forked from Team-Ortix/golang-wasm
refactor(example/basic): Add documentation to examples, use wrapper func
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package main
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import "syscall/js"
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var (
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// bridgeName is the namesace for all functions and values set.
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//
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// The returning JavaScript proxy via the webpack loader will look for functions and values under this namespace.
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bridgeName = "__go_wasm__"
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// The JS object of the __go_wasm__ value.
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bridge js.Value
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// Wrapper is a simple JS function that when called with a Go Function, will return a new function that will throw
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// if the property `error` is an instance of JavaScript's `error`.
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//
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// All Go functions in the bridgeName proxy are expected to be the result of calling wrapper with the Go function.
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wrapper js.Value
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)
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// newReturnValue creates an object with the value as the result.
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// See wrapGoFunc for the reasoning behind style style of returning values from Go functions.
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func newReturnValue(value interface{}) js.Value {
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jsObject := js.Global().Get("Object").New()
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jsObject.Set("result", value)
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return jsObject
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}
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// newReturnError creates an object with the goError's message and creates a Javascript Error object with the message.
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//
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// See wrapGoFunc for the reasoning behind style style of returning values from Go functions.
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func newReturnError(goErr error) js.Value {
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jsObject := js.Global().Get("Object").New()
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jsError := js.Global().Get("Error")
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jsObject.Set("error", jsError.New(goErr.Error()))
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return jsObject
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}
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// Using this wrapper makes it possible to throw errors in go-fashion.
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// This means that all wrapped functions must return error and a value.
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//
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// The __wrapper__ function from JS will automatically throw if the returned object has an 'error' property.
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// Inversly, it will automatically give the result value if that property exists.
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// All go functions directly returned via wasm should keep this in mind.
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func wrapGoFunc(f func(js.Value, []js.Value) (interface{}, error)) js.Func {
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return js.FuncOf(func(this js.Value, args []js.Value) interface{} {
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res, err := f(this, args)
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if err != nil {
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return newReturnError(err)
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}
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return newReturnValue(res)
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})
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}
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func setFunc(name string, f func(js.Value, []js.Value) (interface{}, error)) {
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bridge.Set(name, wrapper.Invoke(wrapGoFunc(f)))
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}
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func setValue(name string, value interface{}) {
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bridge.Set(name, value)
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}
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// Toggling the __ready__ value in the bridge lets JS know that everything is setup.
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// Setting __ready__ to true can help prevent possible race conditions of Wasm being called before everything is
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// registered, and potentially crashing applications.
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func ready() {
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bridge.Set("__ready__", true)
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<-make(chan bool, 0) // To use anything from Go WASM, the program may not exit.
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}
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// We want to make sure that this is always ran first. This means that we can make sure that whenever functions are
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// initialized, they are able to be set to the bridge and wrapper.
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func init() {
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bridge = js.Global().Get(bridgeName)
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wrapper = bridge.Get("__wrapper__")
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}
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