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https://github.com/DioxusLabs/dioxus
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cbadea022a
Only awaiting eval should error. Eval should always be available, even if using its methods returns errors.
46 lines
1.7 KiB
Rust
46 lines
1.7 KiB
Rust
//! This example shows how to use the `eval` function to run JavaScript code in the webview.
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//!
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//! Eval will only work with renderers that support javascript - so currently only the web and desktop/mobile renderers
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//! that use a webview. Native renderers will throw "unsupported" errors when calling `eval`.
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use dioxus::prelude::*;
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fn main() {
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launch(app);
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}
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fn app() -> Element {
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// Create a future that will resolve once the javascript has been succesffully executed.
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let future = use_resource(move || async move {
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// Wait a little bit just to give the appearance of a loading screen
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tokio::time::sleep(tokio::time::Duration::from_secs(1)).await;
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// The `eval` is available in the prelude - and simply takes a block of JS.
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// Dioxus' eval is interesting since it allows sending messages to and from the JS code using the `await dioxus.recv()`
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// builtin function. This allows you to create a two-way communication channel between Rust and JS.
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let mut eval = eval(
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r#"
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dioxus.send("Hi from JS!");
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let msg = await dioxus.recv();
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console.log(msg);
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return "hi from JS!";
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"#,
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);
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// Send a message to the JS code.
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eval.send("Hi from Rust!".into()).unwrap();
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// Our line on the JS side will log the message and then return "hello world".
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let res = eval.recv().await.unwrap();
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// This will print "Hi from JS!" and "Hi from Rust!".
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println!("{:?}", eval.await);
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res
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});
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match future.value().as_ref() {
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Some(v) => rsx!( p { "{v}" } ),
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_ => rsx!( p { "waiting.." } ),
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}
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}
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