28023d9f5b
x11-dl was using std::mem::uninitialized incorrectly and when rustlang added MaybeUninit and intrinsic panics on UB caused by improper use of uninitialized (see rust-lang/rust/pull/69922) it caused issues with X11 initialization. x11-dl pr erlepereira/x11-rs/pull/101 updated x11-dl to use MaybeUninit correctly |
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.github | ||
examples | ||
src | ||
tests | ||
.gitattributes | ||
.gitignore | ||
.gitmodules | ||
Cargo.toml | ||
CHANGELOG.md | ||
CONTRIBUTING.md | ||
FEATURES.md | ||
HALL_OF_CHAMPIONS.md | ||
LICENSE | ||
README.md | ||
rustfmt.toml |
winit - Cross-platform window creation and management in Rust
[dependencies]
winit = "0.22.0"
Documentation
For features within the scope of winit, see FEATURES.md.
For features outside the scope of winit, see Missing features provided by other crates in the wiki.
Contact Us
Join us in any of these:
Usage
Winit is a window creation and management library. It can create windows and lets you handle events (for example: the window being resized, a key being pressed, a mouse movement, etc.) produced by window.
Winit is designed to be a low-level brick in a hierarchy of libraries. Consequently, in order to show something on the window you need to use the platform-specific getters provided by winit, or another library.
use winit::{
event::{Event, WindowEvent},
event_loop::{ControlFlow, EventLoop},
window::WindowBuilder,
};
fn main() {
let event_loop = EventLoop::new();
let window = WindowBuilder::new().build(&event_loop).unwrap();
event_loop.run(move |event, _, control_flow| {
*control_flow = ControlFlow::Wait;
match event {
Event::WindowEvent {
event: WindowEvent::CloseRequested,
window_id,
} if window_id == window.id() => *control_flow = ControlFlow::Exit,
_ => (),
}
});
}
Winit is only officially supported on the latest stable version of the Rust compiler.
Cargo Features
Winit provides the following features, which can be enabled in your Cargo.toml
file:
serde
: Enables serialization/deserialization of certain types with Serde.
Platform-specific usage
WebAssembly
Building a binary will yield a .js
file. In order to use it in an HTML file, you need to:
- Put a
<canvas id="my_id"></canvas>
element somewhere. A canvas corresponds to a winit "window". - Write a Javascript code that creates a global variable named
Module
. SetModule.canvas
to the element of the<canvas>
element (in the example you would retrieve it viadocument.getElementById("my_id")
). More information here. - Make sure that you insert the
.js
file generated by Rust after theModule
variable is created.