One of the reason we love React so much is how easy it is to reuse the same component wherever it makes sense. We might want to do something similar here: calling different modals, but rendering the same React component under the hood. Being able to change the content depending on which context that modal was called from is a major key to success, hence the need for params!
They are a two-step-use tool:
We pass params to a modal by putting them as openModal() second argument, ie: openModal('ErrorModal', { message: 'No Internet connection' })
We access the params in the modal component through modal.params.
Now with Modalfy v2, you can even have granular access to your params if you used an object as params (which you should by default) and even provide a default value:
./modals/ErrorModal.js
import React from'react'import { Button, Text, View } from'react-native'constTITLES= { login:'We could not log you in', signup:'We could not create your account', unknown:'An error has occurred!',}constErrorModal= ({ modal: { closeModal, getParam } }) => {// We didn't pass any `origin` key to our params// so `'unknown'` will be used by default constorigin=getParam('origin','unknown')constmessage=getParam('message','Something went wrong... 🤔')return ( <View> {/* 'An error has occurred!' */} <Text>{TITLES[origin]}</Text> {/* 'No Internet connection' */} <Text>{message}</Text> <ButtononPress={closeModal} title="OK" /> </View> )}exportdefault ErrorModal
Checkout the ModalComponentProp API reference to learn more about getParam().