This PR moves code between our packages so that:
- @tldraw/editor is a “core” library with the engine and canvas but no
shapes, tools, or other things
- @tldraw/tldraw contains everything particular to the experience we’ve
built for tldraw
At first look, this might seem like a step away from customization and
configuration, however I believe it greatly increases the configuration
potential of the @tldraw/editor while also providing a more accurate
reflection of what configuration options actually exist for
@tldraw/tldraw.
## Library changes
@tldraw/editor re-exports its dependencies and @tldraw/tldraw re-exports
@tldraw/editor.
- users of @tldraw/editor WITHOUT @tldraw/tldraw should almost always
only import things from @tldraw/editor.
- users of @tldraw/tldraw should almost always only import things from
@tldraw/tldraw.
- @tldraw/polyfills is merged into @tldraw/editor
- @tldraw/indices is merged into @tldraw/editor
- @tldraw/primitives is merged mostly into @tldraw/editor, partially
into @tldraw/tldraw
- @tldraw/file-format is merged into @tldraw/tldraw
- @tldraw/ui is merged into @tldraw/tldraw
Many (many) utils and other code is moved from the editor to tldraw. For
example, embeds now are entirely an feature of @tldraw/tldraw. The only
big chunk of code left in core is related to arrow handling.
## API Changes
The editor can now be used without tldraw's assets. We load them in
@tldraw/tldraw instead, so feel free to use whatever fonts or images or
whatever that you like with the editor.
All tools and shapes (except for the `Group` shape) are moved to
@tldraw/tldraw. This includes the `select` tool.
You should use the editor with at least one tool, however, so you now
also need to send in an `initialState` prop to the Editor /
<TldrawEditor> component indicating which state the editor should begin
in.
The `components` prop now also accepts `SelectionForeground`.
The complex selection component that we use for tldraw is moved to
@tldraw/tldraw. The default component is quite basic but can easily be
replaced via the `components` prop. We pass down our tldraw-flavored
SelectionFg via `components`.
Likewise with the `Scribble` component: the `DefaultScribble` no longer
uses our freehand tech and is a simple path instead. We pass down the
tldraw-flavored scribble via `components`.
The `ExternalContentManager` (`Editor.externalContentManager`) is
removed and replaced with a mapping of types to handlers.
- Register new content handlers with
`Editor.registerExternalContentHandler`.
- Register new asset creation handlers (for files and URLs) with
`Editor.registerExternalAssetHandler`
### Change Type
- [x] `major` — Breaking change
### Test Plan
- [x] Unit Tests
- [x] End to end tests
### Release Notes
- [@tldraw/editor] lots, wip
- [@tldraw/ui] gone, merged to tldraw/tldraw
- [@tldraw/polyfills] gone, merged to tldraw/editor
- [@tldraw/primitives] gone, merged to tldraw/editor / tldraw/tldraw
- [@tldraw/indices] gone, merged to tldraw/editor
- [@tldraw/file-format] gone, merged to tldraw/tldraw
---------
Co-authored-by: alex <alex@dytry.ch>
This PR adds a `meta` property to shapes and other records.
It adds it to:
- asset
- camera
- document
- instance
- instancePageState
- instancePresence
- page
- pointer
- rootShape
## Setting meta
This data can generally be added wherever you would normally update the
corresponding record.
An exception exists for shapes, which can be updated using a partial of
the `meta` in the same way that we update shapes with a partial of
`props`.
```ts
this.updateShapes([{
id: myShape.id,
type: "geo",
meta: {
nemesis: "steve",
special: true
}
])
```
## `Editor.getInitialMetaForShape`
The `Editor.getInitialMetaForShape` method is kind of a hack to set the
initial meta property for newly created shapes. You can set it
externally. Escape hatch!
### Change Type
- [x] `minor` — New feature
### Test Plan
todo
- [ ] Unit Tests (todo)
### Release Notes
- todo
Removes `propsForNextShape` and replaces it with the new styles API.
Changes in here:
- New custom style example
- `setProp` is now `setStyle` and takes a `StyleProp` instead of a
string
- `Editor.props` and `Editor.opacity` are now `Editor.sharedStyles` and
`Editor.sharedOpacity`
- They return an object that flags mixed vs shared types instead of
using null to signal mixed types
- `Editor.styles` returns a `SharedStyleMap` - keyed on `StyleProp`
instead of `string`
- `StateNode.shapeType` is now the shape util rather than just a string.
This lets us pull the styles from the shape type directly.
- `color` is no longer a core part of the editor set on the shape
parent. Individual child shapes have to use color directly.
- `propsForNextShape` is now `stylesForNextShape`
- `InstanceRecordType` is created at runtime in the same way
`ShapeRecordType` is. This is so it can pull style validators out of
shape defs for `stylesForNextShape`
- Shape type are now defined by their props rather than having separate
validators & type defs
### Change Type
- [x] `major` — Breaking change
### Test Plan
1. Big time regression testing around styles!
2. Check UI works as intended for all shape/style/tool combos
- [x] Unit Tests
- [ ] End to end tests
### Release Notes
-
---------
Co-authored-by: Steve Ruiz <steveruizok@gmail.com>
Based on #1549, but with a lot of code-structure related changes backed
out. Shape schemas are still defined in tlschemas with this diff.
Couple differences between this and #1549:
- This tightens up the relationship between store schemas and editor
schemas a bit
- Reduces the number of places we need to remember to include core
shapes
- Only `<TLdrawEditor />` sets default shapes by default. If you're
doing something funky with lower-level APIs, you need to specify
`defaultShapes` manually
- Replaces `validator` with `props` for shapes
### Change Type
- [x] `major` — Breaking Change
### Test Plan
1. Add a step-by-step description of how to test your PR here.
2.
- [x] Unit Tests
- [ ] Webdriver tests
### Release Notes
[dev-facing, notes to come]
This PR does the following:
- Add `selfHosted.js`, which is a great option for users that wish to
self host the assets. Works well for both self hosting from the public
folder or via a CDN.
- Updates the docs for assets. We now have a dedicated page for assets
where all the options are more clearly explained. I also removed the
assets explanation from the main docs as the unpkg option should work
out of the box and setting up the assets is no longer necessary.
- Cleaned up the `refresh-assets` script. We now use common `types.d.ts`
file to define our types. All the other options then reuse them.
- Pulled out the `formatAssetUrl` into it's own file. It's now static an
no longer generated.
- `urls.d.ts`, `import.d.ts`, and newly added `selfhosted.d.ts` are now
also no longer generated as we can import the types from `types.d.ts`.
- You can now pass a subset of `assetUrls` to `<Tldraw />` and it will
override the default option with the passed in overrides. This makes it
easy to only customizes certain assets (only change the draw font as an
example).
### Change Type
- [x] `patch` — Bug Fix
We noticed that when inferring the type of a shape from its ID, it was
getting inferred as `any` which was hiding some issues. This diff
switches `BaseRecord`'s automatic ID to an explicit one, which lets us
pass in our correct `TLShapeId` definition and still have it play nicely
with other places.
### Change Type
- [x] `patch` — Bug Fix
### Release Notes
[internal only, covered by #1432 changelog]
---------
Co-authored-by: Steve Ruiz <steveruizok@gmail.com>
This PR moves our "fractical indices" library into its own package.
- [x] `major` — Breaking Change
### Release Notes
- [@tldraw/editor] Remove fractional indices code into `@tldraw/indices`
- [@tldraw/indices] Create library for fractional indices code
This fixes a bug where creating a page would fail if there were multiple
pages with the same index.
This also changes the store to use a throttled version of
requestAnimationFrame. This should be good for relieving backpressure in
situations where the store is updated many times in quick succession. It
also makes testing a lot easier since it has the mocking logic built in.
### Change Type
- [x] `patch` — Bug Fix
### Release Notes
- Fix a bug where creating a page could throw an error in some
multiplayer contexts.
This PR adds
- A new `TLInstancePresence` record type, to collect info about the
presence state in a particular instance of the editor. This will
eventually be used to sync presence data instead of sending
instance-only state across the wire.
- **Record Scopes**
`RecordType` now has a `scope` property which can be one of three
things:
- `document`: the record belongs to the document and should be synced
and persisted freely. Currently: `TLDocument`, `TLPage`, `TLShape`, and
`TLAsset`
- `instance`: the record belongs to a single instance of the store and
should not be synced at all. It should not be persisted directly in most
cases, but rather compiled into a kind of 'instance configuration' to
store alongside the local document data so that when reopening the
associated document it can remember some of the previous instance state.
Currently: `TLInstance`, `TLInstancePageState`, `TLCamera`, `TLUser`,
`TLUserDocument`, `TLUserPresence`
- `presence`: the record belongs to a single instance of the store and
should not be persisted, but may be synced using the special presence
sync protocol. Currently just `TLInstancePresence`
This sets us up for the following changes, which are gonna be pretty
high-impact in terms of integrating tldraw into existing systems:
- Removing `instanceId` as a config option. Each instance gets a
randomly generated ID.
- We'd replace it with an `instanceConfig` option that has stuff like
selectedIds, camera positions, and so on. Then it's up to library users
to get and reinstate the instance config at persistence boundaries.
- Removing `userId` as config option, and removing the `TLUser` type
altogether.
- We might need to revisit when doing auth-enabled features like locking
shapes, but I suspect that will be separate.