mirror of
https://github.com/DioxusLabs/dioxus
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202 lines
6.6 KiB
Rust
202 lines
6.6 KiB
Rust
//! A tour of the rsx! macro
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//! ------------------------
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//!
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//! This example serves as an informal quick reference of all the things that the rsx! macro can do.
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//!
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//! A full in-depth reference guide is available at: https://www.notion.so/rsx-macro-basics-ef6e367dec124f4784e736d91b0d0b19
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//!
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//! ### Elements
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//! - Create any element from its tag
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//! - Accept compile-safe attributes for each tag
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//! - Display documentation for elements
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//! - Arguments instead of String
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//! - Text
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//! - Inline Styles
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//!
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//! ## General Concepts
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//! - Iterators
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//! - Keys
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//! - Match statements
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//! - Conditional Rendering
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//!
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//! ### Events
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//! - Handle events with the "onXYZ" syntax
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//! - Closures can capture their environment with the 'a lifetime
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//!
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//!
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//! ### Components
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//! - Components can be made by specifying the name
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//! - Components can be referenced by path
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//! - Components may have optional parameters
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//! - Components may have their properties specified by spread syntax
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//! - Components may accept child nodes
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//! - Components that accept "onXYZ" get those closures bump allocated
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//!
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//! ### Fragments
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//! - Allow fragments using the built-in `Fragment` component
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//! - Accept a list of vnodes as children for a Fragment component
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//! - Allow keyed fragments in iterators
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//! - Allow top-level fragments
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//!
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fn main() {
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dioxus::desktop::launch(Example, |c| c);
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}
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/// When trying to return "nothing" to Dioxus, you'll need to specify the type parameter or Rust will be sad.
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/// This type alias specifices the type for you so you don't need to write "None as Option<()>"
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const NONE_ELEMENT: Option<()> = None;
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use baller::Baller;
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use dioxus::prelude::*;
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static Example: FC<()> = |cx| {
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let formatting = "formatting!";
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let formatting_tuple = ("a", "b");
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let lazy_fmt = format_args!("lazily formatted text");
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cx.render(rsx! {
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div {
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// Elements
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div {}
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h1 {"Some text"}
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h1 {"Some text with {formatting}"}
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h1 {"Formatting basic expressions {formatting_tuple.0} and {formatting_tuple.1}"}
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h2 {
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"Multiple"
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"Text"
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"Blocks"
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"Use comments as separators in html"
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}
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div {
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h1 {"multiple"}
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h2 {"nested"}
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h3 {"elements"}
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}
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div {
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class: "my special div"
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h1 {"Headers and attributes!"}
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}
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div {
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// pass simple rust expressions in
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class: lazy_fmt,
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id: format_args!("attributes can be passed lazily with std::fmt::Arguments"),
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div {
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class: {
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const WORD: &str = "expressions";
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format_args!("Arguments can be passed in through curly braces for complex {}", WORD)
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}
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}
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}
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// Expressions can be used in element position too:
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{rsx!(p { "More templating!" })}
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{html!(<p>"Even HTML templating!!"</p>)}
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// Iterators
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{(0..10).map(|i| rsx!(li { "{i}" }))}
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{{
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let data = std::collections::HashMap::<&'static str, &'static str>::new();
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// Iterators *should* have keys when you can provide them.
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// Keys make your app run faster. Make sure your keys are stable, unique, and predictable.
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// Using an "ID" associated with your data is a good idea.
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data.into_iter().map(|(k, v)| rsx!(li { key: "{k}" "{v}" }))
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}}
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// Matching
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// Matching will throw a Rust error about "no two closures are the same type"
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// To fix this, call "render" method or use the "in" syntax to produce VNodes.
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// There's nothing we can do about it, sorry :/ (unless you want *really* unhygenic macros)
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{match true {
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true => rsx!(in cx, h1 {"Top text"}),
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false => cx.render(rsx!( h1 {"Bottom text"}))
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}}
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// Conditional rendering
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// Dioxus conditional rendering is based around None/Some. We have no special syntax for conditionals.
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// You can convert a bool condition to rsx! with .then and .or
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{true.then(|| rsx!(div {}))}
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// True conditions need to be rendered (same reasons as matching)
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{if true {
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rsx!(in cx, h1 {"Top text"})
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} else {
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rsx!(in cx, h1 {"Bottom text"})
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}}
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// returning "None" is a bit noisy... but rare in practice
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{None as Option<()>}
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// Use the Dioxus type-alias for less noise
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{NONE_ELEMENT}
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// can also just use empty fragments
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Fragment {}
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// Fragments let you insert groups of nodes without a parent.
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// This lets you make components that insert elements as siblings without a container.
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div {"A"}
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Fragment {
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div {"B"}
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div {"C"}
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Fragment {
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"D"
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Fragment {
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"heavily nested fragments is an antipattern"
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"they cause Dioxus to do unnecessary work"
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"don't use them carelessly if you can help it"
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}
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}
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}
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// Components
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// Can accept any paths
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// Notice how you still get syntax highlighting and IDE support :)
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Baller {}
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baller::Baller { }
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crate::baller::Baller {}
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// Can take properties
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Taller { a: "asd" }
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// Can take optional properties
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Taller { a: "asd" }
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// Can pass in props directly as an expression
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{{
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let props = TallerProps {a: "hello"};
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rsx!(Taller { ..props })
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}}
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// Spreading can also be overridden manually
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Taller {
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..TallerProps { a: "ballin!" }
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a: "not ballin!"
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}
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// Can take children too!
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Taller { a: "asd", div {"hello world!"} }
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}
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})
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};
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mod baller {
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use super::*;
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pub struct BallerProps {}
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/// This component totally balls
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pub fn Baller(cx: Context<()>) -> VNode {
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todo!()
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}
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}
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#[derive(Debug, PartialEq, Props)]
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pub struct TallerProps {
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a: &'static str,
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}
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/// This component is taller than most :)
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pub fn Taller(cx: Context<TallerProps>) -> VNode {
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let b = true;
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todo!()
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}
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