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
- Removes UserDocumentRecordType
- moving isSnapMode to user preferences
- moving isGridMode and isPenMode to InstanceRecordType
- deleting the other properties which are no longer needed.
- Creates a separate pipeline for persisting instance state.
Previously the instance state records were stored alongside the document
state records, and in order to load the state for a particular instance
(in our case, a particular tab) you needed to pass the 'instanceId'
prop. This prop ended up totally pervading the public API and people ran
into all kinds of issues with it, e.g. using the same instance id in
multiple editor instances.
There was also an issue whereby it was hard for us to clean up old
instance state so the idb table ended up bloating over time.
This PR makes it so that rather than passing an instanceId, you load the
instance state yourself while creating the store. It provides tools to
make that easy.
- Undoes the assumption that we might have more than one instance's
state in the store.
- Like `document`, `instance` now has a singleton id
`instance:instance`.
- Page state ids and camera ids are no longer random, but rather derive
from the page they belong to. This is like having a foreign primary key
in SQL databases. It's something i'd love to support fully as part of
the RecordType/Store api.
Tests to do
- [x] Test Migrations
- [x] Test Store.listen filtering
- [x] Make type sets in Store public and readonly
- [x] Test RecordType.createId
- [x] Test Instance state snapshot loading/exporting
- [x] Manual test File I/O
- [x] Manual test Vscode extension with multiple tabs
- [x] Audit usages of store.query
- [x] Audit usages of changed types: InstanceRecordType, 'instance',
InstancePageStateRecordType, 'instance_page_state', 'user_document',
'camera', CameraRecordType, InstancePresenceRecordType,
'instance_presence'
- [x] Test user preferences
- [x] Manual test isSnapMode and isGridMode and isPenMode
- [ ] Test indexedDb functions
- [x] Add instanceId stuff back
### Change Type
- [x] `major` — Breaking Change
### Test Plan
1. Add a step-by-step description of how to test your PR here.
2.
- [ ] Unit Tests
- [ ] Webdriver tests
### Release Notes
- Add a brief release note for your PR here.
This diff reverts 09c36781 and tweaks how some of our linting was
working.
I'm not actually sure what caused the regression that 09c36781 was
fixing - it was something to do with typescript being used to transpile
eslintrc.js, but that being excluded from the tsconfig for those
projects. I fixed that by removing `rootDir` from those, but that
revealed some other issues with files not getting ignored correctly.
I fixed the ignoring issue with a change I've wanted to make to these
scripts for a while: only running them on files that are actually
tracked by git, instead of on everything with a relevant extension. A
side effect of that is that we have to re-implement .eslintignore
support ourselves, but that's very straight forward: the `ignore`
package that eslint uses is very easy to include.
### Change Type
- [x] `internal` — Any other changes that don't affect the published
package (will not publish a new version)
### Test Plan
-
### Release Notes
[internal-only]
This PR updates our user-facing APIs for the Tldraw and TldrawEditor
components, as well as the Editor (App). It mainly incorporates surface
changes from #1450 without any changes to validators or migrators,
incorporating feedback / discussion with @SomeHats and @ds300.
Here we:
- remove the TldrawEditorConfig
- bring back a loose version of shape definitions
- make a separation between "core" shapes and "default" shapes
- do not allow custom shapes, migrators or validators to overwrite core
shapes
- but _do_ allow new shapes
## `<Tldraw>` component
In this PR, the `Tldraw` component wraps both the `TldrawEditor`
component and our `TldrawUi` component. It accepts a union of props for
both components. Previously, this component also added local syncing via
a `useLocalSyncClient` hook call, however that has been pushed down to
the `TldrawEditor` component.
## `<TldrawEditor>` component
The `TldrawEditor` component now more neatly wraps up the different ways
that the editor can be configured.
## The store prop (`TldrawEditorProps.store`)
There are three main ways for the `TldrawEditor` component to be run:
1. with an externally defined store
2. with an externally defined syncing store (local or remote)
3. with an internally defined store
4. with an internally defined locally syncing store
The `store` prop allows for these configurations.
If the `store` prop is defined, it may be defined either as a `TLStore`
or as a `SyncedStore`. If the store is a `TLStore`, then the Editor will
assume that the store is ready to go; if it is defined as a SyncedStore,
then the component will display the loading / error screens as needed,
or the final editor once the store's status is "synced".
When the store is left undefined, then the `TldrawEditor` will create
its own internal store using the optional `instanceId`, `initialData`,
or `shapes` props to define the store / store schema.
If the `persistenceKey` prop is left undefined, then the store will not
be synced. If the `persistenceKey` is defined, then the store will be
synced locally. In the future, we may also here accept the API key /
roomId / etc for creating a remotely synced store.
The `SyncedStore` type has been expanded to also include types used for
remote syncing, e.g. with `ConnectionStatus`.
## Tools
By default, the App has two "baked-in" tools: the select tool and the
zoom tool. These cannot (for now) be replaced or removed. The default
tools are used by default, but may be replaced by other tools if
provided.
## Shapes
By default, the App has a set of "core" shapes:
- group
- embed
- bookmark
- image
- video
- text
That cannot by overwritten because they're created by the app at
different moments, such as when double clicking on the canvas or via a
copy and paste event. In follow up PRs, we'll split these out so that
users can replace parts of the code where these shapes are created.
### Change Type
- [x] `major` — Breaking Change
### Test Plan
- [x] Unit Tests