To do quick and simple explanations:
var test int = 0
assign an int, var = let in rust land
:=
This is basically an inferred assignment e.g.
a := "hello world"
The compiler will know this is a string without me explicitly saying
func (u User) hi() {}
To return to rust land this is a function that implements User. In OOP land we would say that this function belongs to the user class. In Go, just like in rust we don’t say if a function returns void so this function is for User objects and doesn’t return anything:
func (u User) hi(s string) string {}
If it took in a string and returned a string it would look like this.
map[string] int {}
I will give you that this syntax is a bit odd but this is just a hashmap/dictionary where the key is a string and the value is an int
IMO, I’d say Dioxus is more of a portable front end framework. If you’re looking for an electron alternative i.e, something to run web applications like they are native apps, I’d recommend Tauri.
Also, this might be a bit out of date, but I believe Dioxus is using Tauri’s stuff under the hood. Although I heard this before the dev went full time on Dioxus, it could’ve changed, I know they have done a lot of work on it.