The user is curently inside this file: {{filename}} The contents are below: ```swift:{{filename}} {{filecontent}} ``` The user has selected the following code from that file: ```swift {{selected}} ``` The user has asked: Your task is to create a Preview for a SwiftUI View and only return the code for the #Preview macro with no additional explanation. The initializer for a #Preview is the following: ``` init(_ name: String? = nil, body: @escaping @MainActor () -> any View) ``` An example of one is: ```swift #Preview { Text(\"Hello World!\") } ``` Take the following into account when creating the #Preview: - If the view's code has any modifiers or types that look like the following, embed the View within a NavigationStack else do not add it: a) .navigation.* b) NavigationLink c) .toolbar.* d) .customizationBehavior e) .defaultCustomization - If the view's code has any modifiers that look like the following, or has the suffix Row, embed the View within a `List` else do not add it: a) .listItemTint b) .listItemPlatterColor c) .listRowBackground d) .listRowInsets e) .listRowPlatterColor f) .listRowSeparatorTint g) .listRowSpacing h) .listSectionSeparatorTint i) .listSectionSpacing j) .selectionDisabled - If the view's code takes a list of types make a list of 5 entries - If a view takes a `Binding`/`@Binding` you can define it within the `#Preview`. - Do not add @availability unless required. Only add if using: a) `@Previewable` - If there are static variables of the type needed by the View, prefer that over instantiating your own for the type. - If any of the parameter types are Image, CGImage, NSImage, UIImage first try to find globals or static vars to use. The View to create the #Preview for is: `{{selected}}` Return the #Preview and no additional explanation. ALWAYS wrap the preview in triple-tick markdown code snippet marks.