8 releases
0.4.0-beta2 | Aug 1, 2023 |
---|---|
0.4.0-beta1 | Jun 8, 2023 |
0.3.2 | Aug 16, 2022 |
0.3.0 | Jul 12, 2022 |
0.1.0 | Apr 1, 2020 |
#25 in macOS and iOS APIs
1,589 downloads per month
Used in 3 crates
735KB
12K
SLoC
Cacao
This library provides safe Rust bindings for AppKit
on macOS (beta quality, fairly usable) and UIKit
on iOS/tvOS (alpha quality, see repo).
It tries to do so in a way that, if you've done programming for the framework before (in Swift or
Objective-C), will feel familiar. This is tricky in Rust due to the ownership model, but some
creative coding and assumptions can get us pretty far.
This exists on crates.io in part to enable the project to see wider usage, which can inform development. That said, this library is currently early stages and may have bugs - your usage of it is at your own risk. However, provided you follow the rules (regarding memory/ownership) it's already fine for some apps. The core repository has a wealth of examples to help you get started.
Important
If you are migrating from 0.2 to 0.3, you should elect either
appkit
oruikit
as a feature in yourCargo.toml
. This change was made to support platforms that aren't just macOS/iOS/tvOS (e.g, gnustep, airyx). One of these features is required to work;appkit
is defaulted for ease of development.
Note that this crate relies on the Objective-C runtime. Interfacing with the runtime requires unsafe blocks; this crate handles those unsafe interactions for you and provides a safe wrapper, but by using this crate you understand that usage of
unsafe
is a given and will be somewhat rampant for wrapped controls. This does not mean you can't assess, review, or question unsafe usage - just know it's happening, and in large part it's not going away. Issues pertaining to the mere existence of unsafe will be closed without comment.
If you're looking to build the docs for this on your local machine, you'll want the following due to the way feature flags work
with cargo doc
:
RUSTDOCFLAGS="--cfg docsrs" cargo +nightly doc --all-features --open
Hello World
use cacao::appkit::{App, AppDelegate};
use cacao::appkit::window::Window;
#[derive(Default)]
struct BasicApp {
window: Window
}
impl AppDelegate for BasicApp {
fn did_finish_launching(&self) {
self.window.set_minimum_content_size(400., 400.);
self.window.set_title("Hello World!");
self.window.show();
}
}
fn main() {
App::new("com.hello.world", BasicApp::default()).run();
}
For more thorough examples, check the examples/
folder.
If you're interested in a more "kitchen sink" example, check out the todos_list with:
cargo run --example todos_list
Initialization
Due to the way that AppKit and UIKit programs typically work, you're encouraged to do the bulk
of your work starting from the did_finish_launching()
method of your AppDelegate
. This
ensures the application has had time to initialize and do any housekeeping necessary behind the
scenes.
Currently Supported
In terms of mostly working pieces, the table below showcases the level of support for varying features. This list is not exhaustive just by virtue of documentation updating being hell - so you're encouraged to check out the code-built documentation for more info:
Note that while iOS has green checkmarks, some components still aren't as well defined (e.g, Views/ViewControllers are still very alpha there).
Non-Apple platforms that shim or provide a form of AppKit may be able to use a good chunk of the AppKit support in this library.
Component | Description | AppKit | iOS | tvOS |
---|---|---|---|---|
App | Initialization & events | ✅ | ✅ | ❌ |
Window | Construction, handling, events | ✅ | ✅ | ❌ |
View | Construction, styling, events | ✅ | ✅ | ❌ |
ViewController | Construction, lifecycle events | ✅ | ✅ | ❌ |
Color | System-backed colors, theming | ✅ | ✅ | ❌ |
ListView | Reusable list w/ cached rows | ✅ | ❌ | ❌ |
Button | Styling, events, toolbar support | ✅ | ❌ | ❌ |
Label/TextField | Text rendering & input | ✅ | ❌ | ❌ |
Image/ImageView | Loading, drawing, etc | ✅ | ✅ | ❌ |
Toolbar | Basic native toolbar | ✅ | ❌ | ❌ |
SplitViewController | Split views (Big Sur friendly) | ✅ | ❌ | ❌ |
WebView | Wrapper for WKWebView | ✅ | ❌ | ❌ |
UserDefaults | Persisting small data | ✅ | ✅ | ❌ |
Autolayout | View layout for varying screens | ✅ | ✅ | ❌ |
Optional Features
The following are a list of Cargo features that can be enabled or disabled.
appkit
: LinksAppKit.framework
.uikit
: LinksUIKit.framework
(iOS/tvOS only).cloudkit
: LinksCloudKit.framework
and provides some wrappers around CloudKit functionality. Currently not feature complete.color_fallbacks
: Provides fallback colors for older systems wheresystemColor
types don't exist. This feature is very uncommon and you probably don't need it.quicklook
: LinksQuickLook.framework
and offers methods for generating preview images for files.user-notifications
: LinksUserNotifications.framework
and provides functionality for emitting notifications on macOS and iOS. Note that this requires your application be code-signed, and will not work without it.webview
: LinksWebKit.framework
and provides aWebView
control backed byWKWebView
. This feature is not supported on tvOS, as the platform has no webview control. This feature is also potentially only supported for macOS/iOS due to the WKWebView control and varying support on non-Apple platforms.webview-downloading-macos
: Enables downloading files from theWebView
via a private interface. This is not an App-Store-safe feature, so be aware of that before enabling. This feature is not supported on iOS (a user would handle downloads very differently) or tvOS (there's no web browser there at all).
General Notes
Why not extend the existing cocoa-rs crate?
A good question. At the end of the day, that crate (I believe, and someone can correct me if I'm wrong) is somewhat tied to Servo, and I wanted to experiment with what the best approach for representing the Cocoa UI model in Rust was. This crate doesn't ignore their work entirely, either - core_foundation
and core_graphics
are used internally and re-exported for general use.
Why should I write in Rust, rather than X language?
In my case, I want to be able to write native applications for my devices (and the platform I like to build products for) without being locked in to writing in Apple-specific languages... and without writing in C/C++ or JavaScript (note: the toolchain, not the language - ES6/Typescript are fine). I want to do this because I'm tired of hitting a mountain of work when I want to port my applications to other ecosystems. I think that Rust offers a (growing, but significant) viable model for sharing code across platforms and ecosystems without sacrificing performance.
(This is the part where the internet lights up and rants about some combination of Electron, Qt, and so on - we're not bothering here as it's beaten to death elsewhere)
This crate is useful for people who don't need to go all-in on the Apple ecosystem, but want to port their work there with some relative ease. It's not expected that everyone will suddenly want to rewrite their macOS/iOS/tvOS apps in Rust.
Isn't Objective-C dead?
Yes, and no.
It's true that Apple definitely favors Swift, and for good reason (and I say this as an unabashed lover of Objective-C). With that said, I would be surprised if we didn't have another ~5+ years of support; Apple is quick to deprecate, but removing the Objective-C runtime would require a ton of time and effort. Maybe SwiftUI kills it, who knows. A wrapper around this stuff should conceivably make it easier to swap out the underlying UI backend whenever it comes time.
One thing to note is that Apple has started releasing Swift-only frameworks. For cases where you need those, it should be possible to do some combination of linking and bridging - which would inform how swapping out the underlying UI backend would happen at some point.
Some might also decry Objective-C as slow. To that, I'd note the following:
- Your UI engine is probably not the bottleneck.
- Swift is generally better as it fixes a class of bugs that Objective-C doesn't catch; for the most part it still sits on top of the existing Cocoa frameworks anyway (though this statement will not age well~).
- Message dispatching in Objective-C is more optimized than significant chunks of the code you'll write, and is fast enough for most things.
tl;dr it's probably fine, and you have Rust for your performance needs.
Why not just wrap UIKit, and then rely on Catalyst?
I have yet to see a single application where Catalyst felt good. The goal is good, though, and if it got to a point where that just seemed like the way forward (e.g, Apple just kills AppKit) then it's certainly an option.
You can't possibly wrap all platform-specific behavior here...
Correct! Each UI control contains a objc
field, which you can use as an escape hatch - if the control doesn't support something, you're free to drop to the Objective-C runtime yourself and handle it.
Why don't you use bindings to automatically generate this stuff?
For initial exploration purposes I've done most of this by hand, as I wanted to find an approach that fit well in the Rust model before committing to binding generation. This is something I'll likely focus on next now that I've got things "working" well enough.
Is this related to Cacao, the Swift project?
No. The project referred to in this question aimed to map portions of Cocoa and UIKit over to run on Linux, but hasn't seen activity in some time (it was really cool, too!).
Open source project naming in 2020 is like trying to buy a .com
domain: everything good is taken. Luckily, multiple projects can share a name... so that's what's going to happen here.
Isn't this kind of cheating the Rust object model?
Depends on how you look at it. I personally don't care too much - the GUI layer for these platforms is a hard requirement to support for certain classes of products, and giving them up also means giving up battle-tested tools for things like Accessibility and deeper OS integration. With that said, internally there are efforts to try and make things respect Rust's model of how things should work.
You can think of this as similar to gtk-rs. If you want to support or try a more pure model, go check out Druid or something. :)
License
Dual licensed under an MIT/MPL-2.0 license. See the appropriate files in this repository for more information. Apple, AppKit, UIKit, Cocoa, and other trademarks are copyright Apple, Inc.
Questions, Comments, etc
You can follow me over on twitter or email me with questions that don't fit as an issue here.
Dependencies
~3–10MB
~111K SLoC