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Tiny cross-platform webview library for C/C++/Golang. Uses WebKit (Gtk/Cocoa) and MSHTML (Windows)

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webview

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A tiny cross-platform webview library for C/C++/Golang to build modern cross-platform GUI. Also, there are Rust bindings and Nim bindings available.

It supports two-way JavaScript bindings (to call JavaScript from C/C++/Go and to call C/C++/Go from JavaScript).

It uses Cocoa/WebKit on macOS, gtk-webkit2 on Linux and MSHTML (IE10/11) on Windows.

linux

Webview for Go developers

If you are interested in writing Webview apps in C/C++ - skip to the next section.

Getting started

Install Webview library with go get:

$ go get github.com/zserge/webview

Import the package and start using it:

package main

import "github.com/zserge/webview"

func main() {
	// Open wikipedia in a 800x600 resizable window
	webview.Open("Minimal webview example",
		"https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Main_Page", 800, 600, true)
}

It is not recommended to use go run (although it works perfectly fine on Linux). Use go build instead:

# Linux
$ go build -o webview-example && ./webview-example

# MacOS uses app bundles for GUI apps
$ mkdir -p example.app/Contents/MacOS
$ go build -o example.app/Contents/MacOS/example
$ open example.app # Or click on the app in Finder

# Windows requires special linker flags for GUI apps.
# It's also recommended to use TDM-GCC-64 compiler for CGo.
# http://tdm-gcc.tdragon.net/download
$ go build -ldflags="-H windowsgui" -o webview-example.exe

API

See godoc.

How to serve or inject the initial HTML/CSS/JavaScript into the webview?

First of all, you probably want to embed your assets (HTML/CSS/JavaScript) into the binary to have a standalone executable. Consider using go-bindata or any other similar tools.

Now there are two major approaches to deploy the content:

  • Serve HTML/CSS/JS with an embedded HTTP server
  • Injecting HTML/CSS/JS via JavaScript binding API

To serve the content it is recommended to use ephemeral ports:

ln, err := net.Listen("tcp", "127.0.0.1:0")
if err != nil {
	log.Fatal(err)
}
defer ln.Close()
go func() {
 	// Set up your http server here
	log.Fatal(http.Serve(ln, nil))
}()
webview.Open("Hello", "http://"+ln.Addr().String(), 400, 300, false)

Injecting the content via JS bindings is a bit more complicated, but feels more solid and does not expose any additional open TCP ports.

Leave webview.Settings.URL empty to start with a bare minimal HTML5. It will open a webview with <div id="app"></div> in it. Alternatively, use data URI to inject custom HTML code (don't forget to URL-encode it):

const myHTML = `<!doctype html><html>....</html>`
w := webview.New(webview.Settings{
	URL: `data:text/html,` + url.PathEscape(myHTML),
})

Keep your initial HTML short (a few kilobytes maximum).

Now you can inject more JavaScrtipt once the webview becomes ready using webview.Eval(). You can also inject CSS styles using JavaScript:

w.Dispatch(func() {
	// Inject CSS
	w.Eval(fmt.Sprintf(`(function(css){
		var style = document.createElement('style');
		var head = document.head || document.getElementsByTagName('head')[0];
		style.setAttribute('type', 'text/css');
		if (style.styleSheet) {
			style.styleSheet.cssText = css;
		} else {
			style.appendChild(document.createTextNode(css));
		}
		head.appendChild(style);
	})("%s")`, template.JSEscapeString(myStylesCSS)))
	// Inject JS
	w.Eval(myJSFramework)
	w.Eval(myAppJS)
})

This works fairly well across the platforms, see counter-go example for more details about how make a webview app with no web server. It also demonstrates how to use ReactJS, VueJS or Picodom with webview.

How to communicate between native Go and web UI?

You already have seen how to use w.Eval() to run Javascript inside the webview. There is also a way to call Go code from JavaScript.

On the low level there is a special callback, webview.Settings.ExternalInvokeCallback that receives a string argument. This string can be passed from JavaScript using window.external.invoke(someString).

This might seem very inconvenient, and that is why there is a dedicated webview.Bind() API call. It binds an existing Go object (struct or struct pointer) and creates/injects JS API for it. Now you can call JS methods and they will result in calling native Go methods. Even more, if you modify the Go object - it can be automatically serialized to JSON and passed to the web UI to keep things in sync.

Please, see counter-go example for more details about how to bind Go controllers to the web UI.

Debugging and development tips

If terminal output is unavailable (e.g. if you launch app bundle on MacOS or GUI app on Windows) you may use webview.Debug() and webview.Debugf() to print logs. On MacOS such logs will be printed via NSLog and can be seen in the Console app. On Windows they use OutputDebugString and can be seen using DebugView app. On Linux logging is done to stderr and can be seen in the terminal or redirected to a file.

To debug the web part of your app you may use webview.Settings.Debug flag. It enables Web Inspector in WebKit and work on Linux and MacOS (use popup menu to open the web inspector). On Windows there is no easy to way to enable debugging, but you may include Firebug in your HTML code:

<script type="text/javascript" src="https://getfirebug.com/firebug-lite.js"></script>

Even though Firebug browser extension development has been stopped, Firebug Lite is still available and just works.

Distributing webview apps

On Linux you get a standalone executable. It will depend on GTK3 and GtkWebkit2, so if you distribute your app in DEB or RPM format include those dependencies. Application icon can be specified by providing a .desktop file.

On MacOS you are likely to ship an app bundle. Make the following directory structure and just zip it:

example.app
└── Contents
    ├── Info.plist
    ├── MacOS
    |   └── example
    └── Resources
        └── example.icns

Here, Info.plist is a property list file and *.icns is a special icon format. You may convert PNG to icns online.

On Windows you probably would like to have a custom icon for your executable. It can be done by providing a resource file, compiling it and and linking with it. Typically, windres utility is used to compile resources.

You may find some example build scripts for all three platforms here.

Also, if you want to cross-compile your webview app - use xgo.

Webview for C/C++ developers

Getting started

Download webview.h and include it in your C/C++ code:

// main.c
#define WEBVIEW_IMPLEMENTATION
#include "webview.h"

#ifdef WIN32
int WINAPI WinMain(HINSTANCE hInt, HINSTANCE hPrevInst, LPSTR lpCmdLine,
                   int nCmdShow) {
#else
int main() {
#endif
  /* Open wikipedia in a 800x600 resizable window */
  webview("Minimal webview example",
	  "https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Main_Page", 800, 600, 1);
  return 0;
}

Build it:

# Linux
$ cc main.c -DWEBVIEW_GTK=1 $(shell pkg-config --cflags --libs gtk+-3.0 webkit2gtk-4.0) -o webview-example
# MacOS
$ cc main.c -DWEBVIEW_COCOA=1 -x objective-c -framework Cocoa -framework WebKit -o webview-example
# Windows (mingw)
$ cc main.c -DWEBVIEW_WINAPI=1 -lole32 -lcomctl32 -loleaut32 -luuid -mwindows -o webview-example.exe

API

For the most simple use cases there is only one function:

int webview(const char *title, const char *url,	int width, int height, int resizable);

The following URL schemes are supported:

  • http:// and https://, no surprises here.
  • file:/// can be useful if you want to unpack HTML/CSS assets to some temporary directory and point a webview to open index.html from there.
  • data:text/html,<html>...</html> allows to pass short HTML data inline without using a web server or pulluting the file system. Furhter modifications of the webview contents can be done via JavaScript bindings.

If have choosen a regular http URL scheme, you can use Mongoose or any other web server/framework you like.

If you want to have more control over the app lifecycle you can use the following functions:

  struct webview webview = {
      .title = title,
      .url = url,
      .width = w,
      .height = h,
      .resizable = 1,
      .debug = 0,
      .resizable = resizable,
  };
  /* Create webview window using the provided options */
  webview_init(&webview);
  /* Main app loop, can be either blocking or non-blocking */
  while (webview_loop(&webview, blocking) == 0);
  /* Destroy webview window, often exits the app */
  webview_exit(&webview);

  /* To change window title later: */
  webview_set_title(&webview, "New title");

  /* To terminate the webview main loop: */
  webview_terminate(&webview);

  /* To print logs to stderr, MacOS Console or DebugView: */
  webview_debug("exited: %d\n", 1);

To evaluate arbitrary javascript code use the following C function:

webview_eval(&webview, "alert('hello, world');");

There is also a special callback (webview.external_invoke_cb) that can be invoked from javascript:

// C
void my_cb(struct webview *w, const char *arg) {
	...
}

// JS
window.external.invoke('some arg');
// Exactly one string argument must be provided, to pass more complex objects
// serialize them to JSON and parse it in C. To pass binary data consider using
// base64.
window.external.invoke(JSON.stringify({fn: 'sum', x: 5, y: 3}));

Webview library is meant to be used from a single UI thread only. So if you want to call webview_eval or webview_terminate from some background thread

  • you have to use webview_dispatch to post some arbitrary function with some context to be executed inside the main UI thread:
// This function will be executed on the UI thread
void render(struct webview *w, void *arg) {
  webview_eval(w, ......);
}

// Dispatch render() function from another thread:
webview_dispatch(w, render, some_arg);

You may find some C/C++ examples in this repo that demonstrate the API above.

Also, there is a more more advanced complete C++ app, Slide, that uses webview as a GUI. You may have a look how webview apps can be built, packages and how automatic CI/CD can be set up.

Notes

Execution on OpenBSD requires wxallowed mount(8) option.

FreeBSD is also supported, to install webkit2 run pkg install webkit2-gtk3.

License

Code is distributed under MIT license, feel free to use it in your proprietary projects as well.

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Tiny cross-platform webview library for C/C++/Golang. Uses WebKit (Gtk/Cocoa) and MSHTML (Windows)

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