Events
Introduction
Yew integrates with the web-sys
crate and
uses the events from that crate. The table below lists all of the web-sys
events that are accepted in the html!
macro.
You can still add a Callback
for an event that is not listed in the table
below, see Manual event listener.
Event Types
All the event types mentioned in the following table are re-exported under yew::events
.
Using the types from yew::events
makes it easier to ensure version compatibility than
if you were to manually include web-sys
as a dependency in your crate because you won't
end up using a version which conflicts with the version that Yew specifies.
The event listener name is the expected name when adding an event Callback
in the html
macro:
use yew::{html, Callback};
html! {
<button onclick={Callback::from(|_| ())}>
// ^^^^^^^ event listener name
{ "Click me!" }
</button>
};
The event name is the listener without the "on" prefix, therefore, the onclick
event listener
listens for click
events.
oninput
and onchange
In the next version of Yew oninput
and onchange
Callback
s will accept InputEvent
and Event
respectively.
Yew will be removing InputData
and ChangeData
as they were too restrictive and could panic
in certain circumstances.
You must apply the Callback
to the target element even though the InputEvent
/Event
bubbles up, the InputData
/ChangeData
is expecting the "target" to also be the "currentTarget"
(see the caution in Typed event target section for more).
use yew::{html, ChangeData, Html, InputData};
enum Msg {
InputValue(String),
}
fn view(&self) -> Html {
let oninput = self.link.callback(|e: InputData| Msg::InputValue(e.value));
let onchange = self.link.batch_callback(|e: ChangeData| {
if let ChangeData::Value(value) = e {
Some(Msg::InputValue(value))
} else {
None
}
});
html! {
<div
// The `InputEvent` can bubble and then will read the text content
// of the div as the value in `InputData` which is not what you'd
// expect!
oninput={oninput}
// The `Event` can bubble and will cause a panic when it tries
// to create the `ChangeData` enum.
onchange={onchange}
>
{ "hi" }
<input type="text" />
</div>
}
}
oninput
using InputData
Yew wraps the InputEvent
in an InputData
type, the InputData
type also contains the current
value
of the element on which the oninput
handler is applied.
Yew does this by trying to cast the element into an input
or textarea
element then calling their
respective value
getter method or it will get the text content of the element.
use yew::{html, Html, InputData};
enum Msg {
InputValue(String),
}
fn view(&self) -> Html {
let oninput = self.link.callback(|e: InputData| Msg::InputValue(e.value));
html! {
<div>
<input oninput={oninput} />
</div>
}
}
If you want to get the value as a number (f64
) then InputData
does have the event
field which is the
web_sys::InputEvent
that you can use with the information provided in the
Typed event target section and then you can call
value_as_number
method on the target.
onchange
using ChangeData
The ChangeData
type is an enum which has a variant for the three supported element types:
Variant name | Variant data type | Element type |
---|---|---|
Files | web_sys::FileList | input with type of file |
Select | web_sys::HtmlSelectElement | select element |
Value | String | textarea or input with any type other than file |
If onchange
is used on any other element then the application will panic when Yew tries to
convert the Event
into ChangeData
.
Files
When a user has made a change to the files selected by an input
element with the type file
.
use yew::{html, Html, ChangeData};
fn view(&self) -> Html {
let onchange = self.link.batch_callback(|e| {
if let ChangeData::Files(files) = e {
// do something with web_sys::FileList
} else {
None
}
});
html! {
<div>
<input onchange={onchange} type="file" />
</div>
}
}
Use batch_callback
when you want to conditionally return a value from a Callback
.
see file_upload for a full example.
Select
When a user has made a change to the select
element.
use yew::{html, Html, ChangeData};
fn view(&self) -> Html {
let onchange = self.link.batch_callback(|e| {
if let ChangeData::Select(select) = e {
// do something with web_sys::HtmlSelectElement
} else {
None
}
});
html! {
<div>
<select onchange={onchange}>
<option value="English">{ "Hello!" }</option>
<option value="French">{ "Bonjour!" }</option>
<option value="German">{ "Guten Tag!" }</option>
</select>
</div>
}
}
Value
When a user has made a change to a textarea
or input
element with any type other than file
.
use yew::{html, Html, ChangeData};
fn view(&self) -> Html {
let onchange = self.link.batch_callback(|e| {
if let ChangeData::Value(value) = e {
// do something with the String value
} else {
None
}
});
html! {
<div>
<textarea onchange={onchange} />
</div>
}
}
see crm for a full example.
Typed event target
In this section target (Event.target) is always referring to the element at which the event was dispatched from.
This will not always be the element at which the Callback
is placed, that is the
Event.currentTarget
In event Callback
s you may want to get the target of that event. For example, on the
input
event you may want to update some internal state.
In Yew getting the target element in the correct type can be done in a couple of ways and we will go through
them here. Calling web_sys::Event::target
on an event returns an optional web_sys::EventTarget
type, which might not seem very useful when you want to know the value of your input element.
In all the approaches below we are going to tackle the same problem, so it's clear where the approach differs opposed to the problem at hand.
The Problem:
We have an oninput
Callback
on my <input>
element and each time it is invoked we want to send
an update Msg
to our component. We really want to get the value as a
number or f64
for rust.
Our Msg
enum looks like this:
pub enum Msg {
InputValue(f64),
}
Using JsCast
The wasm-bindgen
crate has
a useful trait; JsCast
which allows us to hop and skip our way to the type we want, as long as it implements JsCast
. We can
do this cautiously, which involves some runtime checks and failure types like Option
and Result
,
or we can do it dangerously.
Enough talk, more code:
[dependencies]
# need wasm-bindgen for JsCast
wasm-bindgen = "0.2"
use wasm_bindgen::JsCast;
use yew::{
html,
web_sys::{EventTarget, HtmlInputElement},
Component, ComponentLink, Html, InputData,
};
pub struct Comp {
link: ComponentLink<Self>,
}
pub enum Msg {
InputValue(f64),
}
impl Component for Comp {
type Message = Msg;
type Properties = ();
fn create(_: Self::Properties, link: ComponentLink<Self>) -> Self {
Self { link }
}
fn update(&mut self, msg: Self::Message) -> yew::ShouldRender {
let Msg::InputValue(value) = msg;
// do something with value
todo!()
}
fn change(&mut self, _props: Self::Properties) -> yew::ShouldRender {
false
}
fn view(&self) -> Html {
let link = &self.link;
// Use batch_callback so if something unexpected happens we can return
// None and do nothing
let on_cautious_change = link.batch_callback(|e: InputData| {
let e = e.event;
// When events are created the target is undefined, it's only
// when dispatched does the target get added.
let target: Option<EventTarget> = e.target();
// Events can bubble so this listener might catch events from child
// elements which are not of type HtmlInputElement
let input = target.and_then(|t| t.dyn_into::<HtmlInputElement>().ok());
input.map(|input| Msg::InputValue(input.value_as_number()))
});
let on_dangerous_change = link.callback(|e: InputData| {
let e = e.event;
let target: EventTarget = e
.target()
.expect("Event should have a target when dispatched");
// You must KNOW target is a HtmlInputElement, otherwise
// the call to value would be Undefined Behaviour (UB).
Msg::InputValue(
target
.unchecked_into::<HtmlInputElement>()
.value_as_number(),
)
});
html! {
<>
<label for="cautious-input">
{ "My cautious input:" }
<input oninput={on_cautious_change}
id="cautious-input"
type="text"
/>
</label>
<label for="dangerous-input">
{ "My dangerous input:" }
<input oninput={on_dangerous_change}
id="dangerous-input"
type="text"
/>
</label>
</>
}
}
}
Use batch_callback
when you want to conditionally return a value from a Callback
.
The methods from JsCast
are dyn_into
and unchecked_into
and you can probably see, they allowed
us to go from EventTarget
to HtmlInputElement
.
The dyn_into
method is cautious because at
runtime it will check whether the type is actually a HtmlInputElement
and if not return an
Err(JsValue)
, the JsValue
is a catch-all type and is essentially giving you back the object to try again.
At this point you might be thinking... when is the dangerous version ok to use? In the case above it
is safe1 as we've set the Callback
on to an element with no children so the target can
only be that same element.
1 As safe as anything can be when JS land is involved.
Using NodeRef
NodeRef
can be used instead of querying the event given to a Callback
.
use yew::{html, web_sys::HtmlInputElement, Component, ComponentLink, Html, NodeRef};
pub struct Comp {
link: ComponentLink<Self>,
my_input: NodeRef,
}
pub enum Msg {
InputValue(f64),
}
impl Component for Comp {
type Message = Msg;
type Properties = ();
fn create(_: Self::Properties, link: ComponentLink<Self>) -> Self {
Self {
link,
my_input: NodeRef::default(),
}
}
fn update(&mut self, msg: Self::Message) -> yew::ShouldRender {
let Msg::InputValue(value) = msg;
// do something with value
todo!()
}
fn change(&mut self, _props: Self::Properties) -> yew::ShouldRender {
false
}
fn view(&self) -> Html {
let my_input_ref = self.my_input.clone();
let oninput = self.link.batch_callback(move |_| {
let input = my_input_ref.cast::<HtmlInputElement>();
input.map(|input| Msg::InputValue(input.value_as_number()))
});
html! {
<>
<label for="my-input">
{ "My input:" }
<input ref={self.my_input.clone()}
oninput={oninput}
id="my-input"
type="text"
/>
</label>
</>
}
}
}
Using NodeRef
, you can ignore the event and use the NodeRef::cast
method to get an
Option<HtmlInputElement>
- this is optional as calling cast
before the NodeRef
has been
set, or when the type doesn't match will return None
.
You might also see by using NodeRef
we don't have to send the f64
back in the
Msg::InputValue
as we always have my_input
in the component state - so we could do the following:
use yew::{html, web_sys::HtmlInputElement, Component, ComponentLink, Html, NodeRef};
pub struct Comp {
link: ComponentLink<Self>,
my_input: NodeRef,
}
pub enum Msg {
// Signal the input element has changed
InputChanged,
}
impl Component for Comp {
type Message = Msg;
type Properties = ();
fn create(_: Self::Properties, link: ComponentLink<Self>) -> Self {
Self {
link,
my_input: NodeRef::default(),
}
}
fn change(&mut self, _props: Self::Properties) -> yew::ShouldRender {
false
}
fn update(&mut self, msg: Self::Message) -> bool {
match msg {
Msg::InputChanged => {
if let Some(input) = self.my_input.cast::<HtmlInputElement>() {
let value = input.value_as_number();
// do something with value
true
} else {
false
}
}
}
}
fn view(&self) -> Html {
let oninput = self.link.callback(|_| Msg::InputChanged);
html! {
<label for="my-input">
{ "My input:" }
<input ref={self.my_input.clone()}
oninput={oninput}
id="my-input"
type="text"
/>
</label>
}
}
}
Which approach you take depends on your component and your preferences, there is no blessed way per se.
Manual event listener
You may want to listen to an event that is not supported by Yew's html
macro, see the
supported events listed here.
In order to add an event listener to one of elements manually we need the help of
NodeRef
so that in the rendered
method we can add a listener using the
web-sys
and
wasm-bindgen API.
We do this in rendered
as this is the only time we can guarantee that the element exists in
the browser, Yew needs some time to create them after view
is called.
The examples below are going to show adding listeners for the made-up custard
event. All events
either unsupported by yew or custom can be represented as a
web_sys::Event
. If you
need to access a specific method or field on a custom / unsupported event then you can use the
methods of JsCast
in order to convert to the type required.
Using Closure
(verbose)
Using the web-sys
and wasm-bindgen
API's directly for this can be a bit painful.. so brace
yourself (there is a more concise way thanks to gloo
).
use wasm_bindgen::{prelude::Closure, JsCast};
use yew::{
html,
web_sys::{Event, HtmlElement},
Component, ComponentLink, Html, NodeRef,
};
pub struct Comp {
link: ComponentLink<Self>,
my_div: NodeRef,
custard_listener: Option<Closure<dyn Fn(Event)>>,
}
pub enum Msg {
Custard,
}
impl Component for Comp {
type Message = Msg;
type Properties = ();
fn create(_: Self::Properties, link: ComponentLink<Self>) -> Self {
Self {
link,
my_div: NodeRef::default(),
custard_listener: None,
}
}
fn update(&mut self, msg: Self::Message) -> bool {
match msg {
Msg::Custard => {
// do something about custard..
true
}
}
}
fn change(&mut self, _props: Self::Properties) -> yew::ShouldRender {
false
}
fn view(&self) -> Html {
html! {
<div ref={self.my_div.clone()} id="my-div"></div>
}
}
fn rendered(&mut self, first_render: bool) {
if !first_render {
return;
}
if let Some(element) = self.my_div.cast::<HtmlElement>() {
// Create your Callback as you normally would
let oncustard = self.link.callback(|_: Event| Msg::Custard);
// Create a Closure from a Box<dyn Fn> - this has to be 'static
let listener =
Closure::<dyn Fn(Event)>::wrap(
Box::new(move |e: Event| oncustard.emit(e))
);
element
.add_event_listener_with_callback(
"custard",
listener.as_ref().unchecked_ref()
)
.unwrap();
// Need to save listener in the component otherwise when the
// event is fired it will try and call the listener that no longer
// exists in memory!
self.custard_listener = Some(listener);
}
}
fn destroy(&mut self) {
// All done with the component but need to remove
// the event listener before the custard_listener memory
// goes out of scope.
if let (Some(element), Some(listener)) = (
self.my_div.cast::<HtmlElement>(),
self.custard_listener.take(),
) {
element
.remove_event_listener_with_callback(
"custard",
listener.as_ref().unchecked_ref()
)
.unwrap();
}
}
}
For more information on Closures
, see
The wasm-bindgen
Guide.
Using gloo
(concise)
The easier way is with gloo
, more specifically gloo_events
which is an abstraction for web-sys
, wasm-bindgen
.
gloo_events
has the EventListener
type which can be used to create and store the
event listener.
[dependencies]
gloo-events = "0.1"
use yew::{
html,
web_sys::{Event, HtmlElement},
Component, ComponentLink, Html, NodeRef,
};
use gloo::events::EventListener;
pub struct Comp {
link: ComponentLink<Self>,
my_div: NodeRef,
custard_listener: Option<EventListener>,
}
pub enum Msg {
Custard,
}
impl Component for Comp {
type Message = Msg;
type Properties = ();
fn create(_: Self::Properties, link: ComponentLink<Self>) -> Self {
Self {
link,
my_div: NodeRef::default(),
custard_listener: None,
}
}
fn update(&mut self, msg: Self::Message) -> bool {
match msg {
Msg::Custard => {
// do something about custard..
true
}
}
}
fn change(&mut self, _props: Self::Properties) -> yew::ShouldRender {
false
}
fn view(&self) -> Html {
html! {
<div ref={self.my_div.clone()} id="my-div"></div>
}
}
fn rendered(&mut self, first_render: bool) {
if !first_render {
return;
}
if let Some(element) = self.my_div.cast::<HtmlElement>() {
// Create your Callback as you normally would
let oncustard = self.link.callback(|_: Event| Msg::Custard);
let listener =
EventListener::new(
&element,
"custard",
move |e| oncustard.emit(e.clone())
);
self.custard_listener = Some(listener);
}
}
}
Notice that when using an EventListener
you don't need to do anything when the
component is about to be destroyed as the EventListener
has a drop
implementation
which will remove the event listener from the element.
For more information on EventListener
, see the
gloo_events docs.rs.