Components
Basic
Any type that implements Component
can be used in the html!
macro:
use yew::{Component, Html, html, Context, Properties};
struct MyComponent;
impl Component for MyComponent {
type Message = ();
type Properties = ();
fn create(_ctx: &Context<Self>) -> Self {
Self
}
fn view(&self, _ctx: &Context<Self>) -> Html {
html! {
{ "This component has no properties!" }
}
}
}
#[derive(Clone, PartialEq, Properties)]
struct Props {
prop1: String,
prop2: String,
}
struct MyComponentWithProps;
impl Component for MyComponentWithProps {
type Message = ();
type Properties = Props;
fn create(_ctx: &Context<Self>) -> Self {
Self
}
fn view(&self, ctx: &Context<Self>) -> Html {
html! {
{
format!(
"prop1: {} and prop2: {}",
ctx.props().prop1,
ctx.props().prop2
)
}
}
}
}
let props = Props {
prop1: "Hello".to_owned(),
prop2: "World".to_owned(),
};
html!{
<>
// No properties
<MyComponent />
// With Properties
<MyComponentWithProps prop1="lorem" prop2="ipsum" />
// With the whole set of props provided at once
<MyComponentWithProps ..props.clone() />
// With Properties from a variable and specific values overridden
<MyComponentWithProps prop2="lorem" ..props />
</>
};
Nested
Components can be passed children if they have a children
field in their Properties
.
parent.rs
use yew::{Children, Component, Context, html, Html, Properties};
#[derive(PartialEq, Properties)]
struct Props {
id: String,
children: Children,
}
struct Container;
impl Component for Container {
type Message = ();
type Properties = Props;
fn create(_ctx: &Context<Self>) -> Self {
Self
}
fn view(&self, ctx: &Context<Self>) -> Html {
html! {
<div id={ctx.props().id.clone()}>
{ ctx.props().children.clone() }
</div>
}
}
}
html! {
<Container id="container">
<h4>{ "Hi" }</h4>
<div>{ "Hello" }</div>
</Container>
};
The html!
macro allows you to pass a base expression with the ..props
syntax instead of specifying each property individually, similar to Rust’s Functional Update Syntax. This base expression must occur after any individual props are passed. When passing a base props expression with a children
field, the children passed in the html!
macro overwrite the ones already present in the props.
use yew::{Children, Component, Context, html, Html, props, Properties};
#[derive(PartialEq, Properties)]
struct Props {
id: String,
children: Children,
}
struct Container;
impl Component for Container {
type Message = ();
type Properties = Props;
fn create(_ctx: &Context<Self>) -> Self {
Self
}
fn view(&self, ctx: &Context<Self>) -> Html {
html! {
<div id={ctx.props().id.clone()}>
{ ctx.props().children.clone() }
</div>
}
}
}
let props = yew::props!(Container::Properties {
id: "container-2",
children: Children::default(),
});
html! {
<Container ..props>
// props.children will be overwritten with this
<span>{ "I am a child, as you can see" }</span>
</Container>
};
Nested Children with Props
Nested component properties can be accessed and mutated if the containing component types its children. In the following example, the List
component can wrap ListItem
components. For a real world example of this pattern, check out the yew-router
source code. For a more advanced example, check out the nested-list
example in the main yew repository.
use std::rc::Rc;
use yew::{html, ChildrenWithProps, Component, Context, Html, Properties};
#[derive(Clone, PartialEq, Properties)]
pub struct ListItemProps {
value: String,
}
pub struct ListItem;
impl Component for ListItem {
type Message = ();
type Properties = ListItemProps;
fn create(_ctx: &Context<Self>) -> Self {
Self
}
fn view(&self, ctx: &Context<Self>) -> Html {
html! {
<span>
{ ctx.props().value.clone() }
</span>
}
}
}
#[derive(PartialEq, Properties)]
pub struct Props {
pub children: ChildrenWithProps<ListItem>,
}
pub struct List;
impl Component for List {
type Message = ();
type Properties = Props;
fn create(_ctx: &Context<Self>) -> Self {
Self
}
fn view(&self, ctx: &Context<Self>) -> Html {
html! {{
for ctx.props().children.iter().map(|mut item| {
let mut props = Rc::make_mut(&mut item.props);
props.value = format!("item-{}", props.value);
item
})
}}
}
}
html! {
<List>
<ListItem value="a" />
<ListItem value="b" />
<ListItem value="c" />
</List>
};