Build a sample app
First create a new Rust library (important: create a library, not a binary by passing the --lib
flag):
cargo new --lib yew-app && cd yew-app
Add yew
and wasm-bindgen
to your dependencies (refer here for the latest version)
[package]
name = "yew-app"
version = "0.1.0"
authors = ["Yew App Developer <name@example.com>"]
edition = "2018"
[lib]
crate-type = ["cdylib", "rlib"]
[dependencies]
yew = "0.17"
wasm-bindgen = "0.2.67"
Copy the following template into your src/lib.rs
file:
use wasm_bindgen::prelude::*;
use yew::prelude::*;
struct Model {
link: ComponentLink<Self>,
value: i64,
}
enum Msg {
AddOne,
}
impl Component for Model {
type Message = Msg;
type Properties = ();
fn create(_: Self::Properties, link: ComponentLink<Self>) -> Self {
Self {
link,
value: 0,
}
}
fn update(&mut self, msg: Self::Message) -> ShouldRender {
match msg {
Msg::AddOne => self.value += 1
}
true
}
fn change(&mut self, _props: Self::Properties) -> ShouldRender {
// Should only return "true" if new properties are different to
// previously received properties.
// This component has no properties so we will always return "false".
false
}
fn view(&self) -> Html {
html! {
<div>
<button onclick=self.link.callback(|_| Msg::AddOne)>{ "+1" }</button>
<p>{ self.value }</p>
</div>
}
}
}
#[wasm_bindgen(start)]
pub fn run_app() {
App::<Model>::new().mount_to_body();
}
This template sets up your root Component
, called Model
which shows a button that updates itself when you click it. Take special note of App::<Model>::new().mount_to_body()
inside main()
which starts your app and mounts it to the page’s <body>
tag. If you would like to start your application with any dynamic properties, you can instead use App::<Model>::new().mount_to_body_with_props(..)
.
Finally, add an index.html
file into a new folder named static
in your app.
mkdir static
<!doctype html>
<html lang="en">
<head>
<meta charset="utf-8">
<title>Yew Sample App</title>
<script type="module">
import init from "./wasm.js"
init()
</script>
</head>
<body></body>
</html>
Run your App!
Using wasm-pack
is the preferred way to get up and running. If you haven’t already, install wasm-pack
with cargo install wasm-pack
and then build and start a development server by running:
wasm-pack build --target web --out-name wasm --out-dir ./static
wasm-pack
generates a bundle in the ./static
directory with your app’s compiled WebAssembly along with a JavaScript wrapper which will load your application’s WebAssembly binary and run it.
Then, use your favorite web server to serve the files under ./static
. For example:
cargo +nightly install miniserve
miniserve ./static --index index.html