bevy/examples/no_std
Carter Anderson 9666a7e688 Rename bevy_platform_support to bevy_platform (#18813)
The goal of `bevy_platform_support` is to provide a set of platform
agnostic APIs, alongside platform-specific functionality. This is a high
traffic crate (providing things like HashMap and Instant). Especially in
light of https://github.com/bevyengine/bevy/discussions/18799, it
deserves a friendlier / shorter name.

Given that it hasn't had a full release yet, getting this change in
before Bevy 0.16 makes sense.

- Rename `bevy_platform_support` to `bevy_platform`.
2025-04-14 22:45:27 +02:00
..
library Rename bevy_platform_support to bevy_platform (#18813) 2025-04-14 22:45:27 +02:00
README.md Add no_std Library Example (#18333) 2025-03-18 00:45:25 +00:00

no_std Examples

This folder contains examples for how to work with no_std targets and Bevy. Refer to each example individually for details around how it works and what features you may need to enable/disable to allow a particular target to work.

What is no_std?

no_std is a Rust term for software which doesn't rely on the standard library, std. The typical use for no_std is in embedded software, where the device simply doesn't support the standard library. For example, a Raspberry Pi Pico has no operating system to support threads or filesystem operations.

For these platforms, Rust has a more fundamental alternative to std, core. A large portion of Rust's std actually just re-exports items from core, such as iterators, Result, and Option.

In addition, std also re-exports from another crate, alloc. This crate is similar to core in that it's generally available on all platforms. Where it differs is that its inclusion requires access to a global allocator. Currently, Bevy relies heavily on allocation, so we consider alloc to be just as available, since without it, Bevy will not compile.