bevy/examples/2d/pixel_grid_snap.rs
Aevyrie bed9ddf3ce
Refactor and simplify custom projections (#17063)
# Objective

- Fixes https://github.com/bevyengine/bevy/issues/16556
- Closes https://github.com/bevyengine/bevy/issues/11807

## Solution

- Simplify custom projections by using a single source of truth -
`Projection`, removing all existing generic systems and types.
- Existing perspective and orthographic structs are no longer components
- I could dissolve these to simplify further, but keeping them around
was the fast way to implement this.
- Instead of generics, introduce a third variant, with a trait object.
- Do an object safety dance with an intermediate trait to allow cloning
boxed camera projections. This is a normal rust polymorphism papercut.
You can do this with a crate but a manual impl is short and sweet.

## Testing

- Added a custom projection example

---

## Showcase

- Custom projections and projection handling has been simplified.
- Projection systems are no longer generic, with the potential for many
different projection components on the same camera.
- Instead `Projection` is now the single source of truth for camera
projections, and is the only projection component.
- Custom projections are still supported, and can be constructed with
`Projection::custom()`.

## Migration Guide

- `PerspectiveProjection` and `OrthographicProjection` are no longer
components. Use `Projection` instead.
- Custom projections should no longer be inserted as a component.
Instead, simply set the custom projection as a value of `Projection`
with `Projection::custom()`.
2025-01-01 20:44:24 +00:00

158 lines
4.8 KiB
Rust

//! Shows how to create graphics that snap to the pixel grid by rendering to a texture in 2D
use bevy::{
prelude::*,
render::{
camera::RenderTarget,
render_resource::{
Extent3d, TextureDescriptor, TextureDimension, TextureFormat, TextureUsages,
},
view::RenderLayers,
},
window::WindowResized,
};
/// In-game resolution width.
const RES_WIDTH: u32 = 160;
/// In-game resolution height.
const RES_HEIGHT: u32 = 90;
/// Default render layers for pixel-perfect rendering.
/// You can skip adding this component, as this is the default.
const PIXEL_PERFECT_LAYERS: RenderLayers = RenderLayers::layer(0);
/// Render layers for high-resolution rendering.
const HIGH_RES_LAYERS: RenderLayers = RenderLayers::layer(1);
fn main() {
App::new()
.add_plugins(DefaultPlugins.set(ImagePlugin::default_nearest()))
.add_systems(Startup, (setup_camera, setup_sprite, setup_mesh))
.add_systems(Update, (rotate, fit_canvas))
.run();
}
/// Low-resolution texture that contains the pixel-perfect world.
/// Canvas itself is rendered to the high-resolution world.
#[derive(Component)]
struct Canvas;
/// Camera that renders the pixel-perfect world to the [`Canvas`].
#[derive(Component)]
struct InGameCamera;
/// Camera that renders the [`Canvas`] (and other graphics on [`HIGH_RES_LAYERS`]) to the screen.
#[derive(Component)]
struct OuterCamera;
#[derive(Component)]
struct Rotate;
fn setup_sprite(mut commands: Commands, asset_server: Res<AssetServer>) {
// the sample sprite that will be rendered to the pixel-perfect canvas
commands.spawn((
Sprite::from_image(asset_server.load("pixel/bevy_pixel_dark.png")),
Transform::from_xyz(-40., 20., 2.),
Rotate,
PIXEL_PERFECT_LAYERS,
));
// the sample sprite that will be rendered to the high-res "outer world"
commands.spawn((
Sprite::from_image(asset_server.load("pixel/bevy_pixel_light.png")),
Transform::from_xyz(-40., -20., 2.),
Rotate,
HIGH_RES_LAYERS,
));
}
/// Spawns a capsule mesh on the pixel-perfect layer.
fn setup_mesh(
mut commands: Commands,
mut meshes: ResMut<Assets<Mesh>>,
mut materials: ResMut<Assets<ColorMaterial>>,
) {
commands.spawn((
Mesh2d(meshes.add(Capsule2d::default())),
MeshMaterial2d(materials.add(Color::BLACK)),
Transform::from_xyz(40., 0., 2.).with_scale(Vec3::splat(32.)),
Rotate,
PIXEL_PERFECT_LAYERS,
));
}
fn setup_camera(mut commands: Commands, mut images: ResMut<Assets<Image>>) {
let canvas_size = Extent3d {
width: RES_WIDTH,
height: RES_HEIGHT,
..default()
};
// this Image serves as a canvas representing the low-resolution game screen
let mut canvas = Image {
texture_descriptor: TextureDescriptor {
label: None,
size: canvas_size,
dimension: TextureDimension::D2,
format: TextureFormat::Bgra8UnormSrgb,
mip_level_count: 1,
sample_count: 1,
usage: TextureUsages::TEXTURE_BINDING
| TextureUsages::COPY_DST
| TextureUsages::RENDER_ATTACHMENT,
view_formats: &[],
},
..default()
};
// fill image.data with zeroes
canvas.resize(canvas_size);
let image_handle = images.add(canvas);
// this camera renders whatever is on `PIXEL_PERFECT_LAYERS` to the canvas
commands.spawn((
Camera2d,
Camera {
// render before the "main pass" camera
order: -1,
target: RenderTarget::Image(image_handle.clone().into()),
..default()
},
Msaa::Off,
InGameCamera,
PIXEL_PERFECT_LAYERS,
));
// spawn the canvas
commands.spawn((Sprite::from_image(image_handle), Canvas, HIGH_RES_LAYERS));
// the "outer" camera renders whatever is on `HIGH_RES_LAYERS` to the screen.
// here, the canvas and one of the sample sprites will be rendered by this camera
commands.spawn((Camera2d, Msaa::Off, OuterCamera, HIGH_RES_LAYERS));
}
/// Rotates entities to demonstrate grid snapping.
fn rotate(time: Res<Time>, mut transforms: Query<&mut Transform, With<Rotate>>) {
for mut transform in &mut transforms {
let dt = time.delta_secs();
transform.rotate_z(dt);
}
}
/// Scales camera projection to fit the window (integer multiples only).
fn fit_canvas(
mut resize_events: EventReader<WindowResized>,
mut projection: Single<&mut Projection, With<OuterCamera>>,
) {
let Projection::Orthographic(projection) = &mut **projection else {
return;
};
for event in resize_events.read() {
let h_scale = event.width / RES_WIDTH as f32;
let v_scale = event.height / RES_HEIGHT as f32;
projection.scale = 1. / h_scale.min(v_scale).round();
}
}