Web View
Web Views power web apps on native devices.
The Web View is automatically provided for apps integrated with Capacitor.
For Cordova, Ionic maintains a Web View plugin. The plugin is provided by default when using the Ionic CLI.
Ionic apps are built using web technologies and are rendered using Web Views, which are a full screen and full-powered web browser.
Modern Web Views offer many built-in HTML5 APIs for hardware functionality such as cameras, sensors, GPS, speakers, and Bluetooth, but sometimes it may also be necessary to access platform-specific hardware APIs. In Ionic apps, hardware APIs can be accessed through a bridge layer, typically by using native plugins which expose JavaScript APIs.
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The Ionic Web View plugin is specialized for modern JavaScript apps. For both iOS and Android, app files are always hosted using the http://
protocol with an optimized HTTP server that runs on the local device.
Web Views enforce CORS, so it's important that external services properly handle cross-origin requests. See the CORS FAQs for information on dealing with CORS in Ionic apps.
Capacitor and Cordova apps are hosted on a local HTTP server and are served with the http://
protocol. Some plugins, however, attempt to access device files via the file://
protocol. To avoid difficulties between http://
and file://
, paths to device files must be rewritten to use the local HTTP server. For example, file:///path/to/device/file
must be rewritten as http://<host>:<port>/<prefix>/path/to/device/file
before being rendered in the app.
For Capacitor apps, convert file URIs like so:
import { Capacitor } from '@capacitor/core';
Capacitor.convertFileSrc(filePath);
For Cordova apps, the Ionic Web View plugin provides a utility function for converting File URIs: window.Ionic.WebView.convertFileSrc()
. There is also a corresponding Ionic Native plugin: @awesome-cordova-plugins/ionic-webview
.