//! Thanks to @japsu and their project https://github.com/japsu/jatsi for the example! //! //! This example shows how to create a simple dice rolling app using SVG and Dioxus. //! The `svg` element and its children have a custom namespace, and are attached using different methods than regular //! HTML elements. Any element can specify a custom namespace by using the `namespace` meta attribute. //! //! If you `go-to-definition` on the `svg` element, you'll see its custom namespace. use dioxus::prelude::*; use rand::{thread_rng, Rng}; fn main() { dioxus::launch(|| { rsx! { div { user_select: "none", webkit_user_select: "none", margin_left: "10%", margin_right: "10%", h1 { "Click die to generate a new value" } div { cursor: "pointer", height: "100%", width: "100%", Dice {} } } } }); } #[component] fn Dice() -> Element { const Y: bool = true; const N: bool = false; const DOTS: [(i64, i64); 7] = [(-1, -1), (-1, -0), (-1, 1), (1, -1), (1, 0), (1, 1), (0, 0)]; const DOTS_FOR_VALUE: [[bool; 7]; 6] = [ [N, N, N, N, N, N, Y], [N, N, Y, Y, N, N, N], [N, N, Y, Y, N, N, Y], [Y, N, Y, Y, N, Y, N], [Y, N, Y, Y, N, Y, Y], [Y, Y, Y, Y, Y, Y, N], ]; let mut value = use_signal(|| 5); let active_dots = use_memo(move || &DOTS_FOR_VALUE[(value() - 1) as usize]); rsx! { svg { view_box: "-1000 -1000 2000 2000", onclick: move |event| { event.prevent_default(); value.set(thread_rng().gen_range(1..=6)) }, rect { x: -1000, y: -1000, width: 2000, height: 2000, rx: 200, fill: "#aaa" } for ((x, y), _) in DOTS.iter().zip(active_dots.read().iter()).filter(|(_, &active)| active) { circle { cx: *x * 600, cy: *y * 600, r: 200, fill: "#333" } } } } }