DOM Components

The expo-router <Link /> component and router API work inside DOM components:

"use dom";

import { Link, useRouter } from "expo-router";

export default function Navigation({
  dom,
}: {
  dom: import("expo/dom").DOMProps;
}) {
  const router = useRouter();

  return (
    <nav>
      <Link href="/about">About</Link>
      <button onClick={() => router.push("/settings")}>Settings</button>
    </nav>
  );
}

Router APIs That Require Props

These hooks don't work directly in DOM components because they need synchronous access to native routing state:

  • useLocalSearchParams()
  • useGlobalSearchParams()
  • usePathname()
  • useSegments()
  • useRootNavigation()
  • useRootNavigationState()

Solution: Read these values in the native parent and pass as props:

// app/[id].tsx (native)
import { useLocalSearchParams, usePathname } from "expo-router";
import DOMComponent from "@/components/dom-component";

export default function Screen() {
  const { id } = useLocalSearchParams();
  const pathname = usePathname();

  return <DOMComponent id={id as string} pathname={pathname} />;
}
// components/dom-component.tsx
"use dom";

interface Props {
  id: string;
  pathname: string;
  dom?: import("expo/dom").DOMProps;
}

export default function DOMComponent({ id, pathname }: Props) {
  return (
    <div>
      <p>Current ID: {id}</p>
      <p>Current Path: {pathname}</p>
    </div>
  );
}

Detecting DOM Environment

Check if code is running in a DOM component:

"use dom";

import { IS_DOM } from "expo/dom";

export default function Component({
  dom,
}: {
  dom?: import("expo/dom").DOMProps;
}) {
  return <div>{IS_DOM ? "Running in DOM component" : "Running natively"}</div>;
}

Assets

Prefer requiring assets instead of using the public directory:

"use dom";

// Good - bundled with the component
const logo = require("../assets/logo.png");

export default function Component({
  dom,
}: {
  dom: import("expo/dom").DOMProps;
}) {
  return <img src={logo} alt="Logo" />;
}

Usage from Native Components

Import and use DOM components like regular components:

// app/index.tsx
import { View, Text } from "react-native";
import WebChart from "@/components/web-chart";
import CodeBlock from "@/components/code-block";

export default function HomeScreen() {
  return (
    <View style={{ flex: 1 }}>
      <Text>Native content above</Text>

      <WebChart data={[10, 20, 30, 40, 50]} dom={{ style: { height: 300 } }} />

      <CodeBlock
        code="const x = 1;"
        language="javascript"
        dom={{ scrollEnabled: true }}
      />

      <Text>Native content below</Text>
    </View>
  );
}

Platform Behavior

Platform Behavior
iOS Rendered in WKWebView
Android Rendered in WebView
Web Rendered as-is (no webview wrapper)

On web, the dom prop is ignored since no webview is needed.

Tips

  • DOM components hot reload during development
  • Keep DOM components focused — don't put entire screens in webviews
  • Use native components for navigation chrome, DOM components for specialized content
  • Test on all platforms — web rendering may differ slightly from native webviews
  • Large DOM components may impact performance — profile if needed
  • The webview has its own JavaScript context — cannot directly share state with native
Files2
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Overall Score

89/100

Grade

A

Excellent

Safety

92

Quality

88

Clarity

90

Completeness

85

Summary

This skill teaches developers how to use Expo DOM components to run web-based React code in native webviews (iOS/Android) and unchanged on web. It provides comprehensive patterns for integrating web-only libraries (charts, syntax highlighters), managing the special `dom` prop for webview configuration, exposing native actions to the webview, handling routing, and detecting the DOM environment. No shell execution, file writes, or network operations are involved.

Detected Capabilities

code pattern documentationReact component examplesTypeScript type guidancerouting integration guidanceplatform-specific behavior explanation

Trigger Keywords

Phrases that MCP clients use to match this skill to user intent.

web library in expomigrate web to nativedom componentwebview react coderecharts in exposyntax highlighter native

Use Cases

  • Integrate web-only libraries like recharts or react-syntax-highlighter into an Expo app without rewriting for React Native
  • Migrate existing React web components to native platforms incrementally using webviews
  • Render complex HTML/CSS layouts or graphics (Canvas, WebGL) that aren't available in React Native
  • Embed iframes or external web content in native Expo apps
  • Bridge native functionality (native modules, storage) to web code running in a webview

Quality Notes

  • Skill provides clear, well-organized documentation with section hierarchy (When to Use, When NOT to Use, Rules, Examples)
  • Examples are practical and runnable: syntax highlighting, charts, native action bridges, routing, asset handling
  • Edge cases are documented: router hooks that don't work in DOM components are explicitly listed with a solution pattern
  • Platform behavior differences (iOS WKWebView vs Android WebView vs web) are clearly explained in a table
  • Props typing is consistently shown across all examples (interface Props with dom?: import('expo/dom').DOMProps)
  • Limitations are explicit: serializable props only, single default export, own file requirement
  • Includes best practices tips: keep components focused, test on all platforms, consider performance
  • Skill acknowledges when to use alternative approaches (expo-web-to-native skill for full migrations)
  • CSS handling is covered for both file-based and inline/CSS-in-JS approaches
Model: claude-haiku-4-5-20251001Analyzed: Jul 11, 2026

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expo/expo-dom | SkillRepo