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Dars is a Python UI framework for building modern, interactive web apps with only Python code. Write your interface in Python, export it to static HTML/CSS/JS, and deploy anywhere.

Project description

Dars Framework

Dars Framework Logo

Dars is a multiplatform Python UI framework for building modern, interactive web and desktop apps with Python code. Write your interface in Python, export it to web technologies and deploy anywhere.

Official Website | Documentation Docs | DeepWiki here |

pip install dars-framework

Some Javascript and css stack required for advanced personalization.

Try dars without installing nothing(single page mode) just visit the Dars Playground

How It Works

  • Build your UI using Python classes and components (like Text, Button, Container, Page, etc).
  • Preview instantly with hot-reload using app.rTimeCompile().
  • Export your app to static web files with a single CLI command.
  • Export to native desktop apps (BETA) using project config format: "desktop" and dars build.
  • Use multipage, layouts, scripts, and more—see docs for advanced features.
  • For more information visit the Documentation

Quick Example: Your First App

from dars.all import *

app = App(title="Hello World", theme="dark")

index = Page(
     Text(
        text="Hello World",
        style={
            'font-size': '48px',
            'color': '#2c3e50',
            'margin-bottom': '20px',
            'font-weight': 'bold',
            'text-align': 'center'
        }
    ),
    Text(
        text="Hello World",
        style={
            'font-size': '20px',
            'color': '#7f8c8d',
            'margin-bottom': '40px',
            'text-align': 'center'
        }
    ),

    Button(
        text="Click Me!",
        on_click= alert('Hello from DARS!'),
        style={
            'background-color': '#3498db',
            'color': 'white',
            'padding': '15px 30px',
            'border': 'none',
            'border-radius': '8px',
            'font-size': '18px',
            'cursor': 'pointer',
            'transition': 'background-color 0.3s'
        }
    ),
    style={
        'display': 'flex',
        'flex-direction': 'column',
        'align-items': 'center',
        'justify-content': 'center',
        'min-height': '100vh',
        'background-color': '#f0f2f5',
        'font-family': 'Arial, sans-serif'
    }
) 

app.add_page("index", index, title="Hello World", index=True)

if __name__ == "__main__":
    app.rTimeCompile()

Modern State Management (State V2)

Dars Framework includes a pure state management system that makes building reactive UIs simple and intuitive. No verbose syntax - just clean Python code.

Quick Start

from dars.all import *

# Create a component
display = Text("0", id="counter")

# Create state with default values
counter = State(display, text=0)

# Use reactive operations
increment_btn = Button("+1", on_click=counter.text.increment(by=1))
decrement_btn = Button("-1", on_click=counter.text.decrement(by=1))
reset_btn = Button("Reset", on_click=counter.reset())

Core Reactive Operations

All Property Types Supported: State V2 can update any component property: text, html, style, class_name, attrs.

Increment/Decrement (numeric props only):

counter.text.increment(by=1)      # Increase by 1
counter.text.decrement(by=1)      # Decrease by 1

Set Any Property:

counter.text.set(value=100)           # Set text
counter.class_name.set("active")      # Set CSS class
counter.style.set({"color": "red"})   # Set styles
counter.attrs.set({"title": "Info"})  # Set attributes

Update Multiple Properties:

state.update(
    text="Done!",
    class_name="success",
    style={"color": "green"}
)

Auto Operations (Continuous):

# Auto-increment every second
timer.text.auto_increment(by=1, interval=1000)

# Stop auto operation
timer.text.stop_auto()

Reset to Defaults:

state.reset()  # Restore all properties to initial values

Auto-Incrementing Timer Example

from dars.all import *

app = App("Timer Demo")

# Create timer display
timer_display = Text("0", id="timer", style={"font-size": "36px"})
timer = State(timer_display, text=0)

# Control buttons
start_btn = Button("Start", on_click=timer.text.auto_increment(by=1, interval=1000))
stop_btn = Button("Stop", on_click=timer.text.stop_auto())
reset_btn = Button("Reset", on_click=timer.reset())

page = Page(Container(timer_display, start_btn, stop_btn, reset_btn))
app.add_page("index", page, index=True)

Animation System

Dars includes 15+ built-in animations that integrate seamlessly with state management:

Basic Animations:

from dars.all import fadeIn, fadeOut, pulse, shake, sequence

# Single animation
button.on_click = fadeIn(id="element", duration=500)

# Chained animations
button.on_click = sequence(
    fadeIn(id="box", duration=400),
    pulse(id="box", scale=1.2, iterations=2),
    shake(id="box", intensity=5)
)

Available Animations:

  • Opacity: fadeIn, fadeOut
  • Movement: slideIn, slideOut (8 directions)
  • Scaling: scaleIn, scaleOut
  • Interactive: shake, bounce, pulse, rotate, flip
  • Effects: colorChange, morphSize

Combining State & Animations:

button.on_click = sequence(
    counter.text.increment(by=1),
    pulse(id="counter", scale=1.2),
    fadeOut(id="counter", duration=200),
    counter.text.set(value=0),
    fadeIn(id="counter", duration=200)
)

Dynamic Updates with this()

Update components directly without pre-defining states:

from dars.all import *

# Self-updating button
btn = Button("Click Me!", on_click=this().state(
    text="Clicked!",
    style={"background-color": "green"}
))

# With animations
btn = Button("Pulse", on_click=[
    pulse(id="btn", scale=1.1),
    this().state(text="Done!")
])

Script Chaining with .then()

Chain asynchronous operations using .then():

from dars.all import *
from dars.scripts.dscript import RawJS, dScript

# Chain file read with state update
read_btn = Button("Load", on_click=
    read_text("data.txt").then(
        this().state(text=RawJS(dScript.ARG))
    )
)

# Multi-step chain
button.on_click = sequence(
    fadeOut(id="status"),
    state.text.set(value="Loading...")
).then(
    fadeIn(id="status")
).then(
    this().state(text="Complete!")
)

New State V2 docs here: State V2

SPA Routing System

Dars 1.4.6 introduces a powerful client-side routing system for Single Page Applications:

Basic Routing

Use the @route decorator or route parameter to create SPA routes:

from dars.all import *

app = App(title="My SPA")

# Using decorator
@route("/")
def home():
    return Page(Text("Home Page"))

# Using parameter
about_page = Page(Text("About Us"))
app.add_page("about", about_page, route="/about")

app.add_page("home", home())

Nested Routes with Outlet

Create complex layouts with parent-child routes using the Outlet component:

# Parent layout with navigation
@route("/dashboard")
def dashboard():
    return Page(
        Text("Dashboard", style={"fontSize": "24px"}),
        Container(
            Link("Settings", href="/dashboard/settings"),
            Link("Profile", href="/dashboard/profile"),
            id="nav",
            
        ),
        Outlet(),  # Child routes render here
        style={"padding": "20px"}
    )

# Child routes
settings_page = Page(Text("Settings Content"))
profile_page = Page(Text("Profile Content"))

# NOTE if you don't assign index=True to one of the pages when using more than 1 page with SPA route system
# you get a 404 error because the router doesn't knwow the index page and cannot assign it as index.
# this is probably going to be fixed in next updates
app.add_page("dashboard", dashboard(), index=True)
app.add_page("settings", settings_page, route="/dashboard/settings", parent="dashboard")
app.add_page("profile", profile_page, route="/dashboard/profile", parent="dashboard")

404 Error Handling

Dars automatically handles 404 errors with a default page, or you can customize it:

# Custom 404 page
custom_404 = Page(
    Text("Oops! Page not found", style={"fontSize": "32px", "color": "red"}),
    Link("Go Home", href="/")
)

app.set_404_page(custom_404)

Hot Reload for SPAs

The development preview server includes intelligent hot reload:

  • Detects changes and reloads automatically
  • Stops polling after 10 errors to prevent browser lag
  • Clean console output without spam

CLI Usage

Command What it does
dars export my_app.py --format html Export app to HTML/CSS/JS in ./my_app_web
dars init --type desktop Scaffold desktop-capable project (BETA)
dars build (desktop config) Build desktop app artifacts (BETA)
dars preview ./my_app_web Preview exported app locally
dars init my_project Create a new Dars project (also creates dars.config.json)
dars init --update Create/Update dars.config.json in current dir
dars build Build using dars.config.json (entry/outdir/format)
dars config validate Validate dars.config.json and print report
dars info my_app.py Show info about your app
dars formats List supported export formats
dars --help Show help and all CLI options

Tip: use dars doctor to review optional tooling that can enhance bundling/minification.

Desktop Export (BETA)

  • Mark your project for desktop in dars.config.json with "format": "desktop".
  • Initialize backend scaffolding with dars init --type desktop (or --update).
  • Build with dars build to produce desktop artifacts under dist/.
  • This feature is in BETA: usable for testing, not yet recommended for production.

Local Execution and Live Preview

To test your app locally before exporting, use the hot-reload preview from any Python file that defines your app:

if __name__ == "__main__":
    app.rTimeCompile()

Then run your file directly:

python my_app.py

This will start a local server at http://localhost:8000 so you can view your app in the browser—no manual export needed. You can change the port with:

python my_app.py --port 8088

You can also use the CLI preview command on an exported app:

dars preview ./my_exported_app

This will start a local server at http://localhost:8000 to view your exported app in the browser.


Project Configuration (dars.config.json)

Dars can read build/export settings from a dars.config.json at your project root. It is created automatically by dars init, and you can add it to existing projects with dars init --update.

Example default:

{
  "entry": "main.py",
  "format": "html",
  "outdir": "dist",
  "publicDir": null,
  "include": [],
  "exclude": ["**/__pycache__", ".git", ".venv", "node_modules"],
  "bundle": true,
  "defaultMinify": true,
  "viteMinify": true
}
  • entry: Python entry file. Used by dars build and dars export config.
  • format: Export format. Currently only html is supported.
  • outdir: Output directory. Used by dars build and default for dars export when not overridden.
  • publicDir: Folder (e.g., public/ or assets/) copied into the output. If null, it is autodetected.
  • include/exclude: Basic filters for copying from publicDir.
  • bundle: Reserved for future use. CLI exports and build already bundle appropriately.
  • defaultMinify: Toggle the built-in Python minifier (safe, conservatively preserves <pre>, <code>, script, style, textarea). Controls HTML minification and provides JS/CSS fallback when advanced tools are unavailable. Default true.
  • viteMinify: Toggle the Vite/esbuild minifier for JS/CSS. Default true.

Validate your config:

dars config validate

Build using config:

dars build

Export using the config entry and outdir:

dars export config --format html

See LandingPage docs for details: state_management.md, events.md, scripts.md, routing.md.

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