This PR adds collapsible groups to the examples app.
it's not finished, but I'd like a review before continuing as I've made
a few decisions I'd like feedback on. I'd like to make a separate issue
for abstracting the accordion component, as I wasn't sure how I would do
it and I thought it would be best to prioritise the functionality first.
Especially considering there are more pressing issues to be getting on
with.
### Change Type
- [ ] `patch` — Bug fix
- [ ] `minor` — New feature
- [ ] `major` — Breaking change
- [ ] `dependencies` — Changes to package dependencies[^1]
- [x] `documentation` — Changes to the documentation only[^2]
- [ ] `tests` — Changes to any test code only[^2]
- [ ] `internal` — Any other changes that don't affect the published
package[^2]
- [ ] I don't know
[^1]: publishes a `patch` release, for devDependencies use `internal`
[^2]: will not publish a new version
### Release Notes
- Add collapsible categories to the examples app
---------
Co-authored-by: Steve Ruiz <steveruizok@gmail.com>
Adds descriptions to examples.
![Kapture 2023-12-22 at 17 08
32](https://github.com/tldraw/tldraw/assets/1489520/d78657cf-b3c3-4160-b58b-7c08ed27823d)
They show as a list on the index page, and on individual examples they
show in a three-js style sidebar. For now, this is disabled completely
on mobile. Examples can still be opened in 'standalone' mode to get rid
of the sidebar.
Note: the 'view code' link won't work until after these changes are
merged.
There's a small impact on authoring examples: each one needs to live in
a folder with a README.md. At a minimum, the readme needs to look like
this:
```md
---
title: My Example
component: ./MyExample.tsx
---
Here is a 1-liner about my example
```
Optionally, you can:
- Add `hide: true` to the frontmatter to remove the example from the
list (you can skip the description this way)
- Add `order: 3` to control the order in which the example appears.
They're alphabetical otherwise
- Add some more description or links to docs below a `---`. This won't
show in the listing, but will be visible on GitHub and on the example
page itself.
As a follow-up, I'd like to add an 'Open in CodeSandbox' link to each
example. These won't work until we've made a release with these examples
(as our special examples codesandbox is tied to our release process) but
the code is there & ready to go!
Have a play, let me know what you think!
### Change Type
- [x] `documentation` — Changes to the documentation only[^2]
---------
Co-authored-by: Steve Ruiz <steveruizok@gmail.com>
This is an attempt at #1989. The big issue there is when `shapeUtils`
change when you're relying on tldraw to provide you with the store
instead of providing your own. Our `useTLStore` component had a bug
where it would rely on effects & a ref to detect when its options had
changed whilst still scheduling updates. Fresh opts would come in, but
they'd be different from the ones in the ref, so we'd schedule an
update, so the opts would come in again, but they'd still be different
as we hadn't run effects yet, and we'd schedule an update again (and so
on).
This diff fixes that by storing the previous opts in state instead of a
ref, so they're updating in lockstep with the store itself. this
prevents the update loop.
There are still situations where we can get into loops if the developer
is passing in custom tools, shapeUtils, or components but not memoising
them or defining them outside of react. As a DX improvement, we do some
auto-memoisation of these values using shallow equality to help with
this issue.
### Change Type
- [x] `patch` — Bug fix
### Test Plan
- [x] Unit Tests
### Release Notes
- Fixes a bug that could cause crashes due to a re-render loop with HMR
#1989
This diff tweaks our `debugFlags` framework to support setting different
default value for different environments, makes it easier to define
feature flags, and makes feature flags show up in the debug menu by
default. With this change, feature flags will default to being enabled
in dev and preview environments, but disabled in production.
Specify a feature flag like this:
```ts
const featureFlags = {
myCoolNewFeature: createFeatureFlag('myCoolNewFeature')
}
```
optionally, pass a second value to control its defaults:
```ts
const featureFlags = {
featureEnabledInProduction: createFeatureFlag('someFeature', { all: true }),
customEnabled: createFeatureFlag('otherFeature', {development: true, staging: false, production: false}),
}
```
In code, the value can be read using `featureFlags.myFeature.value`.
Remember to wrap reading it in a reactive context!
### Change Type
- [x] `patch` — Bug Fix
### Test Plan
-
### Release Notes
[internal only change]
Right now this examples app looks exactly the same as our old examples
app, but there are a couple of tiny differences:
- We use `vite` instead of our own esbuild setup for development and
bundling
- We use `@tldraw/assets` for smart asset hashing instead of copying the
assets to a public folder
You can use `@tldraw/assets` with vite with a bunch of extra config, but
it (plus a bunch of other bundlers) also support a special syntax for
specifying asset urls: `new URL('./my/asset.svg',
import.meta.url).href`. This approach is more standards-complient, but
doesn't work with every bundler just yet. This diff also adds a
url-based version of `@tldraw/assets`, although I'd like to tweak the
entry point - right now you need to import from
`@tldraw/assets/lib/urls`, but i'd like to find a way to get this to
`@tldraw/assets/urls` or something at some point.
There are a couple other extra fixes in here:
- vscode builds were broken, they're fixed now!
- there's also a little tweak to the `getBundlerAssetUrls` API to allow
passing in a function instead of an object for URL formatting
- there are new internal-only functions for injecting asset urls
globally instead of passing them in via react props. this means we can
get the benefits of cacheable URLs without having to clutter our
examples by passing them in