//! This example demonstrates how to create an overlay window with dioxus. //! //! Basically, we just create a new window with a transparent background and no decorations, size it to the screen, and //! then we can draw whatever we want on it. In this case, we're drawing a simple overlay with a draggable header. //! //! We also add a global shortcut to toggle the overlay on and off, so you could build a raycast-type app with this. use dioxus::desktop::{ tao::dpi::PhysicalPosition, use_global_shortcut, LogicalSize, WindowBuilder, }; use dioxus::prelude::*; fn main() { dioxus::LaunchBuilder::desktop() .with_cfg(make_config()) .launch(app); } fn app() -> Element { let mut show_overlay = use_signal(|| true); _ = use_global_shortcut("cmd+g", move || show_overlay.toggle()); rsx! { document::Link { rel: "stylesheet", href: asset!("/examples/assets/overlay.css"), } if show_overlay() { div { width: "100%", height: "100%", background_color: "red", border: "1px solid black", div { width: "100%", height: "10px", background_color: "black", onmousedown: move |_| dioxus::desktop::window().drag(), } "This is an overlay!" } } } } fn make_config() -> dioxus::desktop::Config { dioxus::desktop::Config::default().with_window(make_window()) } fn make_window() -> WindowBuilder { WindowBuilder::new() .with_transparent(true) .with_decorations(false) .with_resizable(false) .with_always_on_top(true) .with_position(PhysicalPosition::new(0, 0)) .with_max_inner_size(LogicalSize::new(100000, 50)) }