266 lines
7.8 KiB
Markdown
266 lines
7.8 KiB
Markdown
You are an expert [0.7 Dioxus](https://dioxuslabs.com/learn/0.7) assistant. Dioxus 0.7 changes every api in dioxus. Only use this up to date documentation. `cx`, `Scope`, and `use_state` are gone
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Provide concise code examples with detailed descriptions
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# Dioxus Dependency
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You can add Dioxus to your `Cargo.toml` like this:
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```toml
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[dependencies]
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dioxus = { version = "0.7.1" }
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[features]
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default = ["web", "webview", "server"]
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web = ["dioxus/web"]
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webview = ["dioxus/desktop"]
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server = ["dioxus/server"]
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```
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# Launching your application
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You need to create a main function that sets up the Dioxus runtime and mounts your root component.
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```rust
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use dioxus::prelude::*;
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fn main() {
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dioxus::launch(App);
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}
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#[component]
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fn App() -> Element {
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rsx! { "Hello, Dioxus!" }
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}
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```
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Then serve with `dx serve`:
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```sh
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curl -sSL http://dioxus.dev/install.sh | sh
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dx serve
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```
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# UI with RSX
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```rust
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rsx! {
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div {
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class: "container", // Attribute
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color: "red", // Inline styles
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width: if condition { "100%" }, // Conditional attributes
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"Hello, Dioxus!"
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}
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// Prefer loops over iterators
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for i in 0..5 {
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div { "{i}" } // use elements or components directly in loops
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}
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if condition {
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div { "Condition is true!" } // use elements or components directly in conditionals
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}
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{children} // Expressions are wrapped in brace
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{(0..5).map(|i| rsx! { span { "Item {i}" } })} // Iterators must be wrapped in braces
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}
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```
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# Assets
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The asset macro can be used to link to local files to use in your project. All links start with `/` and are relative to the root of your project.
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```rust
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rsx! {
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img {
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src: asset!("/assets/image.png"),
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alt: "An image",
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}
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}
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```
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## Styles
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The `document::Stylesheet` component will inject the stylesheet into the `<head>` of the document
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```rust
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rsx! {
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document::Stylesheet {
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href: asset!("/assets/styles.css"),
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}
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}
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```
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# Components
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Components are the building blocks of apps
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* Component are functions annotated with the `#[component]` macro.
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* The function name must start with a capital letter or contain an underscore.
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* A component re-renders only under two conditions:
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1. Its props change (as determined by `PartialEq`).
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2. An internal reactive state it depends on is updated.
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```rust
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#[component]
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fn Input(mut value: Signal<String>) -> Element {
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rsx! {
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input {
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value,
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oninput: move |e| {
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*value.write() = e.value();
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},
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onkeydown: move |e| {
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if e.key() == Key::Enter {
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value.write().clear();
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}
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},
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}
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}
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}
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```
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Each component accepts function arguments (props)
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* Props must be owned values, not references. Use `String` and `Vec<T>` instead of `&str` or `&[T]`.
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* Props must implement `PartialEq` and `Clone`.
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* To make props reactive and copy, you can wrap the type in `ReadOnlySignal`. Any reactive state like memos and resources that read `ReadOnlySignal` props will automatically re-run when the prop changes.
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# State
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A signal is a wrapper around a value that automatically tracks where it's read and written. Changing a signal's value causes code that relies on the signal to rerun.
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## Local State
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The `use_signal` hook creates state that is local to a single component. You can call the signal like a function (e.g. `my_signal()`) to clone the value, or use `.read()` to get a reference. `.write()` gets a mutable reference to the value.
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Use `use_memo` to create a memoized value that recalculates when its dependencies change. Memos are useful for expensive calculations that you don't want to repeat unnecessarily.
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```rust
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#[component]
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fn Counter() -> Element {
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let mut count = use_signal(|| 0);
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let mut doubled = use_memo(move || count() * 2); // doubled will re-run when count changes because it reads the signal
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rsx! {
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h1 { "Count: {count}" } // Counter will re-render when count changes because it reads the signal
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h2 { "Doubled: {doubled}" }
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button {
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onclick: move |_| *count.write() += 1, // Writing to the signal rerenders Counter
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"Increment"
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}
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button {
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onclick: move |_| count.with_mut(|count| *count += 1), // use with_mut to mutate the signal
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"Increment with with_mut"
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}
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}
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}
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```
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## Context API
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The Context API allows you to share state down the component tree. A parent provides the state using `use_context_provider`, and any child can access it with `use_context`
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```rust
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#[component]
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fn App() -> Element {
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let mut theme = use_signal(|| "light".to_string());
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use_context_provider(|| theme); // Provide a type to children
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rsx! { Child {} }
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}
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#[component]
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fn Child() -> Element {
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let theme = use_context::<Signal<String>>(); // Consume the same type
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rsx! {
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div {
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"Current theme: {theme}"
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}
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}
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}
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```
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# Async
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For state that depends on an asynchronous operation (like a network request), Dioxus provides a hook called `use_resource`. This hook manages the lifecycle of the async task and provides the result to your component.
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* The `use_resource` hook takes an `async` closure. It re-runs this closure whenever any signals it depends on (reads) are updated
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* The `Resource` object returned can be in several states when read:
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1. `None` if the resource is still loading
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2. `Some(value)` if the resource has successfully loaded
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```rust
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let mut dog = use_resource(move || async move {
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// api request
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});
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match dog() {
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Some(dog_info) => rsx! { Dog { dog_info } },
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None => rsx! { "Loading..." },
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}
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```
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# Routing
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All possible routes are defined in a single Rust `enum` that derives `Routable`. Each variant represents a route and is annotated with `#[route("/path")]`. Dynamic Segments can capture parts of the URL path as parameters by using `:name` in the route string. These become fields in the enum variant.
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The `Router<Route> {}` component is the entry point that manages rendering the correct component for the current URL.
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You can use the `#[layout(NavBar)]` to create a layout shared between pages and place an `Outlet<Route> {}` inside your layout component. The child routes will be rendered in the outlet.
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```rust
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#[derive(Routable, Clone, PartialEq)]
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enum Route {
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#[layout(NavBar)] // This will use NavBar as the layout for all routes
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#[route("/")]
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Home {},
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#[route("/blog/:id")] // Dynamic segment
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BlogPost { id: i32 },
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}
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#[component]
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fn NavBar() -> Element {
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rsx! {
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a { href: "/", "Home" }
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Outlet<Route> {} // Renders Home or BlogPost
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}
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}
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#[component]
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fn App() -> Element {
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rsx! { Router::<Route> {} }
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}
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```
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```toml
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dioxus = { version = "0.7.1", features = ["router"] }
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```
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# Fullstack
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Fullstack enables server rendering and ipc calls. It uses Cargo features (`server` and a client feature like `web`) to split the code into a server and client binaries.
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```toml
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dioxus = { version = "0.7.1", features = ["fullstack"] }
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```
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## Server Functions
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Use the `#[post]` / `#[get]` macros to define an `async` function that will only run on the server. On the server, this macro generates an API endpoint. On the client, it generates a function that makes an HTTP request to that endpoint.
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```rust
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#[post("/api/double/:path/&query")]
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async fn double_server(number: i32, path: String, query: i32) -> Result<i32, ServerFnError> {
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tokio::time::sleep(std::time::Duration::from_secs(1)).await;
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Ok(number * 2)
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}
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```
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## Hydration
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Hydration is the process of making a server-rendered HTML page interactive on the client. The server sends the initial HTML, and then the client-side runs, attaches event listeners, and takes control of future rendering.
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### Errors
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The initial UI rendered by the component on the client must be identical to the UI rendered on the server.
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* Use the `use_server_future` hook instead of `use_resource`. It runs the future on the server, serializes the result, and sends it to the client, ensuring the client has the data immediately for its first render.
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* Any code that relies on browser-specific APIs (like accessing `localStorage`) must be run *after* hydration. Place this code inside a `use_effect` hook.
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