from fasthtml.common import * # MonsterUI shadows fasthtml components with the same name from monsterui.all import * # If you don't want shadowing behavior, you use import monsterui.core as ... style instead # Get frankenui and tailwind headers via CDN using Theme.blue.headers() hdrs = Theme.blue.headers() # fast_app is shadowed by MonsterUI to make it default to no Pico, and add body classes # needed for frankenui theme styling app, rt = fast_app(hdrs=hdrs) # Examples Product Data to render in the gallery and detail pages   products = [ {"name": "Laptop", "price": "$999", "img": "https://picsum.photos/400/100?random=1"}, {"name": "Smartphone", "price": "$599", "img": "https://picsum.photos/400/100?random=2"}, {"name": "Headphones", "price": "$199", "img": "https://picsum.photos/400/100?random=3"}, {"name": "Smartwatch", "price": "$299", "img": "https://picsum.photos/400/100?random=4"}, {"name": "Tablet", "price": "$449", "img": "https://picsum.photos/400/100?random=5"}, {"name": "Camera", "price": "$799", "img": "https://picsum.photos/400/100?random=6"},] def ProductCard(p): # Card does lots of boilerplate classes so you can just pass in the content return Card( # width:100% makes the image take the full width so we are guarenteed that we won't # have the image cut off or not large enough. Because all our images are a consistent # size we do not need to worry about stretching or skewing the image, this is ideal. # If you have images of different sizes, you will need to use object-fit:cover and/or # height to either strech, shrink, or crop the image. It is much better to adjust your # images to be a consistent size upfront so you don't have to handle edge cases of # different images skeweing/stretching differently. Img(src=p["img"], alt=p["name"], style="width:100%"), # All components can take a cls argument to add additional styling - `mt-2` adds margin # to the top (see spacing tutorial for details on spacing). # # Often adding space makes a site look more put together - usually the 2 - 5 range is a # good choice H4(p["name"], cls="mt-2"), # There are helpful Enums, such as TextPresetsT, ButtonT, ContainerT, etc that allow for easy # discoverability of class options. # bold_sm is helpful for things that you want to look like regular text, but stand out # visually for emphasis. P(p["price"], cls=TextPresets.bold_sm), # ButtonT.primary is useful for actions you really want the user to take (like adding # something to the card) - these stand out visually. For dangerous actions (like # deleting something) you generally would want to use ButtonT.destructive. For UX actions # that aren't a goal of the page (like cancelling something that hasn't been submitted) # you generally want the default styling. Button("Click me!", cls=(ButtonT.primary, "mt-2"), # HTMX can be used as normal on any component hx_get=product_detail.to(product_name=p['name']), hx_push_url='true', hx_target='body')) @rt def index(): # Titled using a H1 title, sets the page title, and wraps contents in Main(Container(...)) using # frankenui styles. Generally you will want to use Titled for all of your pages return Titled("Example Store Front!", Grid(*[ProductCard(p) for p in products], cols_lg=3)) example_product_description = """\n This is a sample detailed description of the {product_name}. You can see when clicking on the card from the gallery you can: + Have a detailed description of the product on the page + Have an order form to fill out and submit + Anything else you want! """ @rt def product_detail(product_name:str): return Titled("Product Detail", # Grid lays out its children in a responsive grid Grid( Div( H1(product_name), # render_md is a helper that renders markdown into HTML using frankenui styles. render_md(example_product_description.format(product_name=product_name))), Div( H3("Order Form"), # Form automatically has a class of 'space-y-3' for a margin between each child. Form( # LabelInput is a convience wrapper for a label and input that links them. LabelInput("Name", id='name'), LabelInput("Email", id='email'), LabelInput("Quantity", id='quantity'), # ButtonT.primary because this is the primary action of the page! Button("Submit", cls=ButtonT.primary)) ), # Grid has defaults and args for cols at different breakpoints, but you can pass in # your own to customize responsiveness. cols_lg=2)) serve()