hypery2k/nativescript-urlhandler

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demo/app/main-page.xml

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<!--
The markup in NativeScript apps contains a series of user interface components, each
of which NativeScript renders with a platform-specific iOS or Android native control.
You can find a full list of user interface components you can use in your app at
https://docs.nativescript.org/ui/components.
-->
<Page xmlns="http://schemas.nativescript.org/tns.xsd" navigatingTo="navigatingTo" class="page">
    <!--
    The ActionBar is the NativeScript common abstraction over the Android ActionBar and iOS NavigationBar.
    http://docs.nativescript.org/ui/action-bar
    -->
    <Page.actionBar>
        <ActionBar title="My App" icon="" class="action-bar">
        </ActionBar>
    </Page.actionBar>
    <!--
    The StackLayout stacks UI components on the screen—either vertically or horizontally.
    In this case, the StackLayout does vertical stacking; you can change the stacking to
    horizontal by applying a orientation="horizontal" attribute to the <StackLayout> element.
    You can learn more about NativeScript layouts at
    https://docs.nativescript.org/ui/layout-containers.

    These components make use of several CSS class names that are part of the NativeScript
    core theme, such as p-20, btn, h2, and text-center. You can view a full list of the
    class names available for styling your app at https://docs.nativescript.org/ui/theme.
    -->
    <StackLayout class="p-20">
        <Label text="Tap the button" class="h1 text-center"/>
        <Button text="TAP" tap="{{ onTap }}" automationText="tapButton" class="btn btn-primary btn-active"/>
        <Label text="{{ message }}"  automationText="messageLabel" class="h2 text-center" textWrap="true"/>
    </StackLayout>
</Page>