rsx_usage.rs 9.3 KB

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  1. //! A tour of the rsx! macro
  2. //! ------------------------
  3. //!
  4. //! This example serves as an informal quick reference of all the things that the rsx! macro can do.
  5. //!
  6. //! A full in-depth reference guide is available at: https://www.notion.so/rsx-macro-basics-ef6e367dec124f4784e736d91b0d0b19
  7. //!
  8. //! ### Elements
  9. //! - Create any element from its tag
  10. //! - Accept compile-safe attributes for each tag
  11. //! - Display documentation for elements
  12. //! - Arguments instead of String
  13. //! - Text
  14. //! - Inline Styles
  15. //!
  16. //! ## General Concepts
  17. //! - Iterators
  18. //! - Keys
  19. //! - Match statements
  20. //! - Conditional Rendering
  21. //!
  22. //! ### Events
  23. //! - Handle events with the "onXYZ" syntax
  24. //! - Closures can capture their environment with the 'a lifetime
  25. //!
  26. //!
  27. //! ### Components
  28. //! - Components can be made by specifying the name
  29. //! - Components can be referenced by path
  30. //! - Components may have optional parameters
  31. //! - Components may have their properties specified by spread syntax
  32. //! - Components may accept child nodes
  33. //! - Components that accept "onXYZ" get those closures bump allocated
  34. //!
  35. //! ### Fragments
  36. //! - Allow fragments using the built-in `Fragment` component
  37. //! - Accept a list of vnodes as children for a Fragment component
  38. //! - Allow keyed fragments in iterators
  39. //! - Allow top-level fragments
  40. fn main() {
  41. dioxus_desktop::launch(App);
  42. }
  43. use core::{fmt, str::FromStr};
  44. use std::fmt::Display;
  45. use baller::Baller;
  46. use dioxus::prelude::*;
  47. #[component]
  48. fn App(cx: Scope) -> Element {
  49. let formatting = "formatting!";
  50. let formatting_tuple = ("a", "b");
  51. let lazy_fmt = format_args!("lazily formatted text");
  52. let asd = 123;
  53. cx.render(rsx! {
  54. div {
  55. // Elements
  56. div {}
  57. h1 {"Some text"}
  58. h1 {"Some text with {formatting}"}
  59. h1 {"Formatting basic expressions {formatting_tuple.0} and {formatting_tuple.1}"}
  60. h1 {"Formatting without interpolation " formatting_tuple.0 "and" formatting_tuple.1 }
  61. h2 {
  62. "Multiple"
  63. "Text"
  64. "Blocks"
  65. "Use comments as separators in html"
  66. }
  67. div {
  68. h1 {"multiple"}
  69. h2 {"nested"}
  70. h3 {"elements"}
  71. }
  72. div {
  73. class: "my special div",
  74. h1 {"Headers and attributes!"}
  75. }
  76. div {
  77. // pass simple rust expressions in
  78. class: lazy_fmt,
  79. id: format_args!("attributes can be passed lazily with std::fmt::Arguments"),
  80. class: "asd",
  81. class: "{asd}",
  82. // if statements can be used to conditionally render attributes
  83. class: if formatting.contains("form") { "{asd}" },
  84. div {
  85. class: {
  86. const WORD: &str = "expressions";
  87. format_args!("Arguments can be passed in through curly braces for complex {WORD}")
  88. }
  89. }
  90. }
  91. // Expressions can be used in element position too:
  92. rsx!(p { "More templating!" }),
  93. // Iterators
  94. (0..10).map(|i| rsx!(li { "{i}" })),
  95. // Iterators within expressions
  96. {
  97. let data = std::collections::HashMap::<&'static str, &'static str>::new();
  98. // Iterators *should* have keys when you can provide them.
  99. // Keys make your app run faster. Make sure your keys are stable, unique, and predictable.
  100. // Using an "ID" associated with your data is a good idea.
  101. data.into_iter().map(|(k, v)| rsx!(li { key: "{k}", "{v}" }))
  102. }
  103. // Matching
  104. match true {
  105. true => rsx!( h1 {"Top text"}),
  106. false => rsx!( h1 {"Bottom text"})
  107. }
  108. // Conditional rendering
  109. // Dioxus conditional rendering is based around None/Some. We have no special syntax for conditionals.
  110. // You can convert a bool condition to rsx! with .then and .or
  111. true.then(|| rsx!(div {})),
  112. // Alternatively, you can use the "if" syntax - but both branches must be resolve to Element
  113. if false {
  114. rsx!(h1 {"Top text"})
  115. } else {
  116. rsx!(h1 {"Bottom text"})
  117. }
  118. // Using optionals for diverging branches
  119. if true {
  120. Some(rsx!(h1 {"Top text"}))
  121. } else {
  122. None
  123. }
  124. // returning "None" without a diverging branch is a bit noisy... but rare in practice
  125. None as Option<()>,
  126. // can also just use empty fragments
  127. Fragment {}
  128. // Fragments let you insert groups of nodes without a parent.
  129. // This lets you make components that insert elements as siblings without a container.
  130. div {"A"}
  131. Fragment {
  132. div {"B"}
  133. div {"C"}
  134. Fragment {
  135. "D"
  136. Fragment {
  137. "E"
  138. "F"
  139. }
  140. }
  141. }
  142. // Components
  143. // Can accept any paths
  144. // Notice how you still get syntax highlighting and IDE support :)
  145. Baller {}
  146. baller::Baller {}
  147. crate::baller::Baller {}
  148. // Can take properties
  149. Taller { a: "asd" }
  150. // Can take optional properties
  151. Taller { a: "asd" }
  152. // Can pass in props directly as an expression
  153. {
  154. let props = TallerProps {a: "hello", children: cx.render(rsx!(()))};
  155. rsx!(Taller { ..props })
  156. }
  157. // Spreading can also be overridden manually
  158. Taller {
  159. ..TallerProps { a: "ballin!", children: cx.render(rsx!(()) )},
  160. a: "not ballin!"
  161. }
  162. // Can take children too!
  163. Taller { a: "asd", div {"hello world!"} }
  164. // This component's props are defined *inline* with the `inline_props` macro
  165. WithInline { text: "using functionc all syntax" }
  166. // Components can be generic too
  167. // This component takes i32 type to give you typed input
  168. TypedInput::<i32> {}
  169. // Type inference can be used too
  170. TypedInput { initial: 10.0 }
  171. // geneircs with the `inline_props` macro
  172. Label { text: "hello geneirc world!" }
  173. Label { text: 99.9 }
  174. // Lowercase components work too, as long as they are access using a path
  175. baller::lowercase_component {}
  176. // For in-scope lowercase components, use the `self` keyword
  177. self::lowercase_helper {}
  178. // helper functions
  179. // Anything that implements IntoVnode can be dropped directly into Rsx
  180. helper(cx, "hello world!")
  181. // Strings can be supplied directly
  182. String::from("Hello world!")
  183. // So can format_args
  184. format_args!("Hello {}!", "world")
  185. // Or we can shell out to a helper function
  186. format_dollars(10, 50)
  187. }
  188. })
  189. }
  190. fn format_dollars(dollars: u32, cents: u32) -> String {
  191. format!("${dollars}.{cents:02}")
  192. }
  193. fn helper<'a>(cx: &'a ScopeState, text: &'a str) -> Element<'a> {
  194. cx.render(rsx! {
  195. p { "{text}" }
  196. })
  197. }
  198. // no_case_check disables PascalCase checking if you *really* want a snake_case component.
  199. // This will likely be deprecated/removed in a future update that will introduce a more polished linting system,
  200. // something like Clippy.
  201. #[component(no_case_check)]
  202. fn lowercase_helper(cx: Scope) -> Element {
  203. cx.render(rsx! {
  204. "asd"
  205. })
  206. }
  207. mod baller {
  208. use super::*;
  209. #[derive(Props, PartialEq, Eq)]
  210. pub struct BallerProps {}
  211. #[component]
  212. /// This component totally balls
  213. pub fn Baller(_cx: Scope<BallerProps>) -> Element {
  214. todo!()
  215. }
  216. // no_case_check disables PascalCase checking if you *really* want a snake_case component.
  217. // This will likely be deprecated/removed in a future update that will introduce a more polished linting system,
  218. // something like Clippy.
  219. #[component(no_case_check)]
  220. pub fn lowercase_component(cx: Scope) -> Element {
  221. cx.render(rsx! { "look ma, no uppercase" })
  222. }
  223. }
  224. #[derive(Props)]
  225. pub struct TallerProps<'a> {
  226. /// Fields are documented and accessible in rsx!
  227. a: &'static str,
  228. children: Element<'a>,
  229. }
  230. /// Documention for this component is visible within the rsx macro
  231. #[component]
  232. pub fn Taller<'a>(cx: Scope<'a, TallerProps<'a>>) -> Element {
  233. cx.render(rsx! {
  234. &cx.props.children
  235. })
  236. }
  237. #[derive(Props, PartialEq, Eq)]
  238. pub struct TypedInputProps<T> {
  239. #[props(optional, default)]
  240. initial: Option<T>,
  241. }
  242. #[allow(non_snake_case)]
  243. pub fn TypedInput<T>(_: Scope<TypedInputProps<T>>) -> Element
  244. where
  245. T: FromStr + fmt::Display,
  246. <T as FromStr>::Err: std::fmt::Display,
  247. {
  248. todo!()
  249. }
  250. #[component]
  251. fn WithInline<'a>(cx: Scope<'a>, text: &'a str) -> Element {
  252. cx.render(rsx! {
  253. p { "{text}" }
  254. })
  255. }
  256. #[component]
  257. fn Label<T>(cx: Scope, text: T) -> Element
  258. where
  259. T: Display,
  260. {
  261. cx.render(rsx! {
  262. p { "{text}" }
  263. })
  264. }