eframe has features for selecting between x11 and wayland. eframe does not forward the features to glutin. This makes glutin always compile with both backends enabled. This change forwards the feature. This allows users of egui to compile less dependencies when they only need one of x11, wayland. To understand this change, read the glutin Cargo.toml [1] and the glutin build.rs [2]. You always have to enable glutin's glx feature with the x11 feature. The other default features (egl, wgl) stay enabled. This is intentional so that everything continues to work as before. We could further minimize when egl and wgl are enabled, but that is not part of this change. There is little reason to do so because those feature already only add dependencies when you compile glutin for the right platform (for example wgl on windows). [1] https://github.com/rust-windowing/glutin/blob/v0.32.1/glutin/Cargo.toml [2] https://github.com/rust-windowing/glutin/blob/v0.32.1/glutin/build.rs |
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| CHANGELOG.md | ||
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README.md
eframe: the egui framework
eframe is the official framework library for writing apps using egui. The app can be compiled both to run natively (for Linux, Mac, Windows, and Android) or as a web app (using Wasm).
To get started, see the examples.
To learn how to set up eframe for web and native, go to https://github.com/emilk/eframe_template/ and follow the instructions there!
There is also a tutorial video at https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=NtUkr_z7l84.
For how to use egui, see the egui docs.
eframe uses egui_glow for rendering, and on native it uses egui-winit.
To use on Linux, first run:
sudo apt-get install libxcb-render0-dev libxcb-shape0-dev libxcb-xfixes0-dev libxkbcommon-dev libssl-dev
You need to either use edition = "2021", or set resolver = "2" in the [workspace] section of your to-level Cargo.toml. See this link for more info.
You can opt-in to the using egui_wgpu for rendering by enabling the wgpu feature and setting NativeOptions::renderer to Renderer::Wgpu.
Alternatives
eframe is not the only way to write an app using egui! You can also try egui-miniquad, bevy_egui, egui_sdl2_gl, and others.
You can also use egui_glow and winit to build your own app as demonstrated in https://github.com/emilk/egui/blob/master/crates/egui_glow/examples/pure_glow.rs.
Limitations when running egui on the web
eframe uses WebGL (via glow) and Wasm, and almost nothing else from the web tech stack. This has some benefits, but also produces some challenges and serious downsides.
- Rendering: Getting pixel-perfect rendering right on the web is very difficult.
- Search: you cannot search an egui web page like you would a normal web page.
- Bringing up an on-screen keyboard on mobile: there is no JS function to do this, so
eframefakes it by adding some invisible DOM elements. It doesn't always work. - Mobile text editing is not as good as for a normal web app.
- No integration with browser settings for colors and fonts.
- Accessibility: There is an experimental screen reader for
eframe, but it has to be enabled explicitly. There is no JS function to ask "Does the user want a screen reader?" (and there should probably not be such a function, due to user tracking/integrity concerns).eguisupports AccessKit, but as of early 2024, AccessKit lacks a Web backend.
In many ways, eframe is trying to make the browser do something it wasn't designed to do (though there are many things browser vendors could do to improve how well libraries like egui work).
The suggested use for eframe are for web apps where performance and responsiveness are more important than accessibility and mobile text editing.
Companion crates
Not all rust crates work when compiled to Wasm, but here are some useful crates have been designed to work well both natively and as Wasm:
Name
The frame in eframe stands both for the frame in which your egui app resides and also for "framework" (eframe is a framework, egui is a library).