This commit adds a new type - the DomEdit - for serializing the changes made by the diffing machine. The architecture of how DomEdits fit into the cooperative scheduling is still TBD but it will allow us to build change lists without applying them immediately. This is more performant and allows us to only render parts of the page at a time.
This commit also adds more infrastructure around webview. Dioxus can now run on the web, generate static pages, run in the desktop, and run on mobile, with a large part of thanks to webview.
This commit adds lifetimes to the diff and realdom methods so consumers may borrow the contents of the DOM for serialization or asynchronous modifications.
This commit solves the memoization , properly memoizing properties that don't have any generic parameters. This is a rough heuristic to prevent non-static lifetimes from creeping into props and breaking our minual lifetime management.
Props that have a generic parameter are opted-out of the `partialeq` requirement and props *without* lifetimes must implement partialeq. We're going to leave manual disabling of memoization for future work.
This change switches back to the original `ctx<props>` syntax for
commponents. This lets lifetime elision to remove the need to match
exactly which lifetime (props or ctx) gets carried to the output. As
such, `Props` is currently required to be static. It *is* possible to
loosen this restriction, and will be done in the future, though only
through adding metadata about the props through the Props derive
macro. Implementing the IS_STATIC trait is unsafe, so the derive macro
will do it through some heuristics.
For now, this unlocks sharing vnodes from parents to children, enabling
pass-thru components, fragments, portals, etc.
This commit adds the framework for "comparable components". This allows
complete sealing of bump-allocated properties types, and a comparison method
that performs a "safe" cast without transmute. This lets us completely erase types
but still be able to perform partialeq over render frames