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Description

Azul is a library for creating graphical user interfaces or GUIs in Rust. It mixes paradigms from functional, immediate mode GUI programming commonly found in games and game engines with an API suitable for developing desktop applications. Instead of focusing on an object-oriented approach to GUI programming ("a button is an object"), it focuses on combining objects by composition ("a button is a function") and achieves complex layouts by composing widgets into a larger DOM tree.

Azul separates the concerns of business logic / callbacks, data model and UI rendering / styling by not letting the UI / rendering logic have mutable access to the application data. Widgets of your user interface are seen as a "view" into your applications data, they are not "objects that manage their own state", like in so many other toolkits. Widgets are simply functions that render a certain state, more complex widgets combine buttons by calling a function multiple times.

The generated DOM itself is immut

Programming language: Rust
License: Mozilla Public License 2.0
Tags: GUI     Graphics     Ui     Applications written in Rust     svg     User-interface    

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README

Azul - Desktop GUI framework

<!-- [START badges] --> CI Coverage Status [LICENSE](LICENSE) Rust Compiler Version dependency status <!-- [END badges] -->

Azul is a free, functional, reactive GUI framework for Rust, C and C++, built using the WebRender rendering engine and a CSS / HTML-like document object model for rapid development of beautiful, native desktop applications

Website | Releases | User guide | API documentation | Video demo | Matrix Chat

Features

Azul uses webrender (the rendering engine behind Firefox) to render your UI, so it supports lots of common CSS features like:

  • gradients (linear, radial, conic)
  • box shadows
  • SVG filters
  • composition operators (multiply, darken, etc.)
  • border styling
  • border-radii
  • scrolling / automatic overflow
  • CSS transforms

See the list of supported CSS keys / values for more info.

On top of that, Azul features...

  • lots of built-in widgets (Button, TextInput, CheckBox, ColorInput, TextInput, NumberInput)
  • embedding OpenGL textures
  • simplified HTML-like relative/absolute layout system based on CSS flexbox
  • 60+ FPS animations via Animation API
  • cross-platform native dialogs
  • cross-platform text shaping and rendering
  • SVG parsing and rendering
  • shape tesselation for rendering large numbers of 2D lines, circles, rects, shapes, etc. in a single draw call
  • managing off-main-thread tasks for I/O
  • dynamic linking via shared library*
  • usable from Rust, C, C++ and Python via auto-generated API bindings**
  • HTML-to-Rust compilation for fast prototyping / hot reload

* static linking not yet available

** C++ bindings and Python are not yet stabilized and might not work depending on the branch you're using. They will be stabilized before the release.

Screenshots

image image image image

Hello World

Python

from azul import *

class DataModel:
    def __init__(self, counter):
        self.counter = counter

def render_dom(data, info):

    label = Dom.text("{}".format(data.counter))
    label.set_inline_style("font-size: 50px;")

    button = Button("Increment counter")
    button.set_on_click(data, increment_counter)

    dom = Dom.body()
    dom.add_child(label)
    dom.add_child(button.dom())

    return dom.style(Css.empty())

def increment_counter(data, info):
    data.counter += 1;
    return Update.RefreshDom

app = App(DataModel(5), AppConfig(LayoutSolver.Default))
app.run(WindowCreateOptions(render_dom))

Rust

use azul::prelude::*;
use azul::widgets::{button::Button, label::Label};

struct DataModel {
    counter: usize,
}

extern "C" 
fn render_dom(data: &mut RefAny, _: &mut LayoutInfo) -> StyledDom {

    let data = data.downcast_ref::<DataModel>()?;

    let label = Dom::text(format!("{}", data.counter))
        .with_inline_style("font-size: 50px;");

    let button = Button::new("Increment counter")
        .onmouseup(increment_counter, data.clone());

    Dom::body()
    .with_child(label)
    .with_child(button.dom())
    .style(Css::empty())
}

extern "C" 
fn increment_counter(data: &mut RefAny, _: &mut CallbackInfo) -> Update {
    let mut data = data.downcast_mut::<DataModel>()?;
    data.counter += 1;
    Update::RefreshDom // call render_dom() again
}

fn main() {
    let initial_data = RefAny::new(DataModel { counter: 0 });
    let app = App::new(initial_data, AppConfig::default());
    app.run(WindowCreateOptions::new(render_dom));
}

C

#include "azul.h"

typedef struct {
    uint32_t counter;
} DataModel;

void DataModel_delete(DataModel* restrict A) { }
AZ_REFLECT(DataModel, DataModel_delete);

AzStyledDom render_dom(AzRefAny* data, AzLayoutInfo* info) {

    DataModelRef d = DataModelRef_create(data);
    if !(DataModel_downcastRef(data, &d)) {
        return AzStyledDom_empty();
    }

    char buffer [20];
    int written = snprintf(buffer, 20, "%d", d->counter);
    AzString const labelstring = AzString_copyFromBytes(&buffer, 0, written);
    AzDom label = AzDom_text(labelstring);
    AzString const inline_css = AzString_fromConstStr("font-size: 50px;");
    AzDom_setInlineStyle(&label, inline_css);

    AzString const buttontext = AzString_fromConstStr("Increment counter");
    AzButton button = AzButton_new(buttontext, AzRefAny_clone(data));
    AzButton_setOnClick(&button, incrementCounter);

    AzDom body = Dom_body();
    AzDom_addChild(body, AzButton_dom(&button));
    AzDom_addChild(body, label);

    AzCss global_css = AzCss_empty();
    return AzDom_style(body, global_css);
}

Update incrementCounter(RefAny* data, CallbackInfo* event) {
    DataModelRefMut d = DataModelRefMut_create(data);
    if !(DataModel_downcastRefMut(data, &d)) {
        return Update_DoNothing;
    }
    d->ptr.counter += 1;
    DataModelRefMut_delete(&d);
    return Update_RefreshDom;
}

int main() {
    DataModel model = { .counter = 5 };
    AzApp app = AzApp_new(DataModel_upcast(model), AzAppConfig_default());
    AzApp_run(app, AzWindowCreateOptions_new(render_dom));
    return 0;
}

License

Azul is licensed under the MPL-2.0. Which means that yes, you can build proprietary applications using azul without having to publish your code: you only have to publish changes made to the library itself.

Copyright 2017 - current Felix Schütt


*Note that all licence references and agreements mentioned in the Azul README section above are relevant to that project's source code only.