Crates.io | tauri-webview2 |
lib.rs | tauri-webview2 |
version | 0.1.2 |
source | src |
created_at | 2021-09-07 05:25:49.785638 |
updated_at | 2021-09-07 05:36:36.24819 |
description | Rust bindings for WebView2 |
homepage | |
repository | https://github.com/sopium/webview2 |
max_upload_size | |
id | 447861 |
size | 165,881 |
Rust bindings for WebView2:
The Microsoft Edge WebView2 control enables you to embed web technologies (HTML, CSS, and JavaScript) in your native applications. The WebView2 control uses Microsoft Edge (Chromium) as the rendering engine to display the web content in native applications. With WebView2, you may embed web code in different parts of your native application, or build the entire native application within a single WebView. For information on how to start building a WebView2 application, see Get Started.
The webview2
crate contains high-level, idiomatic wrappers for the raw COM
APIs, which can be found in the webview2-sys
crate.
The API mapping should be quite straightforward.
The CreateCoreWebView2EnvironmentWithDetails
function does not have a direct
equivalent. It is replaced with a nicer EnvironmentBuilder
API. The
GetAvailableCoreWebView2BrowserVersionString
and CompareBrowserVersions
functions are also exposed through the builder.
The Edge browser from beta, dev or canary channels (>= 86.0.622.0) or the
Evergreen WebView2
Runtime
need to be installed for this to actually work. Or the
build
method will return an
error.
A binary library WebView2Loader
from the WebView2 SDK need to be used, either
the DLL WebView2Loader.dll
or the static library WebView2LoaderStatic.lib
.
This brings some complexities:
When using the gnu toolchain, the static library does not seem to work so
the WebView2Loader.dll
DLL is used. You need to make sure that the DLL can
be loaded at runtime, e.g. by putting it alongside the built exe files.
When using the msvc toolchain, the static library is used. Make sure you have the v142 toolset (or visual studio 2019), because the static library seem to be built with visual studio 2019 and could not be correctly linked by earlier versions of the visual studio. See C++ binary compatibility between Visual Studio 2015, 2017, and 2019.
See the examples
directory, especially the heavily commented win32
example.