dioxus/packages/signals
Evan Almloff b47a6cf83e
Move to a generic GlobalLazy<T> (#2851)
* Expose a generic lazy type

* Switch to generic lazy globals

* simplify global lazy context a bit

* rename LazyGlobal to Global

* use Memo::global in more examples

* Fix soundness issue with deref_impl. It relies on the size of self, so it cannot be safe

* add a comment about safety

* Make clippy happy

* fix formatting

* Restore changes to signal impl

* Add helper methods for global signal and global memo to make getting the inner value easier
2024-08-16 17:57:41 -05:00
..
docs Add a warning when a copy value is used in a higher scope than it was created in (#2771) 2024-08-02 10:48:13 -07:00
examples fix most typos, add crate-ci/typos to CI (#2653) 2024-07-23 17:49:33 -07:00
src Move to a generic GlobalLazy<T> (#2851) 2024-08-16 17:57:41 -05:00
tests Suspense boundaries/out of order streaming/anyhow like error handling (#2365) 2024-07-01 20:50:36 -07:00
Cargo.toml Pre-release 0.6.0-alpha.0 (#2755) 2024-07-31 22:37:39 -05:00
README.md test signal drops 2024-03-04 16:02:19 -06:00

Dioxus Signals

Dioxus Signals is an ergonomic Copy runtime for data with local subscriptions.

Copy Data

All signals implement Copy, even if the inner value does not implement copy. This makes it easy to move any data into futures or children.

use dioxus::prelude::*;
use dioxus_signals::*;

#[component]
fn App() -> Element {
    let signal = use_signal(|| "hello world".to_string());

    spawn(async move {
        // signal is Copy even though String is not copy
        print!("{signal}");
    });

    rsx! {
        "{signal}"
    }
}

Local Subscriptions

Signals will only subscribe to components when you read from the signal in that component. It will never subscribe to a component when reading data in a future or event handler.

use dioxus::prelude::*;
use dioxus_signals::*;

#[component]
fn App() -> Element {
    // Because signal is never read in this component, this component will not rerun when the signal changes
    let mut signal = use_signal(|| 0);

    rsx! {
        button {
            onclick: move |_| {
                signal += 1;
            },
            "Increase"
        }
        for id in 0..10 {
            Child {
                signal,
            }
        }
    }
}

#[derive(Props, Clone, PartialEq)]
struct ChildProps {
    signal: Signal<usize>,
}

fn Child(props: ChildProps) -> Element {
    // This component does read from the signal, so when the signal changes it will rerun
    rsx! {
        "{props.signal}"
    }
}

Because subscriptions happen when you read from (not create) the data, you can provide signals through the normal context API:

use dioxus::prelude::*;
use dioxus_signals::*;

#[component]
fn App() -> Element {
    // Because signal is never read in this component, this component will not rerun when the signal changes
    use_context_provider(|| Signal::new(0));

    rsx! {
        Child {}
    }
}

#[component]
fn Child() -> Element {
    let signal: Signal<i32> = use_context();
    // This component does read from the signal, so when the signal changes it will rerun
    rsx! {
        "{signal}"
    }
}

Computed Data

In addition to local subscriptions in components, dioxus-signals provides a way to derive data with local subscriptions.

The use_memo hook will only rerun when any signals inside the hook change:

use dioxus::prelude::*;
use dioxus_signals::*;

#[component]
fn App() -> Element {
    let mut signal = use_signal(|| 0);
    let doubled = use_memo(move || signal * 2);

    rsx! {
        button {
            onclick: move |_| signal += 1,
            "Increase"
        }
        Child {
            signal: doubled
        }
    }
}

#[component]
fn Child(signal: ReadOnlySignal<usize>) -> Element {
    rsx! {
        "{signal}"
    }
}