3 releases

0.1.2 Apr 9, 2024
0.1.1 Jan 5, 2023
0.1.0 Jan 5, 2023

#1410 in Web programming

Download history 4/week @ 2024-07-23 7/week @ 2024-09-24

118 downloads per month

MIT license

32KB
651 lines

💇‍♂️+🦀 -> Hallings - components for Yew

❓ Purpose

What if there existed a couple of pre-built components for yew like password strength checker or steps-left? Wonder no more.

this is not a finished library it is meant as a prototype/test during a master's course at LiU (Sweden), it should not be used for any real world projects

Prerequisites

Yew: version "0.20"

🏁 Getting started

  1. Install Yew
  2. Add dependency to Cargo.toml file hallings = "0.1"
  3. Bring in the library by doing use hallings::prelude::*

👷‍♂️ As simple as that to get started

✒ Running tests

All tests are located in test.rs. To run tests make sure you have installed everything required, then run.

  • wasm-pack test --chrome

You could replace --chrome with --firefox. Check the wasm-pack documentation for more info

👌 Check out our usage examples below...

Provider & Theme

Halling uses Context Providers to provide components with theme data. Currently you can not pass your own theme struct.

<MaestroProvider> halling components </MaestroProvider>

All of the examples have been tested using yew = "0.20" inside Function Components

Text

<Text
    size={"40px"}
    color={"purple"} // if none is specified theme color is used
    class={classes!("Custom class")}
>
    {"Pretty large text"}
</Text>

Or feed text through as prop variable,

<Text size={"40px"} custom={TextProps { label: "Test".into() }}/>

Button

let counter = use_state(|| 0);

let click = {
    let counter = counter.clone();
    Callback::from(move |_s: yew::MouseEvent| {
        counter.set(*counter + 1);
    })
};

<Button custom={
    ButtonProps { onclick: cb }
}>
    <Text color={"white"}>{"Next"}</Text>
</Button>

Password Strength Checker

This component provides a password input component while also providing feedback dependent on how strong the given password currently is. You can provide your own strength checking function and formatting functions. Right now there is no direct way to extract the password value.

<PasswordStrengthInput
	custom = { PasswordStrengthInputProps
	{
        calculate_strength_level: None,
        strength_level_to_text_and_color: None,
        strength_callback: None
	}}
/>

Example 1 (default behaviour)

pub fn calculate_strength_level(value: String) -> StrengthLevel {
    if value.contains("secure") {
        return StrengthLevel::HIGH;
    }
    StrengthLevel::LOW
}

pub fn on_level_change(strength_level: StrengthLevel) {
    // use strength_level
}

fn strength_level_to_text_and_color(value: StrengthLevel) -> (String, String) {
    match value {
        StrengthLevel::LOW => ("Password not strong enough".into(), "red".into()),
        StrengthLevel::MEDIUM => ("Password weak but passable".into(), "blue".into()),
        StrengthLevel::HIGH => ("Password strong".into(), "green".into()),
    }
}

<PasswordStrengthInput
    custom = { PasswordStrengthInputProps {
        calculate_strength_level: Some(calculate_strength_level),
        strength_level_to_text_and_color: Some(strength_level_to_text_and_color),
        strength_callback: Some(on_level_change)
    }}
/>

Example 2 (customized behaviour)

Steps Left

Steps left draws its UI using svg, circle & lines. The width and height dictates the width and height of the svg image. You can feed however many steps and the component will dynamically position and space the steps.

<StepsLeft
    custom = {
        StepsLeftProps {
            width: 800,
            height: 200,
            current_step: (*counter).clone(),
            steps: vec![
                Step {
                    label: "Check out".into()
                },
                Step {
                    label: "Confirm".into()
                },
                Step {
                    label: "Pay".into()
                },
            ]
        }
    }
/>

Dependencies

~12–21MB
~283K SLoC