7 releases (4 breaking)
0.5.0 | Apr 28, 2024 |
---|---|
0.4.0 | Aug 12, 2023 |
0.3.0 | Jan 19, 2023 |
0.2.2 | May 3, 2022 |
0.1.0 | Apr 1, 2022 |
#1292 in Web programming
43KB
145 lines
Style in Rust
Write SCSS in your component functions
Usage with Dioxus
Add the dependency to Cargo.toml
:
[dependencies]
sir = { version = "0.5.0", features = ["dioxus"] }
Render the AppStyle
component somewhere in your app:
use sir::AppStyle;
fn App() -> Element {
rsx!(
AppStyle {}
Counter {}
)
}
Now, use the css!
and global_css!
macros to style your app!
use sir::{css, global_css};
fn Counter() -> Element {
let mut count = use_signal(|| 0);
global_css!("
body {
background: slategray;
}
");
let container = css!("
display: flex;
flex-direction: column;
align-items: center;
gap: 4px;
");
let title = css!("color: white");
let button = css!("
border: none;
padding: 8px 16px;
border-radius: 4px;
background: deepskyblue;
transition: background 0.2s ease-out;
&:hover {
background: aquamarine;
}
");
rsx!(
div {
class: "{container}",
h1 { class: "{title}", "Counter: {count}" }
button { class: "{button}", onclick: move |_| count += 1, "Increment" }
button { class: "{button}", onclick: move |_| count -= 1, "Decrement" }
}
)
}
See examples/dioxus_counter.rs
for the complete example.
Features
sir
uses rsass
for all the SCSS compiling. rsass
is
incomplete, but "usable for personal projects".
Similar Crates
Rustyle looks really cool, but it's not very well-documented and has been abandoned. It appears that Rustyle implements all parsing and code generation from scratch.
css_rs_macro from the Percy project looks promising as well, but it uses a custom, slightly more verbose syntax, and the current implementation looks a bit hacky.
Technical details
At compile time, a class name is generated for each css!()
macro. The provided SCSS is wrapped in a selector for that
class and compiled using rsass
.
At each css!
call site, some code is generated that will register the resulting CSS to the global CSS_COLLECTION
variable at runtime. A static bool
is used to make sure that we only register the CSS once.
Why not collect all CSS at compile time?
I could be wrong, but it seems there's no clean way to globally collect CSS at compile time. Procedural macros only work
on individual items (or, experimentally, on individual files). Build scripts aren't allowed to modify source code (so we
can't easily sync up generated CSS class
es with what gets returned by the css!
macro), and would have to do source
code parsing on their own (error-prone and messy).
There's also linkme
which could push some work to link time, but it appears to
have been abandoned.
Dependencies
~3–9MB
~81K SLoC