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- //! Example: Coroutines!
- //! --------------------
- //!
- //! Coroutines are an awesome way to write concurrent code. Dioxus heavily leverages coroutines to make sense of complex
- //! ongoing asynchronous tasks. The async scheduler of Dioxus supports both single-threaded and multi-threaded coroutines,
- //! so you can drop in code to run across multiple threads without blocking the main thread.
- //!
- //! Dioxus cannot simply abstract away the threading model for the web, unfortunately. If you want to use "web threads"
- //! you either need to limit support for Chrome, or you need to use a Web Workers and message passing. This is easy enough
- //! to do in your own code, and doesn't require 1st-party support from Dioxus itself.
- //!
- //! UseState and friends work fine with coroutines, but coroutines might be easier to use with the Dirac global state
- //! management API. This lets you easily drive global state from a coroutine without having to subscribe to the state.
- //!
- //! For now, this example shows how to use coroutines used with use_state.
- //!
- //!
- //! ## What is a Coroutine?
- //!
- //! A coroutine is a function that can be paused and resumed. It can be paused internally through "await" or externally
- //! using the `TaskHandle` API. Within a coroutine, you may execute asynchronous code, that modifies values captured when
- //! the coroutine was initiated. `use_state` always returns the same setter, so you don't need to worry about
- fn main() {
- dioxus::desktop::launch(App, |c| c);
- }
- use dioxus::prelude::*;
- static App: Component<()> = |cx, props| {
- let p1 = use_state(cx, || 0);
- let p2 = use_state(cx, || 0);
- let (mut p1_async, mut p2_async) = (p1.for_async(), p2.for_async());
- let (p1_handle, _) = use_coroutine(cx, || async move {
- loop {
- *p1_async.get_mut() += 1;
- async_std::task::sleep(std::time::Duration::from_millis(75)).await;
- }
- });
- let (p2_handle, _) = use_coroutine(cx, || async move {
- loop {
- *p2_async.get_mut() += 1;
- async_std::task::sleep(std::time::Duration::from_millis(100)).await;
- }
- });
- cx.render(rsx! {
- div {
- width: "400px", height: "400px", position: "relative", background: "yellow"
- button { "reset", onclick: move |_| {} }
- Horsey { pos: *p1, "horsey 1" }
- Horsey { pos: *p2, "horsey 2" }
- }
- })
- };
- #[derive(Props)]
- struct HorseyProps<'a> {
- pos: i32,
- children: ScopeChildren<'a>,
- }
- fn Horsey<'a>((cx, props): Scope<'a, HorseyProps<'a>>) -> Element {
- cx.render(rsx! {
- div {
- button { "pause" }
- div {
- {&props.children}
- }
- }
- })
- }
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