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97 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Greg Johnston
95eb6b1bd9 remove unnecessary Props imports 2023-04-07 13:54:51 -04:00
Greg Johnston
e81f14a794 oops 2023-04-07 13:49:00 -04:00
Greg Johnston
0e8125abde cargo fmt 2023-04-07 13:43:32 -04:00
Greg Johnston
8bb2ee4569 feat: make __Props imports unnecessary (closes #746) 2023-04-07 13:40:19 -04:00
Greg Johnston
5dab35447a update README.md 2023-04-07 13:19:35 -04:00
Greg Johnston
63be819533 tests: update benchmarks (#827)
* tests: add Criterion benchmarking and move reactive benchmarks into `leptos_reactive`
* tests: updated SSR benchmarks
2023-04-07 13:04:26 -04:00
Aaron Karras
af8afb1204 perf: use local pools for axum handlers (#815) 2023-04-07 11:35:16 -04:00
Mark Catley
2170be8e01 chore: deny warnings on github actions (#814)
Enabling on all except for checking examples to start. I'll fix those
and add it as a follow up.

Closes #795
2023-04-07 09:28:48 -04:00
Greg Johnston
1187a506dd fix: server functions with url as argument name (closes issue #823) (#825) 2023-04-07 09:28:31 -04:00
Greg Johnston
ff5ceddbe2 fix: correctly pass server fn errors to client (#822) 2023-04-07 08:12:10 -04:00
Greg Johnston
41a5e09caa docs: add sandbox links and max height (#824) 2023-04-07 07:38:12 -04:00
Bram
9478245986 docs: remove Leptos guide link (same as book?) (#818) 2023-04-06 20:44:26 -04:00
Bram
4c1c12734a docs: publish book during CI (#817) 2023-04-06 14:09:54 -04:00
Greg Johnston
5d3a360456 fix: correctly escape HTML special characters in text nodes during SSR (#812) 2023-04-06 06:52:59 -04:00
Nova
4e7a0db950 perf: optimize memory usage of update methods (#809) 2023-04-05 20:16:53 -04:00
Nova
cee6ed9a9f perf: optimize Runtime::mark_dirty (#808) 2023-04-05 20:16:40 -04:00
Greg Johnston
fa1013f7c3 chore: fix unused variable warning in property now that it's not memoized (#810) 2023-04-05 13:20:16 -04:00
Ben Wishovich
8b57ba7aa8 feat: add the ability for server fns to be submitted via GET requests (#789) 2023-04-05 06:47:17 -04:00
Mark Catley
ea638e37f6 fix: unused warning in reactive signal diagnostics (#807) 2023-04-05 06:26:36 -04:00
Nova
4342d45a2f perf: optimize size of RuntimeId when slotmap is not used (#805) 2023-04-05 06:26:17 -04:00
Greg Johnston
fe4d2382b8 fix: prevent router panic on root-level <Redirect/> during route list generation (#801) 2023-04-04 21:36:03 -04:00
Greg Johnston
2a13609eff fix: fixes #802 as a temporary measure without resorting to #803 yet (#804) 2023-04-04 20:50:50 -04:00
Marcus Ofenhed
c2ff1cabf1 feat: Add ability to include options to event listeners (#799) 2023-04-04 20:50:35 -04:00
Mark Catley
e72ed26809 fix: warning in Cargo.toml (#800) 2023-04-04 19:53:05 -04:00
Greg Johnston
64e056ffa9 docs: warn if you are using leptos_meta without features (#797) 2023-04-03 21:07:43 -04:00
Mark Catley
db9b7db53d fix: unused warning on cx in server functions (#794)
When running cargo clippy on server functions that use `cx: Scope` it
has an unused variable error.

It appears that the logic for adding an `#[allow(unused)]` notation is
inverted.
2023-04-03 21:07:30 -04:00
ealmloff
a9e6590b5e fix: server functions with non-copy server contexts (#785) 2023-04-03 07:17:22 -04:00
Greg Johnston
b67121b755 docs: <Form/> component (#792) 2023-04-02 16:50:21 -04:00
Greg Johnston
7bce4de682 fix: issues with nested <Suspense/> (closes #764) (#781) 2023-04-02 15:57:43 -04:00
Greg Johnston
8bdb427133 fix: improvements "untracked read" warnings in untrack, SSR cases (#791) 2023-04-02 15:57:06 -04:00
Patrick Auernig
4c23f3c478 chore: remove unused fs dependency from leptos_config (#787) 2023-04-02 12:29:30 -04:00
Greg Johnston
9502de561b fix: warnings about untracked signal access in <Router/> (#790) 2023-04-02 12:28:58 -04:00
Greg Johnston
210c11a733 docs: add runtime "strict mode" checks that warn if you’re non-reactively accessing a value (#786) 2023-04-01 17:41:25 -04:00
ealmloff
6917027204 fix server functions default macro on stable (#784) 2023-04-01 17:31:56 -04:00
Greg Johnston
e78ce7e6b9 feat: create_blocking_resource (#752) 2023-04-01 11:25:00 -04:00
Greg Johnston
a3327f8841 fix: SVG <title> tag (#783) 2023-04-01 11:24:32 -04:00
Greg Johnston
f727dd773b v0.2.5 (#782) 2023-04-01 11:23:42 -04:00
Greg Johnston
952646f066 Merge pull request #780 from leptos-rs/warn-on-routes-issues
docs: warn if you put something invalid inside `<Routes/>`
2023-03-31 17:13:02 -04:00
Greg Johnston
1e037ecb60 chore: clippy and docs warnings (#779) 2023-03-31 17:12:42 -04:00
Greg Johnston
c9f75d82d6 docs: warn if you add something that's not a <Route/> inside <Routes/> 2023-03-31 16:39:06 -04:00
Greg Johnston
de3849c20c example: show how to refactor routes into another component 2023-03-31 16:38:49 -04:00
Christian Rausch
c391c2e938 feat: arbitrary attributes to <Html/> and <Body/> meta tags (#726) 2023-03-31 16:30:10 -04:00
luoxiaozero
1cde4b1f8a docs: fixed parentheses and formatting issues (#775) 2023-03-31 15:48:29 -04:00
Greg Johnston
42360d109b change: insert <head> metadata tags at the beginning of the head, not the end (#731) 2023-03-31 14:51:27 -04:00
Kaszanas
7aa4d9e6db feat: Added `<ProtectedRoute/> component to route file (#741) 2023-03-31 14:50:46 -04:00
Kaszanas
9ed3390b81 examples: updated proxy settings in login_with_token_csr_only (#771)
When testing this example on Windows OS the initial value of `0.0.0.0:3000` for the IP did not work.
2023-03-31 14:44:06 -04:00
Greg Johnston
1ff56f7bfd fix: stop memoizing properties in a way that breaks prop:value (closes #768) (#772) 2023-03-30 19:44:38 -04:00
Greg Johnston
16917997cd fix: prevent forms from entering infinite loops (closes issue #760) (#762) 2023-03-30 16:28:49 -04:00
Greg Johnston
f42568d262 fix: <Redirect/> between nested routes at same level (#767) 2023-03-30 16:28:32 -04:00
Houski
97bbdf561a feat: added the id attribute to the Leptos router <A/> tag (#770) 2023-03-30 16:28:08 -04:00
Greg Johnston
f4043cbd9f fix: escape </script> and other HTML tags in serialized resources (#763) 2023-03-29 13:51:48 -04:00
Lukas Potthast
e9ff26abb4 feat: allow component declaration without use leptos::Scope in scope (#748) 2023-03-29 07:59:08 -04:00
Ben Wishovich
e6b1298915 feat: add property field to Meta component (#759) 2023-03-28 09:10:00 -04:00
Igor Shevchenko
98a9ec8335 chore(docs): fix a few typos (#756) 2023-03-27 20:06:34 -04:00
jquesada2016
5329561687 feat: add is_mounted and dyn_classes (#714) 2023-03-27 19:03:59 -04:00
Greg Johnston
89ca047f2f examples: improve counter_without_macros (#751) 2023-03-27 12:50:01 -04:00
Greg Johnston
a94711fcf0 fix: correct typecast on Memo::get_untracked (closes issue #754) (#755) 2023-03-27 11:28:40 -04:00
Greg Johnston
97d88c65ae docs: warn when reading resource outside <Suspense/> (closes issue #742) (#743) 2023-03-25 14:22:22 -04:00
Jessie Chatham Spencer
e482e3748d docs: document cargo workspace feature resolver footgun (#745)
Due to no rust edition being present in a workspac's Cargo.toml, non
WASM compatible code can end up being built for a WASM target.

This commit documents this error and how to resolve it.
2023-03-25 07:34:28 -04:00
István Donkó
8ab9c08448 docs: fix typo in server_fn docs (#740) 2023-03-24 21:42:27 -04:00
Lachlan Wilger
56de70b714 docs: fix typo (#739)
There was a typo in the section of the docs that pointed towards the hackernews example, so I fixed it by add the word "application."
2023-03-24 21:41:59 -04:00
Greg Johnston
38d97babd8 fix: always run dynamic classes after static classes (closes #735) (#738) 2023-03-24 17:38:34 -04:00
martin frances
4cfecb5d82 chore: bump serde-lite from 0.3 to 0.4. (#737) 2023-03-24 16:54:20 -04:00
Michael Clayton
08b5970b2b check EventSource value for Ok to avoid unwrap panic (#732) 2023-03-23 18:41:18 -04:00
Greg Johnston
af20f80b2b docs: fix typo in router docs (#730) 2023-03-22 20:44:58 -04:00
Andrew Chang-DeWitt
c2fdd2cd70 fix: include missing query params in navigation when <ActionForm/> receives a redirect (#728)
Previous solution in #727 included manually inserted `?` when a leading
`?` is present automatically in `Url.search`.
2023-03-22 20:05:21 -04:00
Greg Johnston
286f3eebe4 fix: relative routing should update when navigating between <Outlet/>s (closes issue #725) (#729)
* clear some cruft out of the navigation code
* fix issue #725 (correctly reactively resolving paths)
2023-03-22 19:59:08 -04:00
Álvaro Mondéjar
509223ab2e chore: Upgrade console_log to stable (#724) 2023-03-22 18:21:53 -04:00
Greg Johnston
665b0b8ed2 chore: make wasm-bindgen dependency optional in leptos_reactive (#723) 2023-03-22 17:56:52 -04:00
Greg Johnston
508ad52582 chore: fix clippy warnings (#721)
* `v0.2.4`

* chore: fix clippy warnings
2023-03-21 18:20:29 -04:00
martin frances
cfd5c98f97 clippy: simplify Box::pin() call. (#718) 2023-03-21 09:06:31 -04:00
Greg Johnston
2e63bb1f50 fix: <Transition/> behavior (#717) 2023-03-21 09:05:41 -04:00
Greg Johnston
982c8f6b5a docs: small fixes (#715) 2023-03-20 20:43:04 -04:00
Greg Johnston
12c4c115f3 docs: make is_odd less pretentious 2023-03-20 20:42:46 -04:00
Carlton Gibson
d4d20ecdb0 Used modulo rather than bitwise & for is_odd check.
The modulo operator is less of a head-scratcher for folks coming through here. The bitwise & is equally correct (clearly) but is likely to cause confusion if folks don't immediately see what's going on.
2023-03-20 20:09:02 +01:00
Greg Johnston
b78919c6ed Merge pull request #712 from leptos-rs/warnings 2023-03-20 10:49:00 -04:00
Greg Johnston
abb9320e31 chore: clear warning and add exports of helpers with handles 2023-03-20 09:36:14 -04:00
Greg Johnston
875d2d5a3a chore: handle unbounded_send warnings 2023-03-20 09:33:58 -04:00
Greg Johnston
42a58855a0 feat: add Scope::batch() (#711) 2023-03-20 08:29:18 -04:00
Greg Johnston
9d142758ec feat: allow manual signal disposal before the scope is disposed (#710) 2023-03-19 21:40:16 -04:00
Greg Johnston
2faddd85cb feat: add set_interval_with_handle and deprecate set_interval (#709) 2023-03-19 16:45:22 -04:00
martin frances
ddd463748d clippy: less .clone() calls, simpler pointer passing. (#707) 2023-03-19 15:30:12 -04:00
Alexis Fontaine
71ee4cd09d fix: view! macro not compiling with a non-default scope name (#704) 2023-03-19 13:14:47 -04:00
Greg Johnston
08c56f7d6c feat: add a debounce helper for event listeners (#691) 2023-03-19 07:10:56 -04:00
Elliot Waite
e1ba26b62c feat: add request_animation_frame_with_handle and request_idle_callback_with_handle (#698) 2023-03-18 19:09:36 -04:00
Greg Johnston
309f0bf826 fix: ignore view markers in DynChild hydration (closes issue #697) (#703) 2023-03-18 19:01:56 -04:00
Greg Johnston
1698ffa7db fix issues in release mode (closes #700) (#701) 2023-03-18 11:04:06 -04:00
Greg Johnston
556955cf1a docs: beginning work on router docs (#682) 2023-03-18 07:34:43 -04:00
Elliot Waite
a9f778459a examples: remove duplicate console_error_panic_hook::set_once() calls (#692) 2023-03-17 16:27:24 -04:00
Greg Johnston
f2ac412253 feat: support diffing inside component children in hot-reload (#690) 2023-03-17 13:53:53 -04:00
Greg Johnston
3bd52fcc9d fix: hydration errors with <Suspense/> inside components in SSR mode (#688) 2023-03-17 12:46:04 -04:00
Vassil "Vasco" Kolarov
b9bd1e103c examples: added example using Tailwind, CSR (only) and Trunk (#666) 2023-03-17 12:45:49 -04:00
Greg Johnston
55f9081465 fix: allow multiple <Suspense/> on same page during in-order or async rendering (#687) 2023-03-17 12:05:36 -04:00
ryndin32
0bac16dba0 docs: typos (#685) 2023-03-15 16:40:57 -04:00
Brett Etter
a8a9c575b5 Added IntoView for ReadSignal and RwSignal in the stable feature. (#677) 2023-03-15 16:40:22 -04:00
Greg Johnston
15ec855db5 Update README.md 2023-03-15 14:34:18 -04:00
Greg Johnston
b8f79a7e56 fix: suppress spurious hydration warnings for tags in leptos_meta (#684) 2023-03-14 14:17:23 -04:00
181 changed files with 6002 additions and 1438 deletions

View File

@@ -42,4 +42,4 @@ jobs:
- uses: Swatinem/rust-cache@v2
- name: Run cargo check on all examples
run: cargo make check-stable
run: cargo make --profile=github-actions check-stable

View File

@@ -42,4 +42,4 @@ jobs:
- uses: Swatinem/rust-cache@v2
- name: Run cargo check on all libraries
run: cargo make check
run: cargo make --profile=github-actions check

37
.github/workflows/publish-book.yml vendored Normal file
View File

@@ -0,0 +1,37 @@
name: Deploy book
on:
push:
paths: ['docs/book/**']
branches:
- main
jobs:
deploy:
runs-on: ubuntu-latest
permissions:
contents: write # To push a branch
pull-requests: write # To create a PR from that branch
steps:
- uses: actions/checkout@v3
with:
fetch-depth: 0
- name: Install mdbook
run: |
mkdir mdbook
curl -sSL https://github.com/rust-lang/mdBook/releases/download/v0.4.27/mdbook-v0.4.27-x86_64-unknown-linux-gnu.tar.gz | tar -xz --directory=./mdbook
echo `pwd`/mdbook >> $GITHUB_PATH
- name: Deploy GitHub Pages
run: |
cd docs/book
mdbook build
git worktree add gh-pages
git config user.name "Deploy book from CI"
git config user.email ""
cd gh-pages
# Delete the ref to avoid keeping history.
git update-ref -d refs/heads/gh-pages
rm -rf *
mv ../book/* .
git add .
git commit -m "Deploy book $GITHUB_SHA to gh-pages"
git push --force --set-upstream origin gh-pages

View File

@@ -42,4 +42,4 @@ jobs:
- uses: Swatinem/rust-cache@v2
- name: Run tests with all features
run: cargo make test
run: cargo make --profile=github-actions test

View File

@@ -25,22 +25,22 @@ members = [
exclude = ["benchmarks", "examples"]
[workspace.package]
version = "0.2.3"
version = "0.2.5"
[workspace.dependencies]
leptos = { path = "./leptos", default-features = false, version = "0.2.3" }
leptos_dom = { path = "./leptos_dom", default-features = false, version = "0.2.3" }
leptos_hot_reload = { path = "./leptos_hot_reload", version = "0.2.3" }
leptos_macro = { path = "./leptos_macro", default-features = false, version = "0.2.3" }
leptos_reactive = { path = "./leptos_reactive", default-features = false, version = "0.2.3" }
leptos_server = { path = "./leptos_server", default-features = false, version = "0.2.3" }
server_fn = { path = "./server_fn", default-features = false, version = "0.2.3" }
server_fn_macro = { path = "./server_fn_macro", default-features = false, version = "0.2.3" }
server_fn_macro_default = { path = "./server_fn/server_fn_macro_default", default-features = false, version = "0.2.3" }
leptos_config = { path = "./leptos_config", default-features = false, version = "0.2.3" }
leptos_router = { path = "./router", version = "0.2.3" }
leptos_meta = { path = "./meta", default-feature = false, version = "0.2.3" }
leptos_integration_utils = { path = "./integrations/utils", version = "0.2.3" }
leptos = { path = "./leptos", default-features = false, version = "0.2.5" }
leptos_dom = { path = "./leptos_dom", default-features = false, version = "0.2.5" }
leptos_hot_reload = { path = "./leptos_hot_reload", version = "0.2.5" }
leptos_macro = { path = "./leptos_macro", default-features = false, version = "0.2.5" }
leptos_reactive = { path = "./leptos_reactive", default-features = false, version = "0.2.5" }
leptos_server = { path = "./leptos_server", default-features = false, version = "0.2.5" }
server_fn = { path = "./server_fn", default-features = false, version = "0.2.5" }
server_fn_macro = { path = "./server_fn_macro", default-features = false, version = "0.2.5" }
server_fn_macro_default = { path = "./server_fn/server_fn_macro_default", default-features = false, version = "0.2.5" }
leptos_config = { path = "./leptos_config", default-features = false, version = "0.2.5" }
leptos_router = { path = "./router", version = "0.2.5" }
leptos_meta = { path = "./meta", default-features = false, version = "0.2.5" }
leptos_integration_utils = { path = "./integrations/utils", version = "0.2.5" }
[profile.release]
codegen-units = 1

View File

@@ -52,6 +52,7 @@ dependencies = [
{ name = "check", path = "examples/ssr_modes" },
{ name = "check", path = "examples/ssr_modes_axum" },
{ name = "check", path = "examples/tailwind" },
{ name = "check", path = "examples/tailwind_csr_trunk" },
{ name = "check", path = "examples/todo_app_sqlite" },
{ name = "check", path = "examples/todo_app_sqlite_axum" },
{ name = "check", path = "examples/todo_app_sqlite_viz" },
@@ -73,3 +74,9 @@ dependencies = ["test-all"]
command = "cargo"
args = ["+nightly", "test-all-features"]
install_crate = "cargo-all-features"
[env]
RUSTFLAGS=""
[env.github-actions]
RUSTFLAGS="-D warnings"

View File

@@ -24,8 +24,7 @@ pub fn SimpleCounter(cx: Scope, initial_value: i32) -> impl IntoView {
let increment = move |_| set_value.update(|value| *value += 1);
// create user interfaces with the declarative `view!` macro
view! {
cx,
view! { cx,
<div>
<button on:click=clear>"Clear"</button>
<button on:click=decrement>"-1"</button>
@@ -48,21 +47,21 @@ Leptos is a full-stack, isomorphic Rust web framework leveraging fine-grained re
## What does that mean?
- **Full-stack**: Leptos can be used to build apps that run in the browser (_client-side rendering_), on the server (_server-side rendering_), or by rendering HTML on the server and then adding interactivity in the browser (_hydration_). This includes support for _HTTP streaming_ of both data (`Resource`s) and HTML (out-of-order streaming of `<Suspense/>` components.)
- **Isomorphic**: Leptos provides primitives to write isomorphic server functions, i.e., functions that can be called with the “same shape” on the client or server, but only run on the server. This means you can write your server-only logic (database requests, authentication etc.) alongside the client-side components that will consume it, and call server functions as if they were running in the browser.
- **Web**: Leptos is built on the Web platform and Web standards. The router is designed to use Web fundamentals (like links and forms) and build on top of them rather than trying to replace them.
- **Full-stack**: Leptos can be used to build apps that run in the browser (client-side rendering), on the server (server-side rendering), or by rendering HTML on the server and then adding interactivity in the browser (server-side rendering with hydration). This includes support for HTTP streaming of both data ([`Resource`s](https://docs.rs/leptos/latest/leptos/struct.Resource.html)) and HTML (out-of-order or in-order streaming of [`<Suspense/>`](https://docs.rs/leptos/latest/leptos/fn.Suspense.html) components.)
- **Isomorphic**: Leptos provides primitives to write isomorphic [server functions](https://docs.rs/leptos_server/0.2.5/leptos_server/index.html), i.e., functions that can be called with the “same shape” on the client or server, but only run on the server. This means you can write your server-only logic (database requests, authentication etc.) alongside the client-side components that will consume it, and call server functions as if they were running in the browser, without needing to create and maintain a separate REST or other API.
- **Web**: Leptos is built on the Web platform and Web standards. The [router](https://docs.rs/leptos_router/latest/leptos_router/) is designed to use Web fundamentals (like links and forms) and build on top of them rather than trying to replace them.
- **Framework**: Leptos provides most of what you need to build a modern web app: a reactive system, templating library, and a router that works on both the server and client side.
- **Fine-grained reactivity**: The entire framework is built from reactive primitives. This allows for extremely performant code with minimal overhead: when a reactive signals value changes, it can update a single text node, toggle a single class, or remove an element from the DOM without any other code running. (_So, no virtual DOM!_)
- **Fine-grained reactivity**: The entire framework is built from reactive primitives. This allows for extremely performant code with minimal overhead: when a reactive signals value changes, it can update a single text node, toggle a single class, or remove an element from the DOM without any other code running. (So, no virtual DOM overhead!)
- **Declarative**: Tell Leptos how you want the page to look, and let the framework tell the browser how to do it.
## Learn more
Here are some resources for learning more about Leptos:
- [Book](https://leptos-rs.github.io/leptos/) (work in progress)
- [Examples](https://github.com/leptos-rs/leptos/tree/main/examples)
- [API Documentation](https://docs.rs/leptos/latest/leptos/)
- [Common Bugs](https://github.com/leptos-rs/leptos/tree/main/docs/COMMON_BUGS.md) (and how to fix them!)
- Leptos Guide (in progress)
## `nightly` Note
@@ -78,7 +77,7 @@ rustup target add wasm32-unknown-unknown
If youre on `stable`, note the following:
1. You need to enable the `"stable"` flag in `Cargo.toml`: `leptos = { version = "0.1.0", features = ["stable"] }`
1. You need to enable the `"stable"` flag in `Cargo.toml`: `leptos = { version = "0.2", features = ["stable"] }`
2. `nightly` enables the function call syntax for accessing and setting signals. If youre using `stable`,
youll just call `.get()`, `.set()`, or `.update()` manually. Check out the
[`counters_stable` example](https://github.com/leptos-rs/leptos/blob/main/examples/counters_stable/src/main.rs)
@@ -86,7 +85,7 @@ If youre on `stable`, note the following:
## `cargo-leptos`
[`cargo-leptos`](https://github.com/leptos-rs/cargo-leptos) is a build tool that's designed to make it easy to build apps that run on both the client and the server, with seamless integration. The best way to get started with a real Leptos project right now is to use `cargo-leptos` and our [starter template](https://github.com/leptos-rs/start).
[`cargo-leptos`](https://github.com/leptos-rs/cargo-leptos) is a build tool that's designed to make it easy to build apps that run on both the client and the server, with seamless integration. The best way to get started with a real Leptos project right now is to use `cargo-leptos` and our starter templates for [Actix](https://github.com/leptos-rs/start) or [Axum](https://github.com/leptos-rs/start-axum).
```bash
cargo install cargo-leptos
@@ -95,13 +94,13 @@ cd [your project name]
cargo leptos watch
```
Open browser on [http://localhost:3000/](http://localhost:3000/)
Open browser to [http://localhost:3000/](http://localhost:3000/).
## FAQs
### Whats up with the name?
*Leptos* (λεπτός) is an ancient Greek word meaning “thin, light, refine, fine-grained.” To me, a classicist and not a dog owner, it evokes the lightweight reactive system that powers the framework. I've since learned the same word is at the root of the medical term “leptospirosis,” a blood infection that affects humans and animals... My bad. No dogs were harmed in the creation of this framework.
_Leptos_ (λεπτός) is an ancient Greek word meaning “thin, light, refine, fine-grained.” To me, a classicist and not a dog owner, it evokes the lightweight reactive system that powers the framework. I've since learned the same word is at the root of the medical term “leptospirosis,” a blood infection that affects humans and animals... My bad. No dogs were harmed in the creation of this framework.
### Is it production ready?
@@ -109,7 +108,7 @@ People usually mean one of three things by this question.
1. **Are the APIs stable?** i.e., will I have to rewrite my whole app from Leptos 0.1 to 0.2 to 0.3 to 0.4, or can I write it now and benefit from new features and updates as new versions come?
With 0.1 the APIs are basically settled. Were adding new features, but were very happy with where the type system and patterns have landed. I would not expect major breaking changes to your code to adapt to, for example, a 0.2.0 release.
The APIs are basically settled. Were adding new features, but were very happy with where the type system and patterns have landed. I would not expect major breaking changes to your code to adapt to future releases. The sorts of breaking changes that we discuss are things like “Oh yeah, that function should probably take `cx` as its argument...” not major changes to the way you write your application.
2. **Are there bugs?**
@@ -119,7 +118,7 @@ Yes, Im sure there are. You can see from the state of our issue tracker over
This may be the big one: “production ready” implies a certain orientation to a library: that you can basically use it, without any special knowledge of its internals or ability to contribute. Everyone has this at some level in their stack: for example I (@gbj) dont have the capacity or knowledge to contribute to something like `wasm-bindgen` at this point: I simply rely on it to work.
There are several people in this community using Leptos right now for internal apps at work, who have also become significant contributors. I think this is the right level of production use for now. There may be missing features that you need, and you may end up building them! But for internal apps, if youre willing to build and contribute missing pieces along the way, the framework is definitely usable right now.
There are several people in the community using Leptos right now for internal apps at work, who have also become significant contributors. I think this is the right level of production use for now. There may be missing features that you need, and you may end up building them! But for internal apps, if youre willing to build and contribute missing pieces along the way, the framework is definitely usable right now.
### Can I use this for native GUI?
@@ -137,8 +136,8 @@ I've put together a [very simple GTK example](https://github.com/leptos-rs/lepto
On the surface level, these libraries may seem similar. Yew is, of course, the most mature Rust library for web UI development and has a huge ecosystem. Dioxus is similar in many ways, being heavily inspired by React. Here are some conceptual differences between Leptos and these frameworks:
- **VDOM vs. fine-grained:** Yew is built on the virtual DOM (VDOM) model: state changes cause components to re-render, generating a new virtual DOM tree. Yew diffs this against the previous VDOM, and applies those patches to the actual DOM. Component functions rerun whenever state changes. Leptos takes an entirely different approach. Components run once, creating (and returning) actual DOM nodes and setting up a reactive system to update those DOM nodes.
- **Performance:** This has huge performance implications: Leptos is simply _much_ faster at both creating and updating the UI than Yew is.
- **Mental model:** Adopting fine-grained reactivity also tends to simplify the mental model. There are no surprising component re-renders because there are no re-renders. Your app can be divided into components based on what makes sense for your app, because they have no performance implications.
- **Performance:** This has huge performance implications: Leptos is simply much faster at both creating and updating the UI than Yew is. (Dioxus has made huge advances in performance with its recent 0.3 release, and is now roughly on par with Leptos.)
- **Mental model:** Adopting fine-grained reactivity also tends to simplify the mental model. There are no surprising component re-renders because there are no re-renders. You can call functions, create timeouts, etc. within the body of your component functions because they wont be re-run. You dont need to think about manual dependency tracking for effects; fine-grained reactivity tracks dependencies automatically.
### How is this different from Sycamore?
@@ -146,9 +145,9 @@ Conceptually, these two frameworks are very similar: because both are built on f
There are some practical differences that make a significant difference:
- **Maturity:** Sycamore is obviously a much more mature and stable library with a larger ecosystem.
- **Templating:** Leptos uses a JSX-like template format (built on [syn-rsx](https://github.com/stoically/syn-rsx)) for its `view` macro. Sycamore offers the choice of its own templating DSL or a builder syntax.
- **Read-write segregation:** Leptos, like Solid, encourages read-write segregation between signal getters and setters, so you end up accessing signals with tuples like `let (count, set_count) = create_signal(cx, 0);` _(If you prefer or if it's more convenient for your API, you can use `create_rw_signal` to give a unified read/write signal.)_
- **Server integration:** Leptos provides primitives that encourage HTML streaming and allow for easy async integration and RPC calls, even without WASM enabled, making it easy to opt into integrations between your frontend and backend code without pushing you toward any particular metaframework patterns.
- **Read-write segregation:** Leptos, like Solid, encourages read-write segregation between signal getters and setters, so you end up accessing signals with tuples like `let (count, set_count) = create_signal(cx, 0);` _(If you prefer or if it's more convenient for your API, you can use [`create_rw_signal`](https://docs.rs/leptos/latest/leptos/fn.create_rw_signal.html) to give a unified read/write signal.)_
- **Signals are functions:** In Leptos, you can call a signal to access it rather than calling a specific method (so, `count()` instead of `count.get()`) This creates a more consistent mental model: accessing a reactive value is always a matter of calling a function. For example:
```rust

View File

@@ -17,15 +17,11 @@ lazy_static = "1"
log = "0.4"
strum = "0.24"
strum_macros = "0.24"
serde = { version = "1", features = ["derive", "rc"]}
serde = { version = "1", features = ["derive", "rc"] }
serde_json = "1"
tera = "1"
reactive-signals = "0.1.0-alpha.4"
[dependencies.web-sys]
version = "0.3"
features = [
"Window",
"Document",
"HtmlElement",
"HtmlInputElement"
]
features = ["Window", "Document", "HtmlElement", "HtmlInputElement"]

View File

@@ -2,6 +2,6 @@
extern crate test;
mod reactive;
//åmod reactive;
//mod ssr;
//mod todomvc;
mod todomvc;

View File

@@ -162,6 +162,77 @@ fn leptos_scope_creation_and_disposal(b: &mut Bencher) {
runtime.dispose();
}
#[bench]
fn rs_deep_update(b: &mut Bencher) {
use reactive_signals::{Scope, Signal, signal, runtimes::ClientRuntime, types::Func};
let sc = ClientRuntime::new_root_scope();
b.iter(|| {
let signal = signal!(sc, 0);
let mut memos = Vec::<Signal<Func<i32>, ClientRuntime>>::new();
for i in 0..1000usize {
let prev = memos.get(i.saturating_sub(1)).copied();
if let Some(prev) = prev {
memos.push(signal!(sc, move || prev.get() + 1))
} else {
memos.push(signal!(sc, move || signal.get() + 1))
}
}
signal.set(1);
assert_eq!(memos[999].get(), 1001);
});
}
#[bench]
fn rs_fanning_out(b: &mut Bencher) {
use reactive_signals::{Scope, Signal, signal, runtimes::ClientRuntime, types::Func};
let cx = ClientRuntime::new_root_scope();
b.iter(|| {
let sig = signal!(cx, 0);
let memos = (0..1000)
.map(|_| signal!(cx, move || sig.get()))
.collect::<Vec<_>>();
assert_eq!(memos.iter().map(|m| m.get()).sum::<i32>(), 0);
sig.set(1);
assert_eq!(memos.iter().map(|m| m.get()).sum::<i32>(), 1000);
});
}
#[bench]
fn rs_narrowing_update(b: &mut Bencher) {
use reactive_signals::{Scope, Signal, signal, runtimes::ClientRuntime, types::Func};
let cx = ClientRuntime::new_root_scope();
b.iter(|| {
let acc = Rc::new(Cell::new(0));
let sigs =
(0..1000).map(|n| signal!(cx, n)).collect::<Vec<_>>();
let memo = signal!(cx, {
let sigs = sigs.clone();
move || {
sigs.iter().map(|r| r.get()).sum::<i32>()
}
});
assert_eq!(memo.get(), 499500);
signal!(cx, {
let acc = Rc::clone(&acc);
move || {
acc.set(memo.get());
}
});
assert_eq!(acc.get(), 499500);
sigs[1].update(|n| *n += 1);
sigs[10].update(|n| *n += 1);
sigs[100].update(|n| *n += 1);
assert_eq!(acc.get(), 499503);
assert_eq!(memo.get(), 499503);
});
}
#[bench]
fn l021_deep_creation(b: &mut Bencher) {
use l021::*;

View File

@@ -4,7 +4,7 @@ use test::Bencher;
fn leptos_ssr_bench(b: &mut Bencher) {
b.iter(|| {
use leptos::*;
HydrationCtx::reset_id();
leptos_dom::HydrationCtx::reset_id();
_ = create_scope(create_runtime(), |cx| {
#[component]
fn Counter(cx: Scope, initial: i32) -> impl IntoView {
@@ -32,7 +32,8 @@ fn leptos_ssr_bench(b: &mut Bencher) {
assert_eq!(
rendered,
"<main id=\"_0-1\"><h1 id=\"_0-2\">Welcome to our benchmark page.</h1><p id=\"_0-3\">Here's some introductory text.</p><div id=\"_0-3-1\"><button id=\"_0-3-2\">-1</button><span id=\"_0-3-3\">Value: <!>1<!--hk=_0-3-4-->!</span><button id=\"_0-3-5\">+1</button></div><!--hk=_0-3-0--><div id=\"_0-3-5-1\"><button id=\"_0-3-5-2\">-1</button><span id=\"_0-3-5-3\">Value: <!>2<!--hk=_0-3-5-4-->!</span><button id=\"_0-3-5-5\">+1</button></div><!--hk=_0-3-5-0--><div id=\"_0-3-5-5-1\"><button id=\"_0-3-5-5-2\">-1</button><span id=\"_0-3-5-5-3\">Value: <!>3<!--hk=_0-3-5-5-4-->!</span><button id=\"_0-3-5-5-5\">+1</button></div><!--hk=_0-3-5-5-0--></main>" );
"<main id=\"_0-1\"><h1 id=\"_0-2\">Welcome to our benchmark page.</h1><p id=\"_0-3\">Here&#x27;s some introductory text.</p><div id=\"_0-3-1\"><button id=\"_0-3-2\">-1</button><span id=\"_0-3-3\">Value: <!>1<!--hk=_0-3-4-->!</span><button id=\"_0-3-5\">+1</button></div><!--hk=_0-3-0--><div id=\"_0-3-5-1\"><button id=\"_0-3-5-2\">-1</button><span id=\"_0-3-5-3\">Value: <!>2<!--hk=_0-3-5-4-->!</span><button id=\"_0-3-5-5\">+1</button></div><!--hk=_0-3-5-0--><div id=\"_0-3-5-5-1\"><button id=\"_0-3-5-5-2\">-1</button><span id=\"_0-3-5-5-3\">Value: <!>3<!--hk=_0-3-5-5-4-->!</span><button id=\"_0-3-5-5-5\">+1</button></div><!--hk=_0-3-5-5-0--></main>"
);
});
});
}

View File

@@ -1,6 +1,7 @@
pub use leptos::*;
use miniserde::*;
use web_sys::HtmlInputElement;
use wasm_bindgen::JsCast;
#[derive(Debug, Clone, PartialEq, Eq)]
pub struct Todos(pub Vec<Todo>);
@@ -110,10 +111,6 @@ pub fn TodoMVC(cx: Scope, todos: Todos) -> impl IntoView {
provide_context(cx, set_todos);
let (mode, set_mode) = create_signal(cx, Mode::All);
window_event_listener("hashchange", move |_| {
let new_mode = location_hash().map(|hash| route(&hash)).unwrap_or_default();
set_mode(new_mode);
});
let add_todo = move |ev: web_sys::KeyboardEvent| {
let target = event_target::<HtmlInputElement>(&ev);
@@ -167,57 +164,79 @@ pub fn TodoMVC(cx: Scope, todos: Todos) -> impl IntoView {
});
view! { cx,
<main>
<section class="todoapp">
<header class="header">
<h1>"todos"</h1>
<input class="new-todo" placeholder="What needs to be done?" autofocus="" on:keydown=add_todo />
</header>
<section class="main" class:hidden={move || todos.with(|t| t.is_empty())}>
<input id="toggle-all" class="toggle-all" type="checkbox"
prop:checked={move || todos.with(|t| t.remaining() > 0)}
on:input=move |_| set_todos.update(|t| t.toggle_all())
/>
<label for="toggle-all">"Mark all as complete"</label>
<ul class="todo-list">
<For
each=filtered_todos
key=|todo| todo.id
view=move |todo: Todo| view! { cx, <Todo todo=todo.clone() /> }
/>
</ul>
</section>
<footer class="footer" class:hidden={move || todos.with(|t| t.is_empty())}>
<span class="todo-count">
<strong>{move || todos.with(|t| t.remaining().to_string())}</strong>
{move || if todos.with(|t| t.remaining()) == 1 {
" item"
} else {
" items"
}}
" left"
</span>
<ul class="filters">
<li><a href="#/" class="selected" class:selected={move || mode() == Mode::All}>"All"</a></li>
<li><a href="#/active" class:selected={move || mode() == Mode::Active}>"Active"</a></li>
<li><a href="#/completed" class:selected={move || mode() == Mode::Completed}>"Completed"</a></li>
</ul>
<button
class="clear-completed hidden"
class:hidden={move || todos.with(|t| t.completed() == 0)}
on:click=move |_| set_todos.update(|t| t.clear_completed())
>
"Clear completed"
</button>
</footer>
</section>
<footer class="info">
<p>"Double-click to edit a todo"</p>
<p>"Created by "<a href="http://todomvc.com">"Greg Johnston"</a></p>
<p>"Part of "<a href="http://todomvc.com">"TodoMVC"</a></p>
</footer>
</main>
}.into_view(cx)
<main>
<section class="todoapp">
<header class="header">
<h1>"todos"</h1>
<input
class="new-todo"
placeholder="What needs to be done?"
autofocus=""
on:keydown=add_todo
/>
</header>
<section class="main" class:hidden=move || todos.with(|t| t.is_empty())>
<input
id="toggle-all"
class="toggle-all"
type="checkbox"
prop:checked=move || todos.with(|t| t.remaining() > 0)
on:input=move |_| set_todos.update(|t| t.toggle_all())
/>
<label for="toggle-all">"Mark all as complete"</label>
<ul class="todo-list">
<For
each=filtered_todos
key=|todo| todo.id
view=move |cx, todo: Todo| {
view! { cx, <Todo todo=todo.clone()/> }
}
/>
</ul>
</section>
<footer class="footer" class:hidden=move || todos.with(|t| t.is_empty())>
<span class="todo-count">
<strong>{move || todos.with(|t| t.remaining().to_string())}</strong>
{move || if todos.with(|t| t.remaining()) == 1 { " item" } else { " items" }}
" left"
</span>
<ul class="filters">
<li>
<a
href="#/"
class="selected"
class:selected=move || mode() == Mode::All
>
"All"
</a>
</li>
<li>
<a href="#/active" class:selected=move || mode() == Mode::Active>
"Active"
</a>
</li>
<li>
<a href="#/completed" class:selected=move || mode() == Mode::Completed>
"Completed"
</a>
</li>
</ul>
<button
class="clear-completed hidden"
class:hidden=move || todos.with(|t| t.completed() == 0)
on:click=move |_| set_todos.update(|t| t.clear_completed())
>
"Clear completed"
</button>
</footer>
</section>
<footer class="info">
<p>"Double-click to edit a todo"</p>
<p>"Created by " <a href="http://todomvc.com">"Greg Johnston"</a></p>
<p>"Part of " <a href="http://todomvc.com">"TodoMVC"</a></p>
</footer>
</main>
}.into_view(cx)
}
#[component]
@@ -237,41 +256,36 @@ pub fn Todo(cx: Scope, todo: Todo) -> impl IntoView {
};
view! { cx,
<li
class="todo"
class:editing={editing}
class:completed={move || (todo.completed)()}
//_ref=input
>
<li class="todo" class:editing=editing class:completed=move || (todo.completed)()>
<div class="view">
<input
class="toggle"
type="checkbox"
prop:checked={move || (todo.completed)()}
/>
<label on:dblclick=move |_| set_editing(true)>
{move || todo.title.get()}
</label>
<button class="destroy" on:click=move |_| set_todos.update(|t| t.remove(todo.id))/>
<input class="toggle" type="checkbox" prop:checked=move || (todo.completed)()/>
<label on:dblclick=move |_| set_editing(true)>{move || todo.title.get()}</label>
<button
class="destroy"
on:click=move |_| set_todos.update(|t| t.remove(todo.id))
></button>
</div>
{move || editing().then(|| view! { cx,
<input
class="edit"
class:hidden={move || !(editing)()}
prop:value={move || todo.title.get()}
on:focusout=move |ev| save(&event_target_value(&ev))
on:keyup={move |ev| {
let key_code = ev.unchecked_ref::<web_sys::KeyboardEvent>().key_code();
if key_code == ENTER_KEY {
save(&event_target_value(&ev));
} else if key_code == ESCAPE_KEY {
set_editing(false);
{move || {
editing()
.then(|| {
view! { cx,
<input
class="edit"
class:hidden=move || !(editing)()
prop:value=move || todo.title.get()
on:focusout=move |ev| save(&event_target_value(&ev))
on:keyup=move |ev| {
let key_code = ev.unchecked_ref::<web_sys::KeyboardEvent>().key_code();
if key_code == ENTER_KEY {
save(&event_target_value(&ev));
} else if key_code == ESCAPE_KEY {
set_editing(false);
}
}
/>
}
}}
/>
})
}
})
}}
</li>
}
}

View File

@@ -7,19 +7,15 @@ mod yew;
#[bench]
fn leptos_todomvc_ssr(b: &mut Bencher) {
use ::leptos::*;
let runtime = create_runtime();
b.iter(|| {
use crate::todomvc::leptos::*;
_ = create_scope(create_runtime(), |cx| {
let rendered = view! {
cx,
<TodoMVC todos=Todos::new(cx)/>
}
.into_view(cx)
.render_to_string(cx);
assert!(rendered.len() > 1);
let html = ::leptos::ssr::render_to_string(|cx| {
view! { cx, <TodoMVC todos=Todos::new(cx)/> }
});
assert!(html.len() > 1);
});
}
@@ -57,21 +53,20 @@ fn yew_todomvc_ssr(b: &mut Bencher) {
});
});
}
/*
#[bench]
fn leptos_todomvc_ssr_with_1000(b: &mut Bencher) {
b.iter(|| {
use self::leptos::*;
use ::leptos::*;
_ = create_scope(create_runtime(), |cx| {
let rendered = view! {
let html = ::leptos::ssr::render_to_string(|cx| {
view! {
cx,
<TodoMVC todos=Todos::new_with_1000(cx)/>
}.into_view(cx).render_to_string(cx);
assert!(rendered.len() > 1);
}
});
assert!(html.len() > 1);
});
}
@@ -108,5 +103,4 @@ fn yew_todomvc_ssr_with_1000(b: &mut Bencher) {
assert!(rendered.len() > 1);
});
});
}
*/
}

View File

@@ -174,4 +174,4 @@ fn tera_todomvc_1000(b: &mut Bencher) {
let _ = TERA.render("template.html", &ctx).unwrap();
});
}
}

View File

@@ -61,3 +61,19 @@ view! {
<input prop:value=a on:input=on_input />
}
```
## Build configuration
### Cargo feature resolution in workspaces
A new [version](https://doc.rust-lang.org/cargo/reference/resolver.html#resolver-versions) of Cargo's feature resolver was introduced for the 2021 edition of Rust.
For single crate projects it will select a resolver version based on the Rust edition in `Cargo.toml`. As there is no Rust edition present for `Cargo.toml` in a workspace, Cargo will default to the pre 2021 edition resolver.
This can cause issues resulting in non WASM compatible code being built for a WASM target. Seeing `mio` failing to build is often a sign that none WASM compatible code is being included in the build.
The resolver version can be set in the workspace `Cargo.toml` to remedy this issue.
```toml
[workspace]
members = ["member1", "member2"]
resolver = "2"
```

View File

@@ -60,7 +60,7 @@ Your directory structure should now look something like this
leptos_tutorial
├── src
│ └── main.rs
├── Cargo.html
├── Cargo.toml
├── index.html
```

View File

@@ -107,4 +107,6 @@ create_effect(cx, move |prev_value| {
Every time `count` is updated, this effect wil rerun. This is what allows reactive, fine-grained updates to the DOM.
<iframe src="https://codesandbox.io/p/sandbox/serene-thompson-40974n?file=%2Fsrc%2Fmain.rs&selection=%5B%7B%22endColumn%22%3A1%2C%22endLineNumber%22%3A2%2C%22startColumn%22%3A1%2C%22startLineNumber%22%3A2%7D%5D" width="100%" height="1000px"></iframe>
[Click to open CodeSandbox.](https://codesandbox.io/p/sandbox/serene-thompson-40974n?file=%2Fsrc%2Fmain.rs&selection=%5B%7B%22endColumn%22%3A1%2C%22endLineNumber%22%3A2%2C%22startColumn%22%3A1%2C%22startLineNumber%22%3A2%7D%5D)
<iframe src="https://codesandbox.io/p/sandbox/serene-thompson-40974n?file=%2Fsrc%2Fmain.rs&selection=%5B%7B%22endColumn%22%3A1%2C%22endLineNumber%22%3A2%2C%22startColumn%22%3A1%2C%22startLineNumber%22%3A2%7D%5D" width="100%" height="1000px" style="max-height: 100vh"></iframe>

View File

@@ -84,7 +84,7 @@ fn FancyMath(cx: Scope) -> impl IntoView {
This kind of “provide a signal in a parent, consume it in a child” should be familiar
from the chapter on [parent-child interactions](./view/08_parent_child.md). The same
pattern you use to communicate between parents and children works for grandparents and
grandchildren, or any ancestors and descendents: in other words, between “global” state
grandchildren, or any ancestors and descendants: in other words, between “global” state
in the root component of your app and any other components anywhere else in the app.
Because of the fine-grained nature of updates, this is usually all you need. However,
@@ -122,6 +122,7 @@ fn App(cx: Scope) -> impl IntoView {
provide_context(cx, state);
// ...
}
```
Then child components can access “slices” of that state with fine-grained
@@ -168,4 +169,6 @@ somewhere else that only takes `state.name`, clicking the button wont cause
that other slice to update. This allows you to combine the benefits of a top-down
data flow and of fine-grained reactive updates.
<iframe src="https://codesandbox.io/p/sandbox/1-basic-component-forked-8bte19?selection=%5B%7B%22endColumn%22%3A1%2C%22endLineNumber%22%3A2%2C%22startColumn%22%3A1%2C%22startLineNumber%22%3A2%7D%5D&file=%2Fsrc%2Fmain.rs" width="100%" height="1000px">
[Click to open CodeSandbox.](https://codesandbox.io/p/sandbox/1-basic-component-forked-8bte19?selection=%5B%7B%22endColumn%22%3A1%2C%22endLineNumber%22%3A2%2C%22startColumn%22%3A1%2C%22startLineNumber%22%3A2%7D%5D&file=%2Fsrc%2Fmain.rs)
<iframe src="https://codesandbox.io/p/sandbox/1-basic-component-forked-8bte19?selection=%5B%7B%22endColumn%22%3A1%2C%22endLineNumber%22%3A2%2C%22startColumn%22%3A1%2C%22startLineNumber%22%3A2%7D%5D&file=%2Fsrc%2Fmain.rs" width="100%" height="1000px" style="max-height: 100vh">

View File

@@ -21,11 +21,12 @@
- [Actions](./async/13_actions.md)
- [Responding to Changes with `create_effect`](./14_create_effect.md)
- [Global State Management](./15_global_state.md)
- [Router]()
- [Fundamentals]()
- [defining `<Routes/>`]()
- [`<A/>`]()
- [`<Form/>`]()
- [Router](./router/README.md)
- [Defining `<Routes/>`](./router/16_routes.md)
- [Nested Routing](./router/17_nested_routing.md)
- [Params and Queries](./router/18_params_and_queries.md)
- [`<A/>`](./router/19_a.md)
- [`<Form/>`](./router/20_form.md)
- [Interlude: Styling — CSS, Tailwind, Style.rs, and more]()
- [Metadata]()
- [SSR]()
@@ -33,6 +34,9 @@
- [`cargo-leptos`]()
- [Hydration Footguns]()
- [Request/Response]()
- [Extractors]()
- [Axum]()
- [Actix]()
- [Headers]()
- [Cookies]()
- [Server Functions]()
@@ -41,3 +45,4 @@
- [`<ActionForm/>`s]()
- [Turning off WebAssembly]()
- [Advanced Reactivity]()
- [Appendix: Optimizing WASM Binary Size]()

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@@ -50,4 +50,6 @@ view! { cx,
Resources also provide a `refetch()` method that allows you to manually reload the data (for example, in response to a button click) and a `loading()` method that returns a `ReadSignal<bool>` indicating whether the resource is currently loading or not.
<iframe src="https://codesandbox.io/p/sandbox/10-async-resources-4z0qt3?file=%2Fsrc%2Fmain.rs&selection=%5B%7B%22endColumn%22%3A1%2C%22endLineNumber%22%3A3%2C%22startColumn%22%3A1%2C%22startLineNumber%22%3A3%7D%5D" width="100%" height="1000px"></iframe>
[Click to open CodeSandbox.](https://codesandbox.io/p/sandbox/10-async-resources-4z0qt3?file=%2Fsrc%2Fmain.rs&selection=%5B%7B%22endColumn%22%3A1%2C%22endLineNumber%22%3A3%2C%22startColumn%22%3A1%2C%22startLineNumber%22%3A3%7D%5D)
<iframe src="https://codesandbox.io/p/sandbox/10-async-resources-4z0qt3?file=%2Fsrc%2Fmain.rs&selection=%5B%7B%22endColumn%22%3A1%2C%22endLineNumber%22%3A3%2C%22startColumn%22%3A1%2C%22startLineNumber%22%3A3%7D%5D" width="100%" height="1000px" style="max-height: 100vh"></iframe>

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@@ -69,4 +69,6 @@ Every time one of the resources is reloading, the `"Loading..."` fallback will s
This inversion of the flow of control makes it easier to add or remove individual resources, as you dont need to handle the matching yourself. It also unlocks some massive performance improvements during server-side rendering, which well talk about during a later chapter.
<iframe src="https://codesandbox.io/p/sandbox/10-async-resources-4z0qt3?file=%2Fsrc%2Fmain.rs&selection=%5B%7B%22endColumn%22%3A1%2C%22endLineNumber%22%3A3%2C%22startColumn%22%3A1%2C%22startLineNumber%22%3A3%7D%5D" width="100%" height="1000px"></iframe>
[Click to open CodeSandbox.](https://codesandbox.io/p/sandbox/11-suspense-907niv?file=%2Fsrc%2Fmain.rs)
<iframe src="https://codesandbox.io/p/sandbox/11-suspense-907niv?file=%2Fsrc%2Fmain.rs" width="100%" height="1000px" style="max-height: 100vh"></iframe>

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@@ -4,6 +4,8 @@ Youll notice in the `<Suspense/>` example that if you keep reloading the data
`<Transition/>` behaves exactly the same as `<Suspense/>`, but instead of falling back every time, it only shows the fallback the first time. On all subsequent loads, it continues showing the old data until the new data are ready. This can be really handy to prevent the flickering effect, and to allow users to continue interacting with your application.
This example shows how you can create a simple tabbed contact list with `<Transition/>`. When you select a new tab, it continues showing the current contact until the new data laods. This can be a much better user experience than constantly falling back to a loading message.
This example shows how you can create a simple tabbed contact list with `<Transition/>`. When you select a new tab, it continues showing the current contact until the new data loads. This can be a much better user experience than constantly falling back to a loading message.
<iframe src="https://codesandbox.io/p/sandbox/12-transition-sn38sd?selection=%5B%7B%22endColumn%22%3A15%2C%22endLineNumber%22%3A2%2C%22startColumn%22%3A15%2C%22startLineNumber%22%3A2%7D%5D&file=%2Fsrc%2Fmain.rs" width="100%" height="1000px"></iframe>
[Click to open CodeSandbox.](https://codesandbox.io/p/sandbox/12-transition-sn38sd?selection=%5B%7B%22endColumn%22%3A15%2C%22endLineNumber%22%3A2%2C%22startColumn%22%3A15%2C%22startLineNumber%22%3A2%7D%5D&file=%2Fsrc%2Fmain.rs)
<iframe src="https://codesandbox.io/p/sandbox/12-transition-sn38sd?selection=%5B%7B%22endColumn%22%3A15%2C%22endLineNumber%22%3A2%2C%22startColumn%22%3A15%2C%22startLineNumber%22%3A2%7D%5D&file=%2Fsrc%2Fmain.rs" width="100%" height="1000px" style="max-height: 100vh"></iframe>

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@@ -91,4 +91,6 @@ view! { cx,
Now, theres a chance this all seems a little over-complicated, or maybe too restricted. I wanted to include actions here, alongside resources, as the missing piece of the puzzle. In a real Leptos app, youll actually most often use actions alongside server functions, [`create_server_action`](https://docs.rs/leptos/latest/leptos/fn.create_server_action.html), and the [`<ActionForm/>`](https://docs.rs/leptos_router/latest/leptos_router/fn.ActionForm.html) component to create really powerful progressively-enhanced forms. So if this primitive seems useless to you... Dont worry! Maybe it will make sense later. (Or check out our [`todo_app_sqlite`](https://github.com/leptos-rs/leptos/blob/main/examples/todo_app_sqlite/src/todo.rs) example now.)
<iframe src="https://codesandbox.io/p/sandbox/10-async-resources-forked-hgpfp0?selection=%5B%7B%22endColumn%22%3A1%2C%22endLineNumber%22%3A4%2C%22startColumn%22%3A1%2C%22startLineNumber%22%3A4%7D%5D&file=%2Fsrc%2Fmain.rs" width="100%" height="1000px"></iframe>
[Click to open CodeSandbox.](https://codesandbox.io/p/sandbox/10-async-resources-forked-hgpfp0?selection=%5B%7B%22endColumn%22%3A1%2C%22endLineNumber%22%3A4%2C%22startColumn%22%3A1%2C%22startLineNumber%22%3A4%7D%5D&file=%2Fsrc%2Fmain.rs)
<iframe src="https://codesandbox.io/p/sandbox/10-async-resources-forked-hgpfp0?selection=%5B%7B%22endColumn%22%3A1%2C%22endLineNumber%22%3A4%2C%22startColumn%22%3A1%2C%22startLineNumber%22%3A4%7D%5D&file=%2Fsrc%2Fmain.rs" width="100%" height="1000px" style="max-height: 100vh"></iframe>

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@@ -0,0 +1,101 @@
# Defining Routes
## Getting Started
Its easy to get started with the router.
First things first, make sure youve added the `leptos_router` package to your dependencies.
> Its important that the router is a separate package from `leptos` itself. This means that everything in the router can be defined in user-land code. If you want to create your own router, or use no router, youre completely free to do that!
And import the relevant types from the router, either with something like
```rust
use leptos_router::{Route, RouteProps, Router, RouterProps, Routes, RoutesProps};
```
or simply
```rust
use leptos_router::*;
```
## Providing the `<Router/>`
Routing behavior is provided by the [`<Router/>`](https://docs.rs/leptos_router/latest/leptos_router/fn.Router.html) component. This should usually be somewhere near the root of your application, the rest of the app.
> You shouldnt try to use multiple `<Router/>`s in your app. Remember that the router drives global state: if you have multiple routers, which ones decides what to do when the URL changes?
Lets start with a simple `<App/>` component using the router:
```rust
use leptos::*;
use leptos_router::*;
#[component]
pub fn App(cx: Scope) -> impl IntoView {
view! {
<Router>
<nav>
/* ... */
</nav>
<main>
/* ... */
</main>
</Router>
}
}
```
## Defining `<Routes/>`
The [`<Routes/>`](https://docs.rs/leptos_router/latest/leptos_router/fn.Routes.html) component is where you define all the routes to which a user can navigate in your application. Each possible route is defined by a [`<Route/>`](https://docs.rs/leptos_router/latest/leptos_router/fn.Route.html) component.
You should place the `<Routes/>` component at the location within your app where you want routes to be rendered. Everything outside `<Routes/>` will be present on every page, so you can leave things like a navigation bar or menu outside the `<Routes/>`.
```rust
use leptos::*;
use leptos_router::*;
#[component]
pub fn App(cx: Scope) -> impl IntoView {
view! {
<Router>
<nav>
/* ... */
</nav>
<main>
// all our routes will appear inside <main>
<Routes>
/* ... */
</Routes>
</main>
</Router>
}
}
```
Individual routes are defined by providing children to `<Routes/>` with the `<Route/>` component. `<Route/>` takes a `path` and a `view`. When the current location matches `path`, the `view` will be created and displayed.
The `path` can include
- a static path (`/users`),
- dynamic, named parameters beginning with a colon (`/:id`),
- and/or a wildcard beginning with an asterisk (`/user/*any`)
The `view` is a function that takes a `Scope` and returns a view.
```rust
<Routes>
<Route path="/" view=|cx| view! { cx, <Home/> }/>
<Route path="/users" view=|cx| view! { cx, <Users/> }/>
<Route path="/users/:id" view=|cx| view! { cx, <UserProfile/> }/>
<Route path="/*any" view=|cx| view! { cx, <NotFound/> }/>
</Routes>
```
> The router scores each route to see how good a match it is, so you can define your routes in any order.
Now if you navigate to `/` or to `/users` youll get the home page or the `<Users/>`. If you go to `/users/3` or `/blahblah` youll get a user profile or your 404 page (`<NotFound/>`). On every navigation, the router determines which `<Route/>` should be matched, and therefore what content should be displayed where the `<Routes/>` component is defined.
Simple enough?

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@@ -0,0 +1,172 @@
# Nested Routing
We just defined the following set of routes:
```rust
<Routes>
<Route path="/" view=|cx| view! { cx, <Home /> }/>
<Route path="/users" view=|cx| view! { cx, <Users /> }/>
<Route path="/users/:id" view=|cx| view! { cx, <UserProfile /> }/>
<Route path="/*any" view=|cx| view! { cx, <NotFound /> }/>
</Routes>
```
Theres a certain amount of duplication here: `/users` and `/users/:id`. This is fine for a small app, but you can probably already tell it wont scale well. Wouldnt it be nice if we could nest these routes?
Well... you can!
```rust
<Routes>
<Route path="/" view=|cx| view! { cx, <Home /> }/>
<Route path="/users" view=|cx| view! { cx, <Users /> }>
<Route path=":id" view=|cx| view! { cx, <UserProfile /> }/>
</Route>
<Route path="/*any" view=|cx| view! { cx, <NotFound /> }/>
</Routes>
```
But wait. Weve just subtly changed what our application does.
The next section is one of the most important in this entire routing section of the guide. Read it carefully, and feel free to ask questions if theres anything you dont understand.
# Nested Routes as Layout
Nested routes are a form of layout, not a method of route definition.
Let me put that another way: The goal of defining nested routes is not primarily to avoid repeating yourself when typing out the paths in your route definitions. It is actually to tell the router to display multiple `<Route/>`s on the page at the same time, side by side.
Lets look back at our practical example.
```rust
<Routes>
<Route path="/users" view=|cx| view! { cx, <Users /> }/>
<Route path="/users/:id" view=|cx| view! { cx, <UserProfile /> }/>
</Routes>
```
This means:
- If I go to `/users`, I get the `<Users/>` component.
- If I go to `/users/3`, I get the `<UserProfile/>` component (with the parameter `id` set to `3`; more on that later)
Lets say I use nested routes instead:
```rust
<Routes>
<Route path="/users" view=|cx| view! { cx, <Users /> }>
<Route path=":id" view=|cx| view! { cx, <UserProfile /> }/>
</Route>
</Routes>
```
This means:
- If I go to `/users/3`, the path matches two `<Route/>`s: `<Users/>` and `<UserProfile/>`.
- If I go to `/users`, the path is not matched.
I actually need to add a fallback route
```rust
<Routes>
<Route path="/users" view=|cx| view! { cx, <Users /> }>
<Route path=":id" view=|cx| view! { cx, <UserProfile /> }/>
<Route path="" view=|cx| view! { cx, <NoUser /> }/>
</Route>
</Routes>
```
Now:
- If I go to `/users/3`, the path matches `<Users/>` and `<UserProfile/>`.
- If I go to `/users`, the path matches `<Users/>` and `<NoUser/>`.
When I use nested routes, in other words, each **path** can match multiple **routes**: each URL can render the views provided by multiple `<Route/>` components, at the same time, on the same page.
This may be counter-intuitive, but its very powerful, for reasons youll hopefully see in a few minutes.
## Why Nested Routing?
Why bother with this?
Most web applications contain levels of navigation that correspond to different parts of the layout. For example, in an email app you might have a URL like `/contacts/greg`, which shows a list of contacts on the left of the screen, and contact details for Greg on the right of the screen. The contact list and the contact details should always appear on the screen at the same time. If theres no contact selected, maybe you want to show a little instructional text.
You can easily define this with nested routes
```rust
<Routes>
<Route path="/contacts" view=|cx| view! { cx, <ContactList/> }>
<Route path=":id" view=|cx| view! { cx, <ContactInfo/> }/>
<Route path="" view=|cx| view! { cx,
<p>"Select a contact to view more info."</p>
}/>
</Route>
</Routes>
```
You can go even deeper. Say you want to have tabs for each contacts address, email/phone, and your conversations with them. You can add _another_ set of nested routes inside `:id`:
```rust
<Routes>
<Route path="/contacts" view=|cx| view! { cx, <ContactList/> }>
<Route path=":id" view=|cx| view! { cx, <ContactInfo/> }>
<Route path="" view=|cx| view! { cx, <EmailAndPhone/> }/>
<Route path="address" view=|cx| view! { cx, <Address/> }/>
<Route path="messages" view=|cx| view! { cx, <Messages/> }/>
</Route>
<Route path="" view=|cx| view! { cx,
<p>"Select a contact to view more info."</p>
}/>
</Route>
</Routes>
```
> The main page of the [Remix website](https://remix.run/), a React framework from the creators of React Router, has a great visual example if you scroll down, with three levels of nested routing: Sales > Invoices > an invoice.
## `<Outlet/>`
Parent routes do not automatically render their nested routes. After all, they are just components; they dont know exactly where they should render their children, and “just stick at at the end of the parent component” is not a great answer.
Instead, you tell a parent component where to render any nested components with an `<Outlet/>` component. The `<Outlet/>` simply renders one of two things:
- if there is no nested route that has been matched, it shows nothing
- if there is a nested route that has been matched, it shows its `view`
Thats all! But its important to know and to remember, because its a common source of “Why isnt this working?” frustration. If you dont provide an `<Outlet/>`, the nested route wont be displayed.
```rust
#[component]
pub fn ContactList(cx: Scope) -> impl IntoView {
let contacts = todo!();
view! { cx,
<div style="display: flex">
// the contact list
<For each=contacts
key=|contact| contact.id
view=|cx, contact| todo!()
>
// the nested child, if any
// dont forget this!
<Outlet/>
</div>
}
}
```
## Nested Routing and Performance
All of this is nice, conceptually, but again—whats the big deal?
Performance.
In a fine-grained reactive library like Leptos, its always important to do the least amount of rendering work you can. Because were working with real DOM nodes and not diffing a virtual DOM, we want to “rerender” components as infrequently as possible. Nested routing makes this extremely easy.
Imagine my contact list example. If I navigate from Greg to Alice to Bob and back to Greg, the contact information needs to change on each navigation. But the `<ContactList/>` should never be rerendered. Not only does this save on rendering performance, it also maintains state in the UI. For example, if I have a search bar at the top of `<ContactList/>`, navigating from Greg to Alice to Bob wont clear the search.
In fact, in this case, we dont even need to rerender the `<Contact/>` component when moving between contacts. The router will just reactively update the `:id` parameter as we navigate, allowing us to make fine-grained updates. As we navigate between contacts, well update single text nodes to change the contacts name, address, and so on, without doing _any_ additional rerendering.
> This sandbox includes a couple features (like nested routing) discussed in this section and the previous one, and a couple well cover in the rest of this chapter. The router is such an integrated system that it makes sense to provide a single example, so dont be surprised if theres anything you dont understand.
[Click to open CodeSandbox.](https://codesandbox.io/p/sandbox/16-router-fy4tjv?file=%2Fsrc%2Fmain.rs&selection=%5B%7B%22endColumn%22%3A1%2C%22endLineNumber%22%3A3%2C%22startColumn%22%3A1%2C%22startLineNumber%22%3A3%7D%5D)
<iframe src="https://codesandbox.io/p/sandbox/16-router-fy4tjv?file=%2Fsrc%2Fmain.rs&selection=%5B%7B%22endColumn%22%3A1%2C%22endLineNumber%22%3A3%2C%22startColumn%22%3A1%2C%22startLineNumber%22%3A3%7D%5D" width="100%" height="1000px" style="max-height: 100vh"></iframe>

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# Params and Queries
Static paths are useful for distinguishing between different pages, but almost every application wants to pass data through the URL at some point.
There are two ways you can do this:
1. named route **params** like `id` in `/users/:id`
2. named route **queries** like `q` in `/search?q=Foo`
Because of the way URLs are built, you can access the query from _any_ `<Route/>` view. You can access route params from the `<Route/>` that defines them or any of its nested children.
Accessing params and queries is pretty simple with a couple of hooks:
- [`use_query`](https://docs.rs/leptos_router/latest/leptos_router/fn.use_query.html) or [`use_query_map`](https://docs.rs/leptos_router/latest/leptos_router/fn.use_query_map.html)
- [`use_params`](https://docs.rs/leptos_router/latest/leptos_router/fn.use_params.html) or [`use_params_map`](https://docs.rs/leptos_router/latest/leptos_router/fn.use_query_map.html)
Each of these comes with a typed option (`use_query` and `use_params`) and an untyped option (`use_query_map` and `use_params_map`).
The untyped versions hold a simple key-value map. To use the typed versions, derive the [`Params`](https://docs.rs/leptos_router/0.2.3/leptos_router/trait.Params.html) trait on a struct.
> `Params` is a very lightweight trait to convert a flat key-value map of strings into a struct by applying `FromStr` to each field. Because of the flat structure of route params and URL queries, its significantly less flexible than something like `serde`; it also adds much less weight to your binary.
```rust
use leptos::*;
use leptos_router::*;
#[derive(Params)]
struct ContactParams {
id: usize
}
#[derive(Params)]
struct ContactSearch {
q: String
}
```
> Note: The `Params` derive macro is located at `leptos::Params`, and the `Params` trait is at `leptos_router::Params`. If you avoid using glob imports like `use leptos::*;`, make sure youre importing the right one for the derive macro.
Now we can use them in a component. Imagine a URL that has both params and a query, like `/contacts/:id?q=Search`.
The typed versions return `Memo<Result<T>, _>`. Its a Memo so it reacts to changes in the URL. Its a `Result` because the params or query need to be parsed from the URL, and may or may not be valid.
```rust
let params = use_params::<ContactParams>(cx);
let query = use_query::<ContactSearch>(cx);
// id: || -> usize
let id = move || {
params.with(|params| {
params
.map(|params| params.id)
.unwrap_or_default()
})
};
```
The untyped versions return `Memo<ParamsMap>`. Again, its memo to react to changes in the URL. [`ParamsMap`](https://docs.rs/leptos_router/0.2.3/leptos_router/struct.ParamsMap.html) behaves a lot like any other map type, with a `.get()` method that returns `Option<&String>`.
```rust
let params = use_params_map(cx);
let query = use_query_map(cx);
// id: || -> Option<String>
let id = move || {
params.with(|params| params.get("id").cloned())
};
```
This can get a little messy: deriving a signal that wraps an `Option<_>` or `Result<_>` can involve a couple steps. But its worth doing this for two reasons:
1. Its correct, i.e., it forces you to consider the cases, “What if the user doesnt pass a value for this query field? What if they pass an invalid value?”
2. Its performant. Specifically, when you navigate between different paths that match the same `<Route/>` with only params or the query changing, you can get fine-grained updates to different parts of your app without rerendering. For example, navigating between different contacts in our contact-list example does a targeted update to the name field (and eventually contact info) without needing to replacing or rerender the wrapping `<Contact/>`. This is what fine-grained reactivity is for.
> This is the same example from the previous section. The router is such an integrated system that it makes sense to provide a single example highlighting multiple features, even if we havent explain them all yet.
[Click to open CodeSandbox.](https://codesandbox.io/p/sandbox/16-router-fy4tjv?file=%2Fsrc%2Fmain.rs&selection=%5B%7B%22endColumn%22%3A1%2C%22endLineNumber%22%3A3%2C%22startColumn%22%3A1%2C%22startLineNumber%22%3A3%7D%5D)
<iframe src="https://codesandbox.io/p/sandbox/16-router-fy4tjv?file=%2Fsrc%2Fmain.rs&selection=%5B%7B%22endColumn%22%3A1%2C%22endLineNumber%22%3A3%2C%22startColumn%22%3A1%2C%22startLineNumber%22%3A3%7D%5D" width="100%" height="1000px" style="max-height: 100vh"></iframe>

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# The `<A/>` Component
Client-side navigation works perfectly fine with ordinary HTML `<a>` elements. The router adds a listener that handles every click on a `<a>` element and tries to handle it on the client side, i.e., without doing another round trip to the server to request HTML. This is what enables the snappy “single-page app” navigations youre probably familiar with from most modern web apps.
The router will bail out of handling an `<a>` click under a number of situations
- the click event has had `prevent_default()` called on it
- the <kbd>Meta</kbd>, <kbd>Alt</kbd>, <kbd>Ctrl</kbd>, or <kbd>Shift</kbd> keys were held during click
- the `<a>` has a `target` or `download` attribute, or `rel="external"`
- the link has a different origin from the current location
In other words, the router will only try to do a client-side navigation when its pretty sure it can handle it, and it will upgrade every `<a>` element to get this special behavior.
The router also provides an [`<A>`](https://docs.rs/leptos_router/latest/leptos_router/fn.A.html) component, which does two additional things:
1. Correctly resolves relative nested routes. Relative routing with ordinary `<a>` tags can be tricky. For example, if you have a route like `/post/:id`, `<A href="1">` will generate the correct relative route, but `<a href="1">` likely will not (depending on where it appears in your view.) `<A/>` resolves routes relative to the path of the nested route within which it appears.
2. Sets the `aria-current` attribute to `page` if this link is the active link (i.e., its a link to the page youre on). This is helpful for accessibility and for styling. For example, if you want to set the link a different color if its a link to the page youre currently on, you can match this attribute with a CSS selector.
> Once again, this is the same example. Check out the relative `<A/>` components, and take a look at the CSS in `index.html` to see the ARIA-based styling.
[Click to open CodeSandbox.](https://codesandbox.io/p/sandbox/16-router-fy4tjv?file=%2Fsrc%2Fmain.rs&selection=%5B%7B%22endColumn%22%3A1%2C%22endLineNumber%22%3A3%2C%22startColumn%22%3A1%2C%22startLineNumber%22%3A3%7D%5D)
<iframe src="https://codesandbox.io/p/sandbox/16-router-fy4tjv?file=%2Fsrc%2Fmain.rs&selection=%5B%7B%22endColumn%22%3A1%2C%22endLineNumber%22%3A3%2C%22startColumn%22%3A1%2C%22startLineNumber%22%3A3%7D%5D" width="100%" height="1000px" style="max-height: 100vh"></iframe>

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# The `<Form/>` Component
Links and forms sometimes seem completely unrelated. But in fact, they work in very similar ways.
In plain HTML, there are three ways to navigate to another page:
1. An `<a>` element that links to another page. Navigates to the URL in its `href` attribute with the `GET` HTTP method.
2. A `<form method="GET">`. Navigates to the URL in its `action` attribute with the `GET` HTTP method and the form data from its inputs encoded in the URL query string.
3. A `<form method="POST">`. Navigates to the URL in its `action` attribute with the `POST` HTTP method and the form data from its inputs encoded in the body of the request.
Since we have a client-side router, we can do client-side link navigations without reloading the page, i.e., without a full round-trip to the server and back. It makes sense that we can do client-side form navigations in the same way.
The router provides a [`<Form>`](https://docs.rs/leptos_router/latest/leptos_router/fn.Form.html) component, which works like the HTML `<form>` element, but uses client-side navigations instead of full page reloads. `<Form/>` works with both `GET` and `POST` requests. With `method="GET"`, it will navigate to the URL encoded in the form data. With `method="POST"` it will make a `POST` request and handle the servers response.
`<Form/>` provides the basis for some components like `<ActionForm/>` and `<MultiActionForm/>` that well see in later chapters. But it also enables some powerful patterns of its own.
For example, imagine that you want to create a search field that updates search results in real time as the user searches, without a page reload, but that also stores the search in the URL so a user can copy and paste it to share results with someone else.
It turns out that the patterns weve learned so far make this easy to implement.
```rust
async fn fetch_results() {
// some async function to fetch our search results
}
#[component]
pub fn Search(cx: Scope) -> impl IntoView {
#[component]
pub fn FormExample(cx: Scope) -> impl IntoView {
// reactive access to URL query strings
let query = use_query_map(cx);
// search stored as ?q=
let search = move || query().get("q").cloned().unwrap_or_default();
// a resource driven by the search string
let search_results = create_resource(cx, search, fetch_results);
view! { cx,
<Form method="GET" action="">
<input type="search" name="search" value=search/>
<input type="submit"/>
</Form>
<Transition fallback=move || ()>
/* render search results */
</Transition>
}
}
```
Whenever you click `Submit`, the `<Form/>` will “navigate” to `?q={search}`. But because this navigation is done on the client side, theres no page flicker or reload. The URL query string changes, which triggers `search` to update. Because `search` is the source signal for the `search_results` resource, this triggers `search_results` to reload its resource. The `<Transition/>` continues displaying the current search results until the new ones have loaded. When they are complete, it switches to displaying the new result.
This is a great pattern. The data flow is extremely clear: all data flows from the URL to the resource into the UI. The current state of the application is stored in the URL, which means you can refresh the page or text the link to a friend and it will show exactly what youre expecting. And once we introduce server rendering, this pattern will prove to be really fault-tolerant, too: because it uses a `<form>` element and URLs under the hood, it actually works really well without even loading your WASM on the client.
We can actually take it a step further and do something kind of clever:
```rust
view! { cx,
<Form method="GET" action="">
<input type="search" name="search" value=search
oninput="this.form.requestSubmit()"
/>
</Form>
}
```
Youll notice that this version drops the `Submit` button. Instead, we add an `oninput` attribute to the input. Note that this is _not_ `on:input`, which would listen for the `input` event and run some Rust code. Without the colon, `oninput` is the plain HTML attribute. So the string is actually a JavaScript string. `this.form` gives us the form the input is attached to. `requestSubmit()` fires the `submit` event on the `<form>`, which is caught by `<Form/>` just as if we had clicked a `Submit` button. Now the form will “navigate” on every keystroke or input to keep the URL (and therefore the search) perfectly in sync with the users input as they type.
[Click to open CodeSandbox.](https://codesandbox.io/p/sandbox/16-router-forked-hrrt3h?file=%2Fsrc%2Fmain.rs)
<iframe src="https://codesandbox.io/p/sandbox/16-router-forked-hrrt3h?file=%2Fsrc%2Fmain.rs" width="100%" height="1000px" style="max-height: 100vh"></iframe>

View File

@@ -0,0 +1,23 @@
# Routing
## The Basics
Routing drives most websites. A router is the answer to the question, “Given this URL, what should appear on the page?”
A URL consists of many parts. For example, the URL `https://leptos.dev/blog/search?q=Search#results` consists of
- a _scheme_: `https`
- a _domain_: `leptos.dev`
- a **path**: `/blog/search`
- a **query** (or **search**): `?q=Search`
- a _hash_: `#results`
The Leptos Router works with the path and query (`/blog/search?q=Search`). Given this piece of the URL, what should the app render on the page?
## The Philosophy
In most cases, the path should drive what is displayed on the page. From the users perspective, for most applications, most major changes in the state of the app should be reflected in the URL. If you copy and paste the URL and open it in another tab, you should find yourself more or less in the same place.
In this sense, the router is really at the heart of the global state management for your application. More than anything else, it drives what is displayed on the page.
The router handles most of this work for you by mapping the current location to particular components.

View File

@@ -107,27 +107,28 @@ fn clear() {
test_wrapper.clone().unchecked_into(),
|cx| view! { cx, <SimpleCounter initial_value=10 step=1/> },
);
}
```
Well use some manual DOM operations to grab the `<div>` that wraps
the whole component, as well as the `clear` button.
```rust
// now we extract the buttons by iterating over the DOM
// this would be easier if they had IDs
let div = test_wrapper.query_selector("div").unwrap().unwrap();
let clear = test_wrapper
.query_selector("button")
.unwrap()
.unwrap()
.unchecked_into::<web_sys::HtmlElement>();
// now we extract the buttons by iterating over the DOM
// this would be easier if they had IDs
let div = test_wrapper.query_selector("div").unwrap().unwrap();
let clear = test_wrapper
.query_selector("button")
.unwrap()
.unwrap()
.unchecked_into::<web_sys::HtmlElement>();
```
Now we can use ordinary DOM APIs to simulate user interaction.
```rust
// now let's click the `clear` button
clear.click();
// now let's click the `clear` button
clear.click();
```
You can test individual DOM element attributes or text node values. Sometimes
@@ -135,27 +136,27 @@ I like to test the whole view at once. We can do this by testing the elements
`outerHTML` against our expectations.
```rust
assert_eq!(
div.outer_html(),
// here we spawn a mini reactive system to render the test case
run_scope(create_runtime(), |cx| {
// it's as if we're creating it with a value of 0, right?
let (value, set_value) = create_signal(cx, 0);
assert_eq!(
div.outer_html(),
// here we spawn a mini reactive system to render the test case
run_scope(create_runtime(), |cx| {
// it's as if we're creating it with a value of 0, right?
let (value, set_value) = create_signal(cx, 0);
// we can remove the event listeners because they're not rendered to HTML
view! { cx,
<div>
<button>"Clear"</button>
<button>"-1"</button>
<span>"Value: " {value} "!"</span>
<button>"+1"</button>
</div>
}
// the view returned an HtmlElement<Div>, which is a smart pointer for
// a DOM element. So we can still just call .outer_html()
.outer_html()
})
);
// we can remove the event listeners because they're not rendered to HTML
view! { cx,
<div>
<button>"Clear"</button>
<button>"-1"</button>
<span>"Value: " {value} "!"</span>
<button>"+1"</button>
</div>
}
// the view returned an HtmlElement<Div>, which is a smart pointer for
// a DOM element. So we can still just call .outer_html()
.outer_html()
})
);
```
That test involved us manually replicating the `view` thats inside the component.
@@ -164,15 +165,14 @@ with the initial value `0`. This is where our wrapping element comes in: Ill
the wrappers `innerHTML` against another comparison case.
```rust
assert_eq!(test_wrapper.inner_html(), {
let comparison_wrapper = document.create_element("section").unwrap();
leptos::mount_to(
comparison_wrapper.clone().unchecked_into(),
|cx| view! { cx, <SimpleCounter initial_value=0 step=1/>},
);
comparison_wrapper.inner_html()
});
}
assert_eq!(test_wrapper.inner_html(), {
let comparison_wrapper = document.create_element("section").unwrap();
leptos::mount_to(
comparison_wrapper.clone().unchecked_into(),
|cx| view! { cx, <SimpleCounter initial_value=0 step=1/>},
);
comparison_wrapper.inner_html()
});
```
This is only a very limited introduction to testing. But I hope its useful as you begin to build applications.

View File

@@ -1,14 +1,14 @@
# A Basic Component
That “Hello, world!” was a *very* simple example. Lets move on to something a
That “Hello, world!” was a _very_ simple example. Lets move on to something a
little more like an ordinary app.
First, lets edit the `main` function so that, instead of rendering the whole
app, it just renders an `<App/>` component. Components are the basic unit of
composition and design in most web frameworks, and Leptos is no exception.
Conceptually, they are similar to HTML elements: they represent a section of the
DOM, with self-contained, defined behavior. Unlike HTML elements, they are in
`PascalCase`, so most Leptos applications will start with something like an
composition and design in most web frameworks, and Leptos is no exception.
Conceptually, they are similar to HTML elements: they represent a section of the
DOM, with self-contained, defined behavior. Unlike HTML elements, they are in
`PascalCase`, so most Leptos applications will start with something like an
`<App/>` component.
```rust
@@ -39,11 +39,12 @@ fn App(cx: Scope) -> impl IntoView {
```
## The Component Signature
```rust
#[component]
```
Like all component definitions, this begins with the [`#[component]`](https://docs.rs/leptos/latest/leptos/attr.component.html) macro. `#[component]` annotates a function so it can be
Like all component definitions, this begins with the [`#[component]`](https://docs.rs/leptos/latest/leptos/attr.component.html) macro. `#[component]` annotates a function so it can be
used as a component in your Leptos application. Well see some of the other features of
this macro in a couple chapters.
@@ -52,6 +53,7 @@ fn App(cx: Scope) -> impl IntoView
```
Every component is a function with the following characteristics
1. It takes a reactive [`Scope`](https://docs.rs/leptos/latest/leptos/struct.Scope.html)
as its first argument. This `Scope` is our entrypoint into the reactive system.
By convention, its usually named `cx`.
@@ -60,7 +62,8 @@ Every component is a function with the following characteristics
anything you could return from a Leptos `view`.
## The Component Body
The body of the component function is a set-up function that runs once, not a
The body of the component function is a set-up function that runs once, not a
render function that reruns multiple times. Youll typically use it to create a
few reactive variables, define any side effects that run in response to those values
changing, and describe the user interface.
@@ -68,16 +71,17 @@ changing, and describe the user interface.
```rust
let (count, set_count) = create_signal(cx, 0);
```
[`create_signal`](https://docs.rs/leptos/latest/leptos/fn.create_signal.html)
creates a signal, the basic unit of reactive change and state management in Leptos.
This returns a `(getter, setter)` tuple. To access the current value, youll
use `count.get()` (or, on `nightly` Rust, the shorthand `count()`). To set the
This returns a `(getter, setter)` tuple. To access the current value, youll
use `count.get()` (or, on `nightly` Rust, the shorthand `count()`). To set the
current value, youll call `set_count.set(...)` (or `set_count(...)`).
> `.get()` clones the value and `.set()` overwrites it. In many cases, its more
efficient to use `.with()` or `.update()`; check out the docs for [`ReadSignal`](https://docs.rs/leptos/latest/leptos/struct.ReadSignal.html) and [`WriteSignal`](https://docs.rs/leptos/latest/leptos/struct.WriteSignal.html) if youd like to learn more about those trade-offs at this point.
> `.get()` clones the value and `.set()` overwrites it. In many cases, its more
> efficient to use `.with()` or `.update()`; check out the docs for [`ReadSignal`](https://docs.rs/leptos/latest/leptos/struct.ReadSignal.html) and [`WriteSignal`](https://docs.rs/leptos/latest/leptos/struct.WriteSignal.html) if youd like to learn more about those trade-offs at this point.
## The View
## The View
Leptos defines user interfaces using a JSX-like format via the [`view`](https://docs.rs/leptos/latest/leptos/macro.view.html) macro.
@@ -100,25 +104,28 @@ view! { cx,
This should mostly be easy to understand: it looks like HTML, with a special
`on:click` to define a `click` event listener, a text node thats formatted like
a Rust string, and then...
```rust
{move || count.get()}
```
whatever that is.
People sometimes joke that they use more closures in their first Leptos application
than theyve ever used in their lives. And fair enough. Basically, passing a function
People sometimes joke that they use more closures in their first Leptos application
than theyve ever used in their lives. And fair enough. Basically, passing a function
into the view tells the framework: “Hey, this is something that might change.”
When we click the button and call `set_count`, the `count` signal is updated. This
`move || count.get()` closure, whose value depends on the value of `count`, reruns,
and the framework makes a targeted update to that one specific text node, touching
When we click the button and call `set_count`, the `count` signal is updated. This
`move || count.get()` closure, whose value depends on the value of `count`, reruns,
and the framework makes a targeted update to that one specific text node, touching
nothing else in your application. This is what allows for extremely efficient updates
to the DOM.
Now, if you have Clippy on—or if you have a particularly sharp eye—you might notice
that this closure is redundant, at least if youre in `nightly` Rust. If youre using
that this closure is redundant, at least if youre in `nightly` Rust. If youre using
Leptos with `nightly` Rust, signals are already functions, so the closure is unnecessary.
As a result, you can write a simpler view:
As a result, you can write a simpler view:
```rust
view! { cx,
<button /* ... */>
@@ -129,15 +136,17 @@ view! { cx,
}
```
Remember—and this is *very important*—only functions are reactive. This means that
`{count}` and `{count()}` do very different things in your view. `{count}` passes
Remember—and this is _very important_—only functions are reactive. This means that
`{count}` and `{count()}` do very different things in your view. `{count}` passes
in a function, telling the framework to update the view every time `count` changes.
`{count()}` access the value of `count` once, and passes an `i32` into the view,
`{count()}` access the value of `count` once, and passes an `i32` into the view,
rendering it once, unreactively. You can see the difference in the CodeSandbox below!
> Throughout this tutorial, well use CodeSandbox to show interactive examples. To
show the browser in the sandbox, you may need to click `Add DevTools >
Other Previews > 8080.` Hover over any of the variables to show Rust-Analyzer details
and docs for whats going on. Feel free to fork the examples to play with them yourself!
> Throughout this tutorial, well use CodeSandbox to show interactive examples. To
> show the browser in the sandbox, you may need to click `Add DevTools >
Other Previews > 8080.` Hover over any of the variables to show Rust-Analyzer details
> and docs for whats going on. Feel free to fork the examples to play with them yourself!
<iframe src="https://codesandbox.io/p/sandbox/1-basic-component-3d74p3?file=%2Fsrc%2Fmain.rs&selection=%5B%7B%22endColumn%22%3A31%2C%22endLineNumber%22%3A19%2C%22startColumn%22%3A31%2C%22startLineNumber%22%3A19%7D%5D" width="100%" height="1000px"></iframe>
[Click to open CodeSandbox.](https://codesandbox.io/p/sandbox/1-basic-component-3d74p3?file=%2Fsrc%2Fmain.rs&selection=%5B%7B%22endColumn%22%3A31%2C%22endLineNumber%22%3A19%2C%22startColumn%22%3A31%2C%22startLineNumber%22%3A19%7D%5D)
<iframe src="https://codesandbox.io/p/sandbox/1-basic-component-3d74p3?file=%2Fsrc%2Fmain.rs&selection=%5B%7B%22endColumn%22%3A31%2C%22endLineNumber%22%3A19%2C%22startColumn%22%3A31%2C%22startLineNumber%22%3A19%7D%5D" width="100%" height="1000px" style="max-height: 100vh"></iframe>

View File

@@ -1,13 +1,13 @@
# `view`: Dynamic Attributes and Classes
So far weve seen how to use the `view` macro to create event listeners and to
So far weve seen how to use the `view` macro to create event listeners and to
create dynamic text by passing a function (such as a signal) into the view.
But of course there are other things you might want to update in your user interface.
In this section, well look at how to update attributes and classes dynamically,
In this section, well look at how to update attributes and classes dynamically,
and well introduce the concept of a **derived signal**.
Lets start with a simple component that should be familiar: click a button to
Lets start with a simple component that should be familiar: click a button to
increment a counter.
```rust
@@ -20,6 +20,12 @@ fn App(cx: Scope) -> impl IntoView {
on:click=move |_| {
set_count.update(|n| *n += 1);
}
>
"Click me: "
{move || count()}
</button>
}
}
```
So far, this is just the example from the last chapter.
@@ -28,27 +34,31 @@ So far, this is just the example from the last chapter.
Now lets say Id like to update the list of CSS classes on this element dynamically.
For example, lets say I want to add the class `red` when the count is odd. I can
do this using the `class:` syntax.
do this using the `class:` syntax.
```rust
class:red=move || count() & 1 == 1
class:red=move || count() % 2 == 1
```
`class:` attributes take
1. the class name, following the colon (`red`)
2. a value, which can be a `bool` or a function that returns a `bool`
When the value is `true`, the class is added. When the value is `false`, the class
is removed. And if the value is a function that accesses a signal, the class will
is removed. And if the value is a function that accesses a signal, the class will
reactively update when the signal changes.
Now every time I click the button, the text should toggle between red and black as
Now every time I click the button, the text should toggle between red and black as
the number switches between even and odd.
## Dynamic Attributes
The same applies to plain attributes. Passing a plain string or primitive value to
an attribute gives it a static value. Passing a function (including a signal) to
an attribute causes it to update its value reactively. Lets add another element
an attribute causes it to update its value reactively. Lets add another element
to our view:
```rust
<progress
max="50"
@@ -57,17 +67,18 @@ to our view:
/>
```
Now every time we set the count, not only will the `class` of the `<button>` be
toggled, but the `value` of the `<progress>` bar will increase, which means that
Now every time we set the count, not only will the `class` of the `<button>` be
toggled, but the `value` of the `<progress>` bar will increase, which means that
our progress bar will move forward.
## Derived Signals
## Derived Signals
Lets go one layer deeper, just for fun.
You already know that we create reactive interfaces just by passing functions into
You already know that we create reactive interfaces just by passing functions into
the `view`. This means that we can easily change our progress bar. For example,
suppose we want it to move twice as fast:
```rust
<progress
max="50"
@@ -77,28 +88,31 @@ suppose we want it to move twice as fast:
But imagine we want to reuse that calculation in more than one place. You can do this
using a **derived signal**: a closure that accesses a signal.
```rust
let double_count = move || count() * 2;
/* insert the rest of the view */
/* insert the rest of the view */
<progress
max="50"
// we use it once here
value=double_count
/>
<p>
"Double Count: "
"Double Count: "
// and again here
{double_count}
</p>
```
Derived signals let you create reactive computed values that can be used in multiple
Derived signals let you create reactive computed values that can be used in multiple
places in your application with minimal overhead.
> Note: Using a derived signal like this means that the calculation runs once per
signal change per place we access `double_count`; in other words, twice. This is a
very cheap calculation, so thats fine. Well look at memos in a later chapter, which
are designed to solve this problem for expensive calculations.
> Note: Using a derived signal like this means that the calculation runs once per
> signal change per place we access `double_count`; in other words, twice. This is a
> very cheap calculation, so thats fine. Well look at memos in a later chapter, which
> are designed to solve this problem for expensive calculations.
<iframe src="https://codesandbox.io/p/sandbox/2-dynamic-attribute-pqyvzl?file=%2Fsrc%2Fmain.rs&selection=%5B%7B%22endColumn%22%3A1%2C%22endLineNumber%22%3A2%2C%22startColumn%22%3A1%2C%22startLineNumber%22%3A2%7D%5D" width="100%" height="1000px"></iframe>
[Click to open CodeSandbox.](https://codesandbox.io/p/sandbox/2-dynamic-attribute-pqyvzl?file=%2Fsrc%2Fmain.rs&selection=%5B%7B%22endColumn%22%3A1%2C%22endLineNumber%22%3A2%2C%22startColumn%22%3A1%2C%22startLineNumber%22%3A2%7D%5D)
<iframe src="https://codesandbox.io/p/sandbox/2-dynamic-attribute-pqyvzl?file=%2Fsrc%2Fmain.rs&selection=%5B%7B%22endColumn%22%3A1%2C%22endLineNumber%22%3A2%2C%22startColumn%22%3A1%2C%22startLineNumber%22%3A2%7D%5D" width="100%" height="1000px" style="max-height: 100vh"></iframe>

View File

@@ -1,11 +1,11 @@
# Components and Props
So far, weve been building our whole application in a single component. This
is fine for really tiny examples, but in any real application youll need to
break the user interface out into multiple components, so you can break your
So far, weve been building our whole application in a single component. This
is fine for really tiny examples, but in any real application youll need to
break the user interface out into multiple components, so you can break your
interface down into smaller, reusable, composable chunks.
Lets take our progress bar example. Imagine that you want two progress bars
Lets take our progress bar example. Imagine that you want two progress bars
instead of one: one that advances one tick per click, one that advances two ticks
per click.
@@ -15,7 +15,7 @@ You _could_ do this by just creating two `<progress>` elements:
let (count, set_count) = create_signal(cx, 0);
let double_count = move || count() * 2;
view! {
view! {
<progress
max="50"
value=count
@@ -24,10 +24,11 @@ view! {
max="50"
value=double_count
/>
}
```
But of course, this doesnt scale very well. If you want to add a third progress
bar, you need to add this code another time. And if you want to edit anything
bar, you need to add this code another time. And if you want to edit anything
about it, you need to edit it in triplicate.
Instead, lets create a `<ProgressBar/>` component.
@@ -47,15 +48,15 @@ fn ProgressBar(
}
```
Theres just one problem: `progress` is not defined. Where should it come from?
When we were defining everything manually, we just used the local variable names.
Theres just one problem: `progress` is not defined. Where should it come from?
When we were defining everything manually, we just used the local variable names.
Now we need some way to pass an argument into the component.
## Component Props
## Component Props
We do this using component properties, or “props.” If youve used another frontend
framework, this is probably a familiar idea. Basically, properties are to components
as attributes are to HTML elements: they let you pass additional information into
framework, this is probably a familiar idea. Basically, properties are to components
as attributes are to HTML elements: they let you pass additional information into
the component.
In Leptos, you define props by giving additional arguments to the component function.
@@ -69,7 +70,7 @@ fn ProgressBar(
view! { cx,
<progress
max="50"
// now this works
// now this works
value=progress
/>
}
@@ -92,41 +93,45 @@ fn App(cx: Scope) -> impl IntoView {
}
```
Using a component in the view looks a lot like using an HTML element. Youll
notice that you can easily tell the difference between an element and a component
because components always have `PascalCase` names. You pass the `progress` prop
Using a component in the view looks a lot like using an HTML element. Youll
notice that you can easily tell the difference between an element and a component
because components always have `PascalCase` names. You pass the `progress` prop
in as if it were an HTML element attribute. Simple.
> ### Important Note
> For every `Component`, Leptos generates a corresponding `ComponentProps` type. This
is what allows us to have named props, when Rust does not have named function parameters.
If youre defining a component in one module and importing it into another, make
sure you include this `ComponentProps` type:
> ### Important Note
>
> For every `Component`, Leptos generates a corresponding `ComponentProps` type. This
> is what allows us to have named props, when Rust does not have named function parameters.
> If youre defining a component in one module and importing it into another, make
> sure you include this `ComponentProps` type:
>
> `use progress_bar::{ProgressBar, ProgressBarProps};`
>
> **Note**: This is still true as of `0.2.5`, but the requirement has been removed on `main`
> and will not apply to later versions.
### Reactive and Static Props
Youll notice that throughout this example, `progress` takes a reactive
Youll notice that throughout this example, `progress` takes a reactive
`ReadSignal<i32>`, and not a plain `i32`. This is **very important**.
Component props have no special meaning attached to them. A component is simply
a function that runs once to set up the user interface. The only way to tell the
interface to respond to changing is to pass it a signal type. So if you have a
component property that will change over time, like our `progress`, it should
Component props have no special meaning attached to them. A component is simply
a function that runs once to set up the user interface. The only way to tell the
interface to respond to changing is to pass it a signal type. So if you have a
component property that will change over time, like our `progress`, it should
be a signal.
### `optional` Props
### `optional` Props
Right now the `max` setting is hard-coded. Lets take that as a prop too. But
lets add a catch: lets make this prop optional by annotating the particular
Right now the `max` setting is hard-coded. Lets take that as a prop too. But
lets add a catch: lets make this prop optional by annotating the particular
argument to the component function with `#[prop(optional)]`.
```rust
#[component]
fn ProgressBar(
cx: Scope,
// mark this prop optional
// mark this prop optional
// you can specify it or not when you use <ProgressBar/>
#[prop(optional)]
max: u16,
@@ -142,7 +147,7 @@ fn ProgressBar(
```
Now, we can use `<ProgressBar max=50 value=count/>`, or we can omit `max`
to use the default value (i.e., `<ProgressBar value=count/>`). The default value
to use the default value (i.e., `<ProgressBar value=count/>`). The default value
on an `optional` is its `Default::default()` value, which for a `u16` is going to
be `0`. In the case of a progress bar, a max value of `0` is not very useful.
@@ -187,20 +192,20 @@ fn App(cx: Scope) -> impl IntoView {
"Click me"
</button>
<ProgressBar progress=count/>
// add a second progress bar
// add a second progress bar
<ProgressBar progress=double_count/>
}
}
```
Hm... this wont compile. It should be pretty easy to understand why: weve declared
that the `progress` prop takes `ReadSignal<i32>`, and `double_count` is not
`ReadSignal<i32>`. As rust-analyzer will tell you, its type is `|| -> i32`, i.e.,
that the `progress` prop takes `ReadSignal<i32>`, and `double_count` is not
`ReadSignal<i32>`. As rust-analyzer will tell you, its type is `|| -> i32`, i.e.,
its a closure that returns an `i32`.
There are a couple ways to handle this. One would be to say: “Well, I know that
a `ReadSignal` is a function, and I know that a closure is a function; maybe I
could just take any function?” If youre savvy, you may know that both these
There are a couple ways to handle this. One would be to say: “Well, I know that
a `ReadSignal` is a function, and I know that a closure is a function; maybe I
could just take any function?” If youre savvy, you may know that both these
implement the trait `Fn() -> i32`. So you could use a generic component:
```rust
@@ -210,8 +215,8 @@ fn ProgressBar<F>(
#[prop(default = 100)]
max: u16,
progress: F
) -> impl IntoView
where
) -> impl IntoView
where
F: Fn() -> i32 + 'static,
{
view! { cx,
@@ -223,27 +228,26 @@ where
}
```
This is a perfectly reasonable way to write this component: `progress` now takes
This is a perfectly reasonable way to write this component: `progress` now takes
any value that implements this `Fn()` trait.
> Note that generic component props _cannot_ be specified inline (as `<F: Fn() -> i32>`)
or as `progress: impl Fn() -> i32 + 'static,`, in part because theyre actually used to generate
a `struct ProgressBarProps`, and struct fields cannot be `impl` types.
> or as `progress: impl Fn() -> i32 + 'static,`, in part because theyre actually used to generate
> a `struct ProgressBarProps`, and struct fields cannot be `impl` types.
### `into` Props
### `into` Props
Theres one more way we could implement this, and it would be to use `#[prop(into)]`.
Theres one more way we could implement this, and it would be to use `#[prop(into)]`.
This attribute automatically calls `.into()` on the values you pass as props,
which allows you to easily pass props with different values.
In this case, its helpful to know about the
In this case, its helpful to know about the
[`Signal`](https://docs.rs/leptos/latest/leptos/struct.Signal.html) type. `Signal`
is a enumerated type that represents any kind of readable reactive signal. It can
be useful when defining APIs for components youll want to reuse while passing
different sorts of signals. The [`MaybeSignal`](https://docs.rs/leptos/latest/leptos/enum.MaybeSignal.html) type is useful when you want to be able to take either a static or
is an enumerated type that represents any kind of readable reactive signal. It can
be useful when defining APIs for components youll want to reuse while passing
different sorts of signals. The [`MaybeSignal`](https://docs.rs/leptos/latest/leptos/enum.MaybeSignal.html) type is useful when you want to be able to take either a static or
reactive value.
```rust
#[component]
fn ProgressBar(
@@ -252,7 +256,7 @@ fn ProgressBar(
max: u16,
#[prop(into)]
progress: Signal<i32>
) -> impl IntoView
) -> impl IntoView
{
view! { cx,
<progress
@@ -281,12 +285,12 @@ fn App(cx: Scope) -> impl IntoView {
## Documenting Components
This is one of the least essential but most important sections of this book.
Its not strictly necessary to document your components and their props. It may
be very important, depending on the size of your team and your app. But its very
This is one of the least essential but most important sections of this book.
Its not strictly necessary to document your components and their props. It may
be very important, depending on the size of your team and your app. But its very
easy, and bears immediate fruit.
To document a component and its props, you can simply add doc comments on the
To document a component and its props, you can simply add doc comments on the
component function, and each one of the props:
```rust
@@ -309,9 +313,11 @@ Thats all you need to do. These behave like ordinary Rust doc comments, excep
that you can document individual component props, which cant be done with Rust
function arguments.
This will automatically generate documentation for your component, its `Props`
type, and each of the fields used to add props. It can be a little hard to
understand how powerful this is until you hover over the component name or props
This will automatically generate documentation for your component, its `Props`
type, and each of the fields used to add props. It can be a little hard to
understand how powerful this is until you hover over the component name or props
and see the power of the `#[component]` macro combined with rust-analyzer here.
<iframe src="https://codesandbox.io/p/sandbox/3-components-50t2e7?file=%2Fsrc%2Fmain.rs&selection=%5B%7B%22endColumn%22%3A1%2C%22endLineNumber%22%3A7%2C%22startColumn%22%3A1%2C%22startLineNumber%22%3A7%7D%5D" width="100%" height="1000px"></iframe>
[Click to open CodeSandbox.](https://codesandbox.io/p/sandbox/3-components-50t2e7?file=%2Fsrc%2Fmain.rs&selection=%5B%7B%22endColumn%22%3A1%2C%22endLineNumber%22%3A7%2C%22startColumn%22%3A1%2C%22startLineNumber%22%3A7%7D%5D)
<iframe src="https://codesandbox.io/p/sandbox/3-components-50t2e7?file=%2Fsrc%2Fmain.rs&selection=%5B%7B%22endColumn%22%3A1%2C%22endLineNumber%22%3A7%2C%22startColumn%22%3A1%2C%22startLineNumber%22%3A7%7D%5D" width="100%" height="1000px" style="max-height: 100vh"></iframe>

View File

@@ -1,18 +1,19 @@
# Iteration
Whether youre listing todos, displaying a table, or showing product images,
Whether youre listing todos, displaying a table, or showing product images,
iterating over a list of items is a common task in web applications. Reconciling
the differences between changing sets of items can also be one of the trickiest
tasks for a framework to handle well.
Leptos supports to two different patterns for iterating over items:
1. For static views: `Vec<_>`
2. For dynamic lists: `<For/>`
## Static Views with `Vec<_>`
Sometimes you need to show an item repeatedly, but the list youre drawing from
does not often change. In this case, its important to know that you can insert
Sometimes you need to show an item repeatedly, but the list youre drawing from
does not often change. In this case, its important to know that you can insert
any `Vec<IV> where IV: IntoView` into your view. In other words, if you can render
`T`, you can render `Vec<T>`.
@@ -58,31 +59,34 @@ view! { cx,
}
```
You _can_ render a `Fn() -> Vec<_>` reactively as well. But note that every time
You _can_ render a `Fn() -> Vec<_>` reactively as well. But note that every time
it changes, this will rerender every item in the list. This is quite inefficient!
Fortunately, theres a better way.
## Dynamic Rendering with the `<For/>` Component
The [`<For/>`](https://docs.rs/leptos/latest/leptos/fn.For.html) component is a
The [`<For/>`](https://docs.rs/leptos/latest/leptos/fn.For.html) component is a
keyed dynamic list. It takes three props:
- `each`: a function (such as a signal) that returns the items `T` to be iterated over
- `key`: a key function that takes `&T` and returns a stable, unique key or ID
- `view`: renders each `T` into a view
- `view`: renders each `T` into a view
`key` is, well, the key. You can add, remove, and move items within the list. As
long as each items key is stable over time, the framework does not need to rerender
any of the items, unless they are new additions, and it can very efficiently add,
remove, and move items as they change. This allows for extremely efficient updates
remove, and move items as they change. This allows for extremely efficient updates
to the list as it changes, with minimal additional work.
Creating a good `key` can be a little tricky. You generally do _not_ want to use
an index for this purpose, as it is not stable—if you remove or move items, their
Creating a good `key` can be a little tricky. You generally do _not_ want to use
an index for this purpose, as it is not stable—if you remove or move items, their
indices change.
But its a great idea to do something like generating a unique ID for each row as
But its a great idea to do something like generating a unique ID for each row as
it is generated, and using that as an ID for the key function.
Check out the `<DynamicList/>` component below for an example.
<iframe src="https://codesandbox.io/p/sandbox/4-iteration-sglt1o?file=%2Fsrc%2Fmain.rs&selection=%5B%7B%22endColumn%22%3A6%2C%22endLineNumber%22%3A55%2C%22startColumn%22%3A5%2C%22startLineNumber%22%3A31%7D%5D" width="100%" height="1000px"></iframe>
[Click to open CodeSandbox.](https://codesandbox.io/p/sandbox/4-iteration-sglt1o?file=%2Fsrc%2Fmain.rs&selection=%5B%7B%22endColumn%22%3A6%2C%22endLineNumber%22%3A55%2C%22startColumn%22%3A5%2C%22startLineNumber%22%3A31%7D%5D)
<iframe src="https://codesandbox.io/p/sandbox/4-iteration-sglt1o?file=%2Fsrc%2Fmain.rs&selection=%5B%7B%22endColumn%22%3A6%2C%22endLineNumber%22%3A55%2C%22startColumn%22%3A5%2C%22startLineNumber%22%3A31%7D%5D" width="100%" height="1000px" style="max-height: 100vh"></iframe>

View File

@@ -1,23 +1,24 @@
# Forms and Inputs
Forms and form inputs are an important part of interactive apps. There are two
Forms and form inputs are an important part of interactive apps. There are two
basic patterns for interacting with inputs in Leptos, which you may recognize
if youre familiar with React, SolidJS, or a similar framework: using **controlled**
or **uncontrolled** inputs.
## Controlled Inputs
In a "controlled input," the framework controls the state of the input
element. On every `input` event, it updates a local signal that holds the current
In a "controlled input," the framework controls the state of the input
element. On every `input` event, it updates a local signal that holds the current
state, which in turn updates the `value` prop of the input.
There are two important things to remember:
1. The `input` event fires on (almost) every change to the element, while the
`change` event fires (more or less) when you unfocus the input. You probably
1. The `input` event fires on (almost) every change to the element, while the
`change` event fires (more or less) when you unfocus the input. You probably
want `on:input`, but we give you the freedom to choose.
2. The `value` *attribute* only sets the initial value of the input, i.e., it
only updates the input up to the point that you begin typing. The `value`
*property* continues updating the input after that. You usually want to set
2. The `value` _attribute_ only sets the initial value of the input, i.e., it
only updates the input up to the point that you begin typing. The `value`
_property_ continues updating the input after that. You usually want to set
`prop:value` for this reason.
```rust
@@ -41,14 +42,14 @@ view! { cx,
}
```
## Uncontrolled Inputs
## Uncontrolled Inputs
In an "uncontrolled input," the browser controls the state of the input element.
Rather than continuously updating a signal to hold its value, we use a
[`NodeRef`](https://docs.rs/leptos/latest/leptos/struct.NodeRef.html) to access
In an "uncontrolled input," the browser controls the state of the input element.
Rather than continuously updating a signal to hold its value, we use a
[`NodeRef`](https://docs.rs/leptos/latest/leptos/struct.NodeRef.html) to access
the input once when we want to get its value.
In this example, we only notify the framework when the `<form>` fires a `submit`
In this example, we only notify the framework when the `<form>` fires a `submit`
event.
```rust
@@ -56,7 +57,8 @@ let (name, set_name) = create_signal(cx, "Uncontrolled".to_string());
let input_element: NodeRef<Input> = create_node_ref(cx);
```
`NodeRef` is a kind of reactive smart pointer: we can use it to access the
`NodeRef` is a kind of reactive smart pointer: we can use it to access the
underlying DOM node. Its value will be set when the element is rendered.
```rust
@@ -76,13 +78,14 @@ let on_submit = move |ev: SubmitEvent| {
set_name(value);
};
```
Our `on_submit` handler will access the inputs value and use it to call `set_name`.
To access the DOM node stored in the `NodeRef`, we can simply call it as a function
(or using `.get()`). This will return `Option<web_sys::HtmlInputElement>`, but we
know it will already have been filled when we rendered the view, so its safe to
(or using `.get()`). This will return `Option<web_sys::HtmlInputElement>`, but we
know it will already have been filled when we rendered the view, so its safe to
unwrap here.
We can then call `.value()` to get the value out of the input, because `NodeRef`
We can then call `.value()` to get the value out of the input, because `NodeRef`
gives us access to a correctly-typed HTML element.
```rust
@@ -97,11 +100,15 @@ view! { cx,
<p>"Name is: " {name}</p>
}
```
The view should be pretty self-explanatory by now. Note two things:
1. Unlike in the controlled input example, we use `value` (not `prop:value`).
This is because were just setting the initial value of the input, and letting
This is because were just setting the initial value of the input, and letting
the browser control its state. (We could use `prop:value` instead.)
2. We use `node_ref` to fill the `NodeRef`. (Older examples sometimes use `_ref`.
They are the same thing, but `node_ref` has better rust-analyzer support.)
<iframe src="https://codesandbox.io/p/sandbox/5-form-inputs-ih9m62?file=%2Fsrc%2Fmain.rs&selection=%5B%7B%22endColumn%22%3A1%2C%22endLineNumber%22%3A12%2C%22startColumn%22%3A1%2C%22startLineNumber%22%3A12%7D%5D" width="100%" height="1000px"></iframe>
[Click to open CodeSandbox.](https://codesandbox.io/p/sandbox/5-form-inputs-ih9m62?file=%2Fsrc%2Fmain.rs&selection=%5B%7B%22endColumn%22%3A1%2C%22endLineNumber%22%3A12%2C%22startColumn%22%3A1%2C%22startLineNumber%22%3A12%7D%5D)
<iframe src="https://codesandbox.io/p/sandbox/5-form-inputs-ih9m62?file=%2Fsrc%2Fmain.rs&selection=%5B%7B%22endColumn%22%3A1%2C%22endLineNumber%22%3A12%2C%22startColumn%22%3A1%2C%22startLineNumber%22%3A12%7D%5D" width="100%" height="1000px" style="max-height: 100vh"></iframe>

View File

@@ -282,4 +282,6 @@ view! { cx,
}
```
<iframe src="https://codesandbox.io/p/sandbox/6-control-flow-in-view-zttwfx?file=%2Fsrc%2Fmain.rs&selection=%5B%7B%22endColumn%22%3A1%2C%22endLineNumber%22%3A2%2C%22startColumn%22%3A1%2C%22startLineNumber%22%3A2%7D%5D" width="100%" height="1000px"></iframe>
[Click to open CodeSandbox.](https://codesandbox.io/p/sandbox/6-control-flow-in-view-zttwfx?file=%2Fsrc%2Fmain.rs&selection=%5B%7B%22endColumn%22%3A1%2C%22endLineNumber%22%3A2%2C%22startColumn%22%3A1%2C%22startLineNumber%22%3A2%7D%5D)
<iframe src="https://codesandbox.io/p/sandbox/6-control-flow-in-view-zttwfx?file=%2Fsrc%2Fmain.rs&selection=%5B%7B%22endColumn%22%3A1%2C%22endLineNumber%22%3A2%2C%22startColumn%22%3A1%2C%22startLineNumber%22%3A2%7D%5D" width="100%" height="1000px" style="max-height: 100vh"></iframe>

View File

@@ -110,4 +110,6 @@ Not a number! Errors:
If you fix the error, the error message will disappear and the content youre wrapping in
an `<ErrorBoundary/>` will appear again.
<iframe src="https://codesandbox.io/p/sandbox/7-error-handling-and-error-boundaries-sroncx?file=%2Fsrc%2Fmain.rs&selection=%5B%7B%22endColumn%22%3A1%2C%22endLineNumber%22%3A2%2C%22startColumn%22%3A1%2C%22startLineNumber%22%3A2%7D%5D" width="100%" height="1000px"></iframe>
[Click to open CodeSandbox.](https://codesandbox.io/p/sandbox/7-error-handling-and-error-boundaries-sroncx?file=%2Fsrc%2Fmain.rs&selection=%5B%7B%22endColumn%22%3A1%2C%22endLineNumber%22%3A2%2C%22startColumn%22%3A1%2C%22startLineNumber%22%3A2%7D%5D)
<iframe src="https://codesandbox.io/p/sandbox/7-error-handling-and-error-boundaries-sroncx?file=%2Fsrc%2Fmain.rs&selection=%5B%7B%22endColumn%22%3A1%2C%22endLineNumber%22%3A2%2C%22startColumn%22%3A1%2C%22startLineNumber%22%3A2%7D%5D" width="100%" height="1000px" style="max-height: 100vh"></iframe>

View File

@@ -285,4 +285,6 @@ in `<ButtonD/>` and a single text node in `<App/>`. Its as if the components
themselves dont exist at all. And, well... at runtime, they dont. Its just
signals and effects, all the way down.
<iframe src="https://codesandbox.io/p/sandbox/8-parent-child-communication-84we8m?file=%2Fsrc%2Fmain.rs&selection=%5B%7B%22endColumn%22%3A1%2C%22endLineNumber%22%3A3%2C%22startColumn%22%3A1%2C%22startLineNumber%22%3A3%7D%5D" width="100%" height="1000px"></iframe>
[Click to open CodeSandbox.](https://codesandbox.io/p/sandbox/8-parent-child-communication-84we8m?file=%2Fsrc%2Fmain.rs&selection=%5B%7B%22endColumn%22%3A1%2C%22endLineNumber%22%3A3%2C%22startColumn%22%3A1%2C%22startLineNumber%22%3A3%7D%5D)
<iframe src="https://codesandbox.io/p/sandbox/8-parent-child-communication-84we8m?file=%2Fsrc%2Fmain.rs&selection=%5B%7B%22endColumn%22%3A1%2C%22endLineNumber%22%3A3%2C%22startColumn%22%3A1%2C%22startLineNumber%22%3A3%7D%5D" width="100%" height="1000px" style="max-height: 100vh"></iframe>

View File

@@ -123,4 +123,6 @@ view! { cx,
}
```
<iframe src="https://codesandbox.io/p/sandbox/9-component-children-2wrdfd?file=%2Fsrc%2Fmain.rs&selection=%5B%7B%22endColumn%22%3A12%2C%22endLineNumber%22%3A19%2C%22startColumn%22%3A12%2C%22startLineNumber%22%3A19%7D%5D" width="100%" height="1000px"></iframe>
[Click to open CodeSandbox.](https://codesandbox.io/p/sandbox/9-component-children-2wrdfd?file=%2Fsrc%2Fmain.rs&selection=%5B%7B%22endColumn%22%3A12%2C%22endLineNumber%22%3A19%2C%22startColumn%22%3A12%2C%22startLineNumber%22%3A19%7D%5D)
<iframe src="https://codesandbox.io/p/sandbox/9-component-children-2wrdfd?file=%2Fsrc%2Fmain.rs&selection=%5B%7B%22endColumn%22%3A12%2C%22endLineNumber%22%3A19%2C%22startColumn%22%3A12%2C%22startLineNumber%22%3A19%7D%5D" width="100%" height="1000px" style="max-height: 100vh"></iframe>

View File

@@ -5,7 +5,7 @@ edition = "2021"
[dependencies]
leptos = { path = "../../leptos" }
console_log = "0.2"
console_log = "1"
log = "0.4"
console_error_panic_hook = "0.1.7"

View File

@@ -1,4 +1,4 @@
use counter::*;
use counter::SimpleCounter;
use leptos::*;
pub fn main() {

View File

@@ -10,7 +10,7 @@ crate-type = ["cdylib", "rlib"]
actix-files = { version = "0.6", optional = true }
actix-web = { version = "4", optional = true, features = ["macros"] }
broadcaster = "1"
console_log = "0.2"
console_log = "1"
console_error_panic_hook = "0.1"
futures = "0.3"
cfg-if = "1"

View File

@@ -198,13 +198,13 @@ pub fn MultiuserCounter(cx: Scope) -> impl IntoView {
let s = create_signal_from_stream(
cx,
source.subscribe("message").unwrap().map(|value| {
value
.expect("no message event")
.1
.data()
.as_string()
.expect("expected string value")
}),
match value {
Ok(value) => {
value.1.data().as_string().expect("expected string value")
},
Err(_) => "0".to_string(),
}
})
);
on_cleanup(cx, move || source.close());

View File

@@ -10,7 +10,6 @@ cfg_if! {
#[wasm_bindgen]
pub fn hydrate() {
console_error_panic_hook::set_once();
_ = console_log::init_with_level(log::Level::Debug);
console_error_panic_hook::set_once();

View File

@@ -5,7 +5,7 @@ edition = "2021"
[dependencies]
leptos = { path = "../../leptos", features = ["stable"] }
console_log = "0.2"
console_log = "1"
log = "0.4"
console_error_panic_hook = "0.1.7"

View File

@@ -1,48 +1,44 @@
use leptos::{ev, html::*, *};
pub struct Props {
/// The starting value for the counter
pub initial_value: i32,
/// The change that should be applied each time the button is clicked.
pub step: i32,
}
/// A simple counter view.
pub fn view(cx: Scope, props: Props) -> impl IntoView {
let Props {
initial_value,
step,
} = props;
// A component is really just a function call: it runs once to create the DOM and reactive system
pub fn counter(cx: Scope, initial_value: i32, step: i32) -> impl IntoView {
let (value, set_value) = create_signal(cx, initial_value);
// elements are created by calling a function with a Scope argument
// the function name is the same as the HTML tag name
div(cx)
.child((
cx,
// children can be added with .child()
// this takes any type that implements IntoView as its argument
// for example, a string or an HtmlElement<_>
.child(
button(cx)
// typed events found in leptos::ev
// 1) prevent typos in event names
// 2) allow for correct type inference in callbacks
.on(ev::click, move |_| set_value.update(|value| *value = 0))
.child((cx, "Clear")),
))
.child((
cx,
.child("Clear"),
)
.child(
button(cx)
.on(ev::click, move |_| {
set_value.update(|value| *value -= step)
})
.child((cx, "-1")),
))
.child((
cx,
.child("-1"),
)
.child(
span(cx)
.child((cx, "Value: "))
.child("Value: ")
// reactive values are passed to .child() as a tuple
// (Scope, [child function]) so an effect can be created
.child((cx, move || value.get()))
.child((cx, "!")),
))
.child((
cx,
.child("!"),
)
.child(
button(cx)
.on(ev::click, move |_| {
set_value.update(|value| *value += step)
})
.child((cx, "+1")),
))
.child("+1"),
)
}

View File

@@ -1,16 +1,8 @@
use counter_without_macros as counter;
use counter_without_macros::counter;
use leptos::*;
pub fn main() {
_ = console_log::init_with_level(log::Level::Debug);
console_error_panic_hook::set_once();
mount_to_body(|cx| {
counter::view(
cx,
counter::Props {
initial_value: 0,
step: 1,
},
)
})
mount_to_body(|cx| counter(cx, 0, 1))
}

View File

@@ -6,7 +6,7 @@ edition = "2021"
[dependencies]
leptos = { path = "../../leptos" }
log = "0.4"
console_log = "0.2"
console_log = "1"
console_error_panic_hook = "0.1.7"
[dev-dependencies]

View File

@@ -1,8 +1,7 @@
use counters::{Counters, CountersProps};
use counters::Counters;
use leptos::*;
fn main() {
console_error_panic_hook::set_once();
_ = console_log::init_with_level(log::Level::Debug);
console_error_panic_hook::set_once();
mount_to_body(|cx| view! { cx, <Counters/> })

View File

@@ -6,7 +6,7 @@ edition = "2021"
[dependencies]
leptos = { path = "../../leptos", features = ["stable"] }
log = "0.4"
console_log = "0.2"
console_log = "1"
console_error_panic_hook = "0.1.7"
[dev-dependencies]

View File

@@ -1,7 +1,6 @@
use leptos::*;
fn main() {
console_error_panic_hook::set_once();
_ = console_log::init_with_level(log::Level::Debug);
console_error_panic_hook::set_once();
mount_to_body(|cx| view! { cx, <Counters/> })

View File

@@ -5,6 +5,6 @@ edition = "2021"
[dependencies]
leptos = { path = "../../leptos" }
console_log = "0.2"
console_log = "1"
log = "0.4"
console_error_panic_hook = "0.1.7"

View File

@@ -7,7 +7,7 @@ edition = "2021"
crate-type = ["cdylib", "rlib"]
[dependencies]
console_log = "0.2.0"
console_log = "1.0.0"
console_error_panic_hook = "0.1.7"
cfg-if = "1.0.0"
leptos = { path = "../../../leptos/leptos", default-features = false, features = [

View File

@@ -70,8 +70,8 @@ pub fn ExampleErrors(cx: Scope) -> impl IntoView {
</p>
<p>"The following <div> will always contain an error and cause this page to produce status 500. Check browser dev tools. "</p>
<div>
// note that the error boundries could be placed above in the Router or lower down
// in a particular route. The generated errors on the entire page contribue to the
// note that the error boundaries could be placed above in the Router or lower down
// in a particular route. The generated errors on the entire page contribute to the
// final status code sent by the server when producing ssr pages.
<ErrorBoundary fallback=|cx, errors| view!{cx, <ErrorTemplate errors=errors/>}>
<ReturnsError/>

View File

@@ -13,7 +13,6 @@ cfg_if! {
#[wasm_bindgen]
pub fn hydrate() {
console_error_panic_hook::set_once();
_ = console_log::init_with_level(log::Level::Debug);
console_error_panic_hook::set_once();

View File

@@ -9,7 +9,7 @@ leptos = { path = "../../leptos" }
reqwasm = "0.5.0"
serde = { version = "1", features = ["derive"] }
log = "0.4"
console_log = "0.2"
console_log = "1"
console_error_panic_hook = "0.1.7"
[dev-dependencies]

View File

@@ -2,7 +2,6 @@ use fetch::fetch_example;
use leptos::*;
pub fn main() {
console_error_panic_hook::set_once();
_ = console_log::init_with_level(log::Level::Debug);
console_error_panic_hook::set_once();
mount_to_body(fetch_example)

View File

@@ -9,7 +9,7 @@ crate-type = ["cdylib", "rlib"]
[dependencies]
actix-files = { version = "0.6", optional = true }
actix-web = { version = "4", optional = true, features = ["macros"] }
console_log = "0.2"
console_log = "1"
console_error_panic_hook = "0.1"
cfg-if = "1"
leptos = { path = "../../leptos", default-features = false, features = [

View File

@@ -38,7 +38,7 @@ pub fn Stories(cx: Scope) -> impl IntoView {
let (pending, set_pending) = create_signal(cx, false);
let hide_more_link =
move || pending() || stories.read(cx).unwrap_or(None).unwrap_or_default().len() < 28;
move |cx| pending() || stories.read(cx).unwrap_or(None).unwrap_or_default().len() < 28;
view! {
cx,
@@ -65,16 +65,20 @@ pub fn Stories(cx: Scope) -> impl IntoView {
}}
</span>
<span>"page " {page}</span>
<span class="page-link"
class:disabled=hide_more_link
aria-hidden=hide_more_link
<Transition
fallback=move || view! { cx, <p>"Loading..."</p> }
>
<a href=move || format!("/{}?page={}", story_type(), page() + 1)
aria-label="Next Page"
<span class="page-link"
class:disabled=move || hide_more_link(cx)
aria-hidden=move || hide_more_link(cx)
>
"more >"
</a>
</span>
<a href=move || format!("/{}?page={}", story_type(), page() + 1)
aria-label="Next Page"
>
"more >"
</a>
</span>
</Transition>
</div>
<main class="news-list">
<div>

View File

@@ -7,7 +7,7 @@ edition = "2021"
crate-type = ["cdylib", "rlib"]
[dependencies]
console_log = "0.2.0"
console_log = "1.0.0"
console_error_panic_hook = "0.1.7"
cfg-if = "1.0.0"
leptos = { path = "../../leptos", default-features = false, features = [

View File

@@ -46,7 +46,6 @@ if #[cfg(feature = "ssr")] {
use hackernews_axum::*;
pub fn main() {
console_error_panic_hook::set_once();
_ = console_log::init_with_level(log::Level::Debug);
console_error_panic_hook::set_once();
mount_to_body(|cx| {

View File

@@ -12,7 +12,7 @@ leptos_router = { version = "0.2.0-alpha2", features = ["stable", "csr"] }
log = "0.4"
console_error_panic_hook = "0.1"
console_log = "0.2"
console_log = "1"
gloo-net = "0.2"
gloo-storage = "0.2"
serde = "1.0"

View File

@@ -1,3 +1,3 @@
[[proxy]]
rewrite = "/api/"
backend = "http://0.0.0.0:3000/"
backend = "http://127.0.0.1:3000/"

View File

@@ -5,7 +5,7 @@ edition = "2021"
[dependencies]
leptos = { path = "../../leptos" }
console_log = "0.2"
console_log = "1"
log = "0.4"
console_error_panic_hook = "0.1.7"
web-sys = "0.3"

View File

@@ -4,7 +4,7 @@ version = "0.1.0"
edition = "2021"
[dependencies]
console_log = "0.2"
console_log = "1"
log = "0.4"
leptos = { path = "../../leptos" }
leptos_router = { path = "../../router", features = ["csr"] }

View File

@@ -28,19 +28,7 @@ pub fn RouterExample(cx: Scope) -> impl IntoView {
</nav>
<main>
<Routes>
<Route
path=""
view=move |cx| view! { cx, <ContactList/> }
>
<Route
path=":id"
view=move |cx| view! { cx, <Contact/> }
/>
<Route
path="/"
view=move |_| view! { cx, <p>"Select a contact."</p> }
/>
</Route>
<ContactRoutes/>
<Route
path="about"
view=move |cx| view! { cx, <About/> }
@@ -59,6 +47,27 @@ pub fn RouterExample(cx: Scope) -> impl IntoView {
}
}
// You can define other routes in their own component.
// Use a #[component(transparent)] that returns a <Route/>.
#[component(transparent)]
pub fn ContactRoutes(cx: Scope) -> impl IntoView {
view! { cx,
<Route
path=""
view=move |cx| view! { cx, <ContactList/> }
>
<Route
path=":id"
view=move |cx| view! { cx, <Contact/> }
/>
<Route
path="/"
view=move |_| view! { cx, <p>"Select a contact."</p> }
/>
</Route>
}
}
#[component]
pub fn ContactList(cx: Scope) -> impl IntoView {
log::debug!("rendering <ContactList/>");

View File

@@ -2,7 +2,6 @@ use leptos::*;
use router::*;
pub fn main() {
console_error_panic_hook::set_once();
_ = console_log::init_with_level(log::Level::Debug);
console_error_panic_hook::set_once();
mount_to_body(|cx| view! { cx, <RouterExample/> })

View File

@@ -8,7 +8,7 @@ crate-type = ["cdylib", "rlib"]
[dependencies]
anyhow = "1.0.66"
console_log = "0.2.0"
console_log = "1.0.0"
rand = { version = "0.8.5", features = ["min_const_gen"], optional = true }
console_error_panic_hook = "0.1.7"
futures = "0.3.25"

View File

@@ -15,7 +15,6 @@ cfg_if! {
#[wasm_bindgen]
pub fn hydrate() {
console_error_panic_hook::set_once();
_ = console_log::init_with_level(log::Level::Debug);
console_error_panic_hook::set_once();

View File

@@ -6,7 +6,7 @@ if #[cfg(feature = "ssr")] {
use axum::{
response::{Response, IntoResponse},
routing::{post, get},
extract::{Path, Extension},
extract::{Path, Extension, RawQuery},
http::{Request, header::HeaderMap},
body::Body as AxumBody,
Router,
@@ -22,11 +22,12 @@ if #[cfg(feature = "ssr")] {
use axum_database_sessions::{SessionConfig, SessionLayer, SessionStore};
use axum_sessions_auth::{AuthSessionLayer, AuthConfig, SessionSqlitePool};
async fn server_fn_handler(Extension(pool): Extension<SqlitePool>, auth_session: AuthSession, path: Path<String>, headers: HeaderMap, request: Request<AxumBody>) -> impl IntoResponse {
async fn server_fn_handler(Extension(pool): Extension<SqlitePool>, auth_session: AuthSession, path: Path<String>, headers: HeaderMap, raw_query: RawQuery,
request: Request<AxumBody>) -> impl IntoResponse {
log!("{:?}", path);
handle_server_fns_with_context(path, headers, move |cx| {
handle_server_fns_with_context(path, headers, raw_query, move |cx| {
provide_context(cx, auth_session.clone());
provide_context(cx, pool.clone());
}, request).await
@@ -73,7 +74,7 @@ if #[cfg(feature = "ssr")] {
// build our application with a route
let app = Router::new()
.route("/api/*fn_name", post(server_fn_handler))
.route("/api/*fn_name", get(server_fn_handler).post(server_fn_handler))
.leptos_routes_with_handler(routes, get(leptos_routes_handler) )
.fallback(file_and_error_handler)
.layer(AuthSessionLayer::<User, i64, SessionSqlitePool, SqlitePool>::new(Some(pool.clone()))

View File

@@ -10,7 +10,7 @@ crate-type = ["cdylib", "rlib"]
actix-files = { version = "0.6", optional = true }
actix-web = { version = "4", optional = true, features = ["macros"] }
console_error_panic_hook = "0.1"
console_log = "0.2"
console_log = "1"
cfg-if = "1"
lazy_static = "1"
leptos = { path = "../../leptos", default-features = false, features = [

View File

@@ -8,7 +8,7 @@ crate-type = ["cdylib", "rlib"]
[dependencies]
console_error_panic_hook = "0.1"
console_log = "0.2"
console_log = "1"
cfg-if = "1"
lazy_static = "1"
leptos = { path = "../../leptos", default-features = false, features = [

View File

@@ -22,7 +22,7 @@ cfg-if = "1.0"
# dependecies for client (enable when csr or hydrate set)
wasm-bindgen = { version = "0.2", optional = true }
console_log = { version = "0.2", optional = true }
console_log = { version = "1", optional = true }
console_error_panic_hook = { version = "0.1", optional = true }
# dependecies for server (enable when ssr set)

View File

@@ -9,14 +9,14 @@ cfg_if! {
#[wasm_bindgen]
pub fn hydrate() {
console_error_panic_hook::set_once();
_ = console_log::init_with_level(log::Level::Debug);
_ = console_log::init_with_level(log::Level::Debug);
console_error_panic_hook::set_once();
log!("hydrate mode - hydrating");
log!("hydrate mode - hydrating");
leptos::mount_to_body(|cx| {
view! { cx, <App/> }
});
leptos::mount_to_body(|cx| {
view! { cx, <App/> }
});
}
}
else if #[cfg(feature = "csr")] {
@@ -35,5 +35,5 @@ cfg_if! {
view! { cx, <App /> }
});
}
}
}
}

10
examples/tailwind_csr_trunk/.gitignore vendored Normal file
View File

@@ -0,0 +1,10 @@
# Generated by Cargo
# will have compiled files and executables
/target/
# Remove Cargo.lock from gitignore if creating an executable, leave it for libraries
# More information here https://doc.rust-lang.org/cargo/guide/cargo-toml-vs-cargo-lock.html
Cargo.lock
# These are backup files generated by rustfmt
**/*.rs.bk

View File

@@ -0,0 +1,21 @@
[package]
name = "tailwind-csr-trunk"
version = "0.1.0"
edition = "2021"
[dependencies]
leptos = { version = "0.2", features = [
"serde",
"csr",
] }
leptos_meta = { version = "0.2", features = ["csr"] }
leptos_router = { version = "0.2", features = ["csr"] }
log = "0.4"
gloo-net = { version = "0.2", features = ["http"] }
# dependecies for client (enable when csr or hydrate set)
wasm-bindgen = { version = "0.2" }
console_log = { version = "1"}
console_error_panic_hook = { version = "0.1"}

View File

@@ -0,0 +1,21 @@
MIT License
Copyright (c) 2022 henrik
Permission is hereby granted, free of charge, to any person obtaining a copy
of this software and associated documentation files (the "Software"), to deal
in the Software without restriction, including without limitation the rights
to use, copy, modify, merge, publish, distribute, sublicense, and/or sell
copies of the Software, and to permit persons to whom the Software is
furnished to do so, subject to the following conditions:
The above copyright notice and this permission notice shall be included in all
copies or substantial portions of the Software.
THE SOFTWARE IS PROVIDED "AS IS", WITHOUT WARRANTY OF ANY KIND, EXPRESS OR
IMPLIED, INCLUDING BUT NOT LIMITED TO THE WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY,
FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE AND NONINFRINGEMENT. IN NO EVENT SHALL THE
AUTHORS OR COPYRIGHT HOLDERS BE LIABLE FOR ANY CLAIM, DAMAGES OR OTHER
LIABILITY, WHETHER IN AN ACTION OF CONTRACT, TORT OR OTHERWISE, ARISING FROM,
OUT OF OR IN CONNECTION WITH THE SOFTWARE OR THE USE OR OTHER DEALINGS IN THE
SOFTWARE.

View File

@@ -0,0 +1,9 @@
[tasks.build]
command = "cargo"
args = ["+nightly", "build-all-features"]
install_crate = "cargo-all-features"
[tasks.check]
command = "cargo"
args = ["+nightly", "check-all-features"]
install_crate = "cargo-all-features"

View File

@@ -0,0 +1,70 @@
# Leptos Starter Template
This is a template demonstrating how to integrate [TailwindCSS](https://tailwindcss.com/) with the [Leptos](https://github.com/leptos-rs/leptos) web framework and the [trunk](https://github.com/thedodd/trunk) tool.
Install Tailwind and build the CSS:
`npx tailwindcss -i ./input.css -o ./style/output.css --watch`
Install trunk to client side render this bundle.
`cargo install trunk`
Then the site can be served with `trunk serve --open`
The browser will automatically open [http://127.0.0.1:8080//](http://127.0.0.1:8080//)
You can begin editing your app at `src/app.rs`.
## Installing Tailwind
You can install Tailwind using `npm`:
```bash
npm install -D tailwindcss
```
If you'd rather not use `npm`, you can install the Tailwind binary [here](https://github.com/tailwindlabs/tailwindcss/releases).
## Setting up with VS Code and Additional Tools
If you're using VS Code, add the following to your `settings.json`
```json
"emmet.includeLanguages": {
"rust": "html",
"*.rs": "html"
},
"tailwindCSS.includeLanguages": {
"rust": "html",
"*.rs": "html"
},
"files.associations": {
"*.rs": "rust"
},
"editor.quickSuggestions": {
"other": "on",
"comments": "on",
"strings": true
},
"css.validate": false,
```
Install [Tailwind CSS Intellisense](https://marketplace.visualstudio.com/items?itemName=bradlc.vscode-tailwindcss).
Install "VS Browser" extension, a browser at the right window.
Allow vscode Ports forward: 3000, 3001.
## Notes about Tooling
By default, `cargo-leptos` uses `nightly` Rust, `cargo-generate`, and `sass`. If you run into any trouble, you may need to install one or more of these tools.
1. `rustup toolchain install nightly --allow-downgrade` - make sure you have Rust nightly
2. `rustup default nightly` - setup nightly as default, or you can use rust-toolchain file later on
3. `rustup target add wasm32-unknown-unknown` - add the ability to compile Rust to WebAssembly
4. `cargo install cargo-generate` - install `cargo-generate` binary (should be installed automatically in future)
5. `npm install -g sass` - install `dart-sass` (should be optional in future
## Attribution
This is based on the original Tailwind example (../examples/tailwind)

View File

@@ -0,0 +1,74 @@
{
"name": "end2end",
"version": "1.0.0",
"lockfileVersion": 2,
"requires": true,
"packages": {
"": {
"name": "end2end",
"version": "1.0.0",
"license": "ISC",
"devDependencies": {
"@playwright/test": "^1.28.0"
}
},
"node_modules/@playwright/test": {
"version": "1.28.0",
"resolved": "https://registry.npmjs.org/@playwright/test/-/test-1.28.0.tgz",
"integrity": "sha512-vrHs5DFTPwYox5SGKq/7TDn/S4q6RA1zArd7uhO6EyP9hj3XgZBBM12ktMbnDQNxh/fL1IUKsTNLxihmsU38lQ==",
"dev": true,
"dependencies": {
"@types/node": "*",
"playwright-core": "1.28.0"
},
"bin": {
"playwright": "cli.js"
},
"engines": {
"node": ">=14"
}
},
"node_modules/@types/node": {
"version": "18.11.9",
"resolved": "https://registry.npmjs.org/@types/node/-/node-18.11.9.tgz",
"integrity": "sha512-CRpX21/kGdzjOpFsZSkcrXMGIBWMGNIHXXBVFSH+ggkftxg+XYP20TESbh+zFvFj3EQOl5byk0HTRn1IL6hbqg==",
"dev": true
},
"node_modules/playwright-core": {
"version": "1.28.0",
"resolved": "https://registry.npmjs.org/playwright-core/-/playwright-core-1.28.0.tgz",
"integrity": "sha512-nJLknd28kPBiCNTbqpu6Wmkrh63OEqJSFw9xOfL9qxfNwody7h6/L3O2dZoWQ6Oxcm0VOHjWmGiCUGkc0X3VZA==",
"dev": true,
"bin": {
"playwright": "cli.js"
},
"engines": {
"node": ">=14"
}
}
},
"dependencies": {
"@playwright/test": {
"version": "1.28.0",
"resolved": "https://registry.npmjs.org/@playwright/test/-/test-1.28.0.tgz",
"integrity": "sha512-vrHs5DFTPwYox5SGKq/7TDn/S4q6RA1zArd7uhO6EyP9hj3XgZBBM12ktMbnDQNxh/fL1IUKsTNLxihmsU38lQ==",
"dev": true,
"requires": {
"@types/node": "*",
"playwright-core": "1.28.0"
}
},
"@types/node": {
"version": "18.11.9",
"resolved": "https://registry.npmjs.org/@types/node/-/node-18.11.9.tgz",
"integrity": "sha512-CRpX21/kGdzjOpFsZSkcrXMGIBWMGNIHXXBVFSH+ggkftxg+XYP20TESbh+zFvFj3EQOl5byk0HTRn1IL6hbqg==",
"dev": true
},
"playwright-core": {
"version": "1.28.0",
"resolved": "https://registry.npmjs.org/playwright-core/-/playwright-core-1.28.0.tgz",
"integrity": "sha512-nJLknd28kPBiCNTbqpu6Wmkrh63OEqJSFw9xOfL9qxfNwody7h6/L3O2dZoWQ6Oxcm0VOHjWmGiCUGkc0X3VZA==",
"dev": true
}
}
}

View File

@@ -0,0 +1,13 @@
{
"name": "end2end",
"version": "1.0.0",
"description": "",
"main": "index.js",
"scripts": {},
"keywords": [],
"author": "",
"license": "ISC",
"devDependencies": {
"@playwright/test": "^1.28.0"
}
}

View File

@@ -0,0 +1,107 @@
import type { PlaywrightTestConfig } from "@playwright/test";
import { devices } from "@playwright/test";
/**
* Read environment variables from file.
* https://github.com/motdotla/dotenv
*/
// require('dotenv').config();
/**
* See https://playwright.dev/docs/test-configuration.
*/
const config: PlaywrightTestConfig = {
testDir: "./tests",
/* Maximum time one test can run for. */
timeout: 30 * 1000,
expect: {
/**
* Maximum time expect() should wait for the condition to be met.
* For example in `await expect(locator).toHaveText();`
*/
timeout: 5000,
},
/* Run tests in files in parallel */
fullyParallel: true,
/* Fail the build on CI if you accidentally left test.only in the source code. */
forbidOnly: !!process.env.CI,
/* Retry on CI only */
retries: process.env.CI ? 2 : 0,
/* Opt out of parallel tests on CI. */
workers: process.env.CI ? 1 : undefined,
/* Reporter to use. See https://playwright.dev/docs/test-reporters */
reporter: "html",
/* Shared settings for all the projects below. See https://playwright.dev/docs/api/class-testoptions. */
use: {
/* Maximum time each action such as `click()` can take. Defaults to 0 (no limit). */
actionTimeout: 0,
/* Base URL to use in actions like `await page.goto('/')`. */
// baseURL: 'http://localhost:3000',
/* Collect trace when retrying the failed test. See https://playwright.dev/docs/trace-viewer */
trace: "on-first-retry",
},
/* Configure projects for major browsers */
projects: [
{
name: "chromium",
use: {
...devices["Desktop Chrome"],
},
},
{
name: "firefox",
use: {
...devices["Desktop Firefox"],
},
},
{
name: "webkit",
use: {
...devices["Desktop Safari"],
},
},
/* Test against mobile viewports. */
// {
// name: 'Mobile Chrome',
// use: {
// ...devices['Pixel 5'],
// },
// },
// {
// name: 'Mobile Safari',
// use: {
// ...devices['iPhone 12'],
// },
// },
/* Test against branded browsers. */
// {
// name: 'Microsoft Edge',
// use: {
// channel: 'msedge',
// },
// },
// {
// name: 'Google Chrome',
// use: {
// channel: 'chrome',
// },
// },
],
/* Folder for test artifacts such as screenshots, videos, traces, etc. */
// outputDir: 'test-results/',
/* Run your local dev server before starting the tests */
// webServer: {
// command: 'npm run start',
// port: 3000,
// },
};
export default config;

View File

@@ -0,0 +1,9 @@
import { test, expect } from "@playwright/test";
test("homepage has title and links to intro page", async ({ page }) => {
await page.goto("http://localhost:8080/");
await expect(page).toHaveTitle("Leptos • Counter with Tailwind");
await expect(page.locator("h2")).toHaveText("Welcome to Leptos with Tailwind");
});

View File

@@ -0,0 +1,14 @@
<!DOCTYPE html>
<html lang="en">
<head>
<meta charset="utf-8">
<link data-trunk rel="rust" data-wasm-opt="z" />
<link data-trunk rel="icon" type="image/ico" href="/public/favicon.ico" />
<link data-trunk rel="css" href="/style/output.css" />
<title>Leptos • Counter with Tailwind</title>
</head>
<body></body>
</html>

View File

@@ -0,0 +1,3 @@
@tailwind base;
@tailwind components;
@tailwind utilities;

Binary file not shown.

After

Width:  |  Height:  |  Size: 15 KiB

View File

@@ -0,0 +1,43 @@
use leptos::*;
use leptos_meta::*;
use leptos_router::*;
#[component]
pub fn App(cx: Scope) -> impl IntoView {
provide_meta_context(cx);
view! {
cx,
<Stylesheet id="leptos" href="/pkg/tailwind.css"/>
<Link rel="shortcut icon" type_="image/ico" href="/favicon.ico"/>
<Router>
<Routes>
<Route path="" view= move |cx| view! { cx, <Home/> }/>
</Routes>
</Router>
}
}
#[component]
fn Home(cx: Scope) -> impl IntoView {
let (count, set_count) = create_signal(cx, 0);
view! { cx,
<div class="my-0 mx-auto max-w-3xl text-center">
<h2 class="p-6 text-4xl">"Welcome to Leptos with Tailwind"</h2>
<p class="px-10 pb-10 text-left">"Tailwind will scan your Rust files for Tailwind class names and compile them into a CSS file."</p>
<button
class="bg-amber-600 hover:bg-sky-700 px-5 py-3 text-white rounded-lg"
on:click=move |_| set_count.update(|count| *count += 1)
>
"Something's here | "
{move || if count() == 0 {
"Click me!".to_string()
} else {
count().to_string()
}}
" | Some more text"
</button>
</div>
}
}

View File

@@ -0,0 +1,15 @@
mod app;
use app::*;
use leptos::*;
pub fn main() {
_ = console_log::init_with_level(log::Level::Debug);
console_error_panic_hook::set_once();
log!("csr mode - mounting to body");
mount_to_body(|cx| {
view! { cx, <App /> }
});
}

View File

@@ -0,0 +1,583 @@
/*
! tailwindcss v3.2.7 | MIT License | https://tailwindcss.com
*/
/*
1. Prevent padding and border from affecting element width. (https://github.com/mozdevs/cssremedy/issues/4)
2. Allow adding a border to an element by just adding a border-width. (https://github.com/tailwindcss/tailwindcss/pull/116)
*/
*,
::before,
::after {
box-sizing: border-box;
/* 1 */
border-width: 0;
/* 2 */
border-style: solid;
/* 2 */
border-color: #e5e7eb;
/* 2 */
}
::before,
::after {
--tw-content: '';
}
/*
1. Use a consistent sensible line-height in all browsers.
2. Prevent adjustments of font size after orientation changes in iOS.
3. Use a more readable tab size.
4. Use the user's configured `sans` font-family by default.
5. Use the user's configured `sans` font-feature-settings by default.
*/
html {
line-height: 1.5;
/* 1 */
-webkit-text-size-adjust: 100%;
/* 2 */
-moz-tab-size: 4;
/* 3 */
-o-tab-size: 4;
tab-size: 4;
/* 3 */
font-family: ui-sans-serif, system-ui, -apple-system, BlinkMacSystemFont, "Segoe UI", Roboto, "Helvetica Neue", Arial, "Noto Sans", sans-serif, "Apple Color Emoji", "Segoe UI Emoji", "Segoe UI Symbol", "Noto Color Emoji";
/* 4 */
font-feature-settings: normal;
/* 5 */
}
/*
1. Remove the margin in all browsers.
2. Inherit line-height from `html` so users can set them as a class directly on the `html` element.
*/
body {
margin: 0;
/* 1 */
line-height: inherit;
/* 2 */
}
/*
1. Add the correct height in Firefox.
2. Correct the inheritance of border color in Firefox. (https://bugzilla.mozilla.org/show_bug.cgi?id=190655)
3. Ensure horizontal rules are visible by default.
*/
hr {
height: 0;
/* 1 */
color: inherit;
/* 2 */
border-top-width: 1px;
/* 3 */
}
/*
Add the correct text decoration in Chrome, Edge, and Safari.
*/
abbr:where([title]) {
-webkit-text-decoration: underline dotted;
text-decoration: underline dotted;
}
/*
Remove the default font size and weight for headings.
*/
h1,
h2,
h3,
h4,
h5,
h6 {
font-size: inherit;
font-weight: inherit;
}
/*
Reset links to optimize for opt-in styling instead of opt-out.
*/
a {
color: inherit;
text-decoration: inherit;
}
/*
Add the correct font weight in Edge and Safari.
*/
b,
strong {
font-weight: bolder;
}
/*
1. Use the user's configured `mono` font family by default.
2. Correct the odd `em` font sizing in all browsers.
*/
code,
kbd,
samp,
pre {
font-family: ui-monospace, SFMono-Regular, Menlo, Monaco, Consolas, "Liberation Mono", "Courier New", monospace;
/* 1 */
font-size: 1em;
/* 2 */
}
/*
Add the correct font size in all browsers.
*/
small {
font-size: 80%;
}
/*
Prevent `sub` and `sup` elements from affecting the line height in all browsers.
*/
sub,
sup {
font-size: 75%;
line-height: 0;
position: relative;
vertical-align: baseline;
}
sub {
bottom: -0.25em;
}
sup {
top: -0.5em;
}
/*
1. Remove text indentation from table contents in Chrome and Safari. (https://bugs.chromium.org/p/chromium/issues/detail?id=999088, https://bugs.webkit.org/show_bug.cgi?id=201297)
2. Correct table border color inheritance in all Chrome and Safari. (https://bugs.chromium.org/p/chromium/issues/detail?id=935729, https://bugs.webkit.org/show_bug.cgi?id=195016)
3. Remove gaps between table borders by default.
*/
table {
text-indent: 0;
/* 1 */
border-color: inherit;
/* 2 */
border-collapse: collapse;
/* 3 */
}
/*
1. Change the font styles in all browsers.
2. Remove the margin in Firefox and Safari.
3. Remove default padding in all browsers.
*/
button,
input,
optgroup,
select,
textarea {
font-family: inherit;
/* 1 */
font-size: 100%;
/* 1 */
font-weight: inherit;
/* 1 */
line-height: inherit;
/* 1 */
color: inherit;
/* 1 */
margin: 0;
/* 2 */
padding: 0;
/* 3 */
}
/*
Remove the inheritance of text transform in Edge and Firefox.
*/
button,
select {
text-transform: none;
}
/*
1. Correct the inability to style clickable types in iOS and Safari.
2. Remove default button styles.
*/
button,
[type='button'],
[type='reset'],
[type='submit'] {
-webkit-appearance: button;
/* 1 */
background-color: transparent;
/* 2 */
background-image: none;
/* 2 */
}
/*
Use the modern Firefox focus style for all focusable elements.
*/
:-moz-focusring {
outline: auto;
}
/*
Remove the additional `:invalid` styles in Firefox. (https://github.com/mozilla/gecko-dev/blob/2f9eacd9d3d995c937b4251a5557d95d494c9be1/layout/style/res/forms.css#L728-L737)
*/
:-moz-ui-invalid {
box-shadow: none;
}
/*
Add the correct vertical alignment in Chrome and Firefox.
*/
progress {
vertical-align: baseline;
}
/*
Correct the cursor style of increment and decrement buttons in Safari.
*/
::-webkit-inner-spin-button,
::-webkit-outer-spin-button {
height: auto;
}
/*
1. Correct the odd appearance in Chrome and Safari.
2. Correct the outline style in Safari.
*/
[type='search'] {
-webkit-appearance: textfield;
/* 1 */
outline-offset: -2px;
/* 2 */
}
/*
Remove the inner padding in Chrome and Safari on macOS.
*/
::-webkit-search-decoration {
-webkit-appearance: none;
}
/*
1. Correct the inability to style clickable types in iOS and Safari.
2. Change font properties to `inherit` in Safari.
*/
::-webkit-file-upload-button {
-webkit-appearance: button;
/* 1 */
font: inherit;
/* 2 */
}
/*
Add the correct display in Chrome and Safari.
*/
summary {
display: list-item;
}
/*
Removes the default spacing and border for appropriate elements.
*/
blockquote,
dl,
dd,
h1,
h2,
h3,
h4,
h5,
h6,
hr,
figure,
p,
pre {
margin: 0;
}
fieldset {
margin: 0;
padding: 0;
}
legend {
padding: 0;
}
ol,
ul,
menu {
list-style: none;
margin: 0;
padding: 0;
}
/*
Prevent resizing textareas horizontally by default.
*/
textarea {
resize: vertical;
}
/*
1. Reset the default placeholder opacity in Firefox. (https://github.com/tailwindlabs/tailwindcss/issues/3300)
2. Set the default placeholder color to the user's configured gray 400 color.
*/
input::-moz-placeholder, textarea::-moz-placeholder {
opacity: 1;
/* 1 */
color: #9ca3af;
/* 2 */
}
input::placeholder,
textarea::placeholder {
opacity: 1;
/* 1 */
color: #9ca3af;
/* 2 */
}
/*
Set the default cursor for buttons.
*/
button,
[role="button"] {
cursor: pointer;
}
/*
Make sure disabled buttons don't get the pointer cursor.
*/
:disabled {
cursor: default;
}
/*
1. Make replaced elements `display: block` by default. (https://github.com/mozdevs/cssremedy/issues/14)
2. Add `vertical-align: middle` to align replaced elements more sensibly by default. (https://github.com/jensimmons/cssremedy/issues/14#issuecomment-634934210)
This can trigger a poorly considered lint error in some tools but is included by design.
*/
img,
svg,
video,
canvas,
audio,
iframe,
embed,
object {
display: block;
/* 1 */
vertical-align: middle;
/* 2 */
}
/*
Constrain images and videos to the parent width and preserve their intrinsic aspect ratio. (https://github.com/mozdevs/cssremedy/issues/14)
*/
img,
video {
max-width: 100%;
height: auto;
}
/* Make elements with the HTML hidden attribute stay hidden by default */
[hidden] {
display: none;
}
*, ::before, ::after {
--tw-border-spacing-x: 0;
--tw-border-spacing-y: 0;
--tw-translate-x: 0;
--tw-translate-y: 0;
--tw-rotate: 0;
--tw-skew-x: 0;
--tw-skew-y: 0;
--tw-scale-x: 1;
--tw-scale-y: 1;
--tw-pan-x: ;
--tw-pan-y: ;
--tw-pinch-zoom: ;
--tw-scroll-snap-strictness: proximity;
--tw-ordinal: ;
--tw-slashed-zero: ;
--tw-numeric-figure: ;
--tw-numeric-spacing: ;
--tw-numeric-fraction: ;
--tw-ring-inset: ;
--tw-ring-offset-width: 0px;
--tw-ring-offset-color: #fff;
--tw-ring-color: rgb(59 130 246 / 0.5);
--tw-ring-offset-shadow: 0 0 #0000;
--tw-ring-shadow: 0 0 #0000;
--tw-shadow: 0 0 #0000;
--tw-shadow-colored: 0 0 #0000;
--tw-blur: ;
--tw-brightness: ;
--tw-contrast: ;
--tw-grayscale: ;
--tw-hue-rotate: ;
--tw-invert: ;
--tw-saturate: ;
--tw-sepia: ;
--tw-drop-shadow: ;
--tw-backdrop-blur: ;
--tw-backdrop-brightness: ;
--tw-backdrop-contrast: ;
--tw-backdrop-grayscale: ;
--tw-backdrop-hue-rotate: ;
--tw-backdrop-invert: ;
--tw-backdrop-opacity: ;
--tw-backdrop-saturate: ;
--tw-backdrop-sepia: ;
}
::backdrop {
--tw-border-spacing-x: 0;
--tw-border-spacing-y: 0;
--tw-translate-x: 0;
--tw-translate-y: 0;
--tw-rotate: 0;
--tw-skew-x: 0;
--tw-skew-y: 0;
--tw-scale-x: 1;
--tw-scale-y: 1;
--tw-pan-x: ;
--tw-pan-y: ;
--tw-pinch-zoom: ;
--tw-scroll-snap-strictness: proximity;
--tw-ordinal: ;
--tw-slashed-zero: ;
--tw-numeric-figure: ;
--tw-numeric-spacing: ;
--tw-numeric-fraction: ;
--tw-ring-inset: ;
--tw-ring-offset-width: 0px;
--tw-ring-offset-color: #fff;
--tw-ring-color: rgb(59 130 246 / 0.5);
--tw-ring-offset-shadow: 0 0 #0000;
--tw-ring-shadow: 0 0 #0000;
--tw-shadow: 0 0 #0000;
--tw-shadow-colored: 0 0 #0000;
--tw-blur: ;
--tw-brightness: ;
--tw-contrast: ;
--tw-grayscale: ;
--tw-hue-rotate: ;
--tw-invert: ;
--tw-saturate: ;
--tw-sepia: ;
--tw-drop-shadow: ;
--tw-backdrop-blur: ;
--tw-backdrop-brightness: ;
--tw-backdrop-contrast: ;
--tw-backdrop-grayscale: ;
--tw-backdrop-hue-rotate: ;
--tw-backdrop-invert: ;
--tw-backdrop-opacity: ;
--tw-backdrop-saturate: ;
--tw-backdrop-sepia: ;
}
.mx-auto {
margin-left: auto;
margin-right: auto;
}
.my-0 {
margin-top: 0px;
margin-bottom: 0px;
}
.max-w-3xl {
max-width: 48rem;
}
.rounded-lg {
border-radius: 0.5rem;
}
.bg-amber-600 {
--tw-bg-opacity: 1;
background-color: rgb(217 119 6 / var(--tw-bg-opacity));
}
.p-6 {
padding: 1.5rem;
}
.px-10 {
padding-left: 2.5rem;
padding-right: 2.5rem;
}
.px-5 {
padding-left: 1.25rem;
padding-right: 1.25rem;
}
.py-3 {
padding-top: 0.75rem;
padding-bottom: 0.75rem;
}
.pb-10 {
padding-bottom: 2.5rem;
}
.text-left {
text-align: left;
}
.text-center {
text-align: center;
}
.text-4xl {
font-size: 2.25rem;
line-height: 2.5rem;
}
.text-white {
--tw-text-opacity: 1;
color: rgb(255 255 255 / var(--tw-text-opacity));
}
.hover\:bg-sky-700:hover {
--tw-bg-opacity: 1;
background-color: rgb(3 105 161 / var(--tw-bg-opacity));
}

View File

@@ -0,0 +1,10 @@
/** @type {import('tailwindcss').Config} */
module.exports = {
content: {
files: ["*.html", "./src/**/*.rs"],
},
theme: {
extend: {},
},
plugins: [],
}

View File

@@ -11,7 +11,7 @@ actix-files = { version = "0.6.2", optional = true }
actix-web = { version = "4.2.1", optional = true, features = ["macros"] }
anyhow = "1.0.68"
broadcaster = "1.0.0"
console_log = "0.2.0"
console_log = "1.0.0"
console_error_panic_hook = "0.1.7"
serde = { version = "1.0.152", features = ["derive"] }
futures = "0.3.25"

View File

@@ -4,6 +4,15 @@ args = ["+nightly", "build-all-features"]
install_crate = "cargo-all-features"
[tasks.check]
clear = true
dependencies = ["check-debug", "check-release"]
[tasks.check-debug]
command = "cargo"
args = ["+nightly", "check-all-features"]
install_crate = "cargo-all-features"
[tasks.check-release]
command = "cargo"
args = ["+nightly", "check-all-features", "--release"]
install_crate = "cargo-all-features"

View File

@@ -7,7 +7,7 @@ edition = "2021"
crate-type = ["cdylib", "rlib"]
[dependencies]
console_log = "0.2.0"
console_log = "1.0.0"
console_error_panic_hook = "0.1.7"
futures = "0.3.25"
cfg-if = "1.0.0"

View File

@@ -13,7 +13,6 @@ cfg_if! {
#[wasm_bindgen]
pub fn hydrate() {
console_error_panic_hook::set_once();
_ = console_log::init_with_level(log::Level::Debug);
console_error_panic_hook::set_once();

View File

@@ -7,7 +7,7 @@ edition = "2021"
crate-type = ["cdylib", "rlib"]
[dependencies]
console_log = "0.2.0"
console_log = "1.0.0"
console_error_panic_hook = "0.1.7"
futures = "0.3.25"
cfg-if = "1.0.0"

View File

@@ -13,7 +13,6 @@ cfg_if! {
#[wasm_bindgen]
pub fn hydrate() {
console_error_panic_hook::set_once();
_ = console_log::init_with_level(log::Level::Debug);
console_error_panic_hook::set_once();

View File

@@ -51,7 +51,8 @@ pub async fn get_todos(cx: Scope) -> Result<Vec<Todo>, ServerFnError> {
let mut conn = db().await?;
let mut todos = Vec::new();
let mut rows = sqlx::query_as::<_, Todo>("SELECT * FROM todos").fetch(&mut conn);
let mut rows =
sqlx::query_as::<_, Todo>("SELECT * FROM todos").fetch(&mut conn);
while let Some(row) = rows
.try_next()
.await

View File

@@ -6,7 +6,7 @@ edition = "2021"
[dependencies]
leptos = { path = "../../leptos", default-features = false }
log = "0.4"
console_log = "0.2"
console_log = "1"
console_error_panic_hook = "0.1.7"
uuid = { version = "1", features = ["v4", "js", "serde"] }
serde = { version = "1", features = ["derive"] }

View File

@@ -1,7 +1,6 @@
use leptos::*;
pub use todomvc::*;
fn main() {
console_error_panic_hook::set_once();
_ = console_log::init_with_level(log::Level::Debug);
console_error_panic_hook::set_once();
mount_to_body(|cx| view! { cx, <TodoMVC/> })

View File

@@ -14,5 +14,6 @@ leptos = { workspace = true, features = ["ssr"] }
leptos_meta = { workspace = true, features = ["ssr"] }
leptos_router = { workspace = true, features = ["ssr"] }
leptos_integration_utils = { workspace = true }
serde_json = "1"
parking_lot = "0.12.1"
regex = "1.7.0"

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