//! Backgrounded futures example //! //! This showcases how use_future, use_memo, and use_effect will stop running if the component returns early. //! Generally you should avoid using early returns around hooks since most hooks are not properly designed to //! handle early returns. However, use_future *does* pause the future when the component returns early, and so //! hooks that build on top of it like use_memo and use_effect will also pause. //! //! This example is more of a demonstration of the behavior than a practical use case, but it's still interesting to see. use async_std::task::sleep; use dioxus::prelude::*; fn main() { dioxus::launch(app); } fn app() -> Element { let mut show_child = use_signal(|| true); let mut count = use_signal(|| 0); let child = use_memo(move || { rsx! { Child { count } } }); rsx! { // Some toggle/controls to show the child or increment the count button { onclick: move |_| show_child.toggle(), "Toggle child" } button { onclick: move |_| count += 1, "Increment count" } if show_child() { {child()} } } } #[component] fn Child(count: Signal) -> Element { let mut early_return = use_signal(|| false); let early = rsx! { button { onclick: move |_| early_return.toggle(), "Toggle {early_return} early return" } }; if early_return() { return early; } use_future(move || async move { loop { sleep(std::time::Duration::from_millis(100)).await; println!("Child") } }); use_effect(move || println!("Child count: {}", count())); rsx! { div { "Child component" {early} } } }