A fork of bevy to implement some features for forestia
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Greeble b2f3248432
Make the animated_mesh example more intuitive (#17421)
# Objective

Make the `animated_mesh` example more intuitive and easier for the user
to extend.

# Solution

The `animated_mesh` example shows how to spawn a single mesh and play a
single animation. The original code is roughly:

1. In `setup_mesh_and_animation`, spawn an entity with a SceneRoot that
will load and spawn the mesh. Also record the animation to play as a
resource.
2. Use `play_animation_once_loaded` to detect when any animation players
are spawned, then play the animation from the resource.

When I used this example as a starting point for my own app, I hit a
wall when trying to spawn multiple meshes with different animations.
`play_animation_once_loaded` tells me an animation player spawned
somewhere, but how do I get from there to the right animation? The
entity it runs on is spawned by the scene so I can't attach any data to
it?

The new code takes a different approach. Instead of a global resource,
the animation is recorded as a component on the entity with the
SceneRoot. Instead of detecting animation players spawning wherever, an
observer is attached to that specific entity.

This feels more intuitive and localised, and I think most users will
work out how to get from there to different animations and meshes. The
downside is more lines of code, and the "find the animation players"
part still feels a bit magical and inefficient.

# Side Notes

- The solution was mostly stolen from
https://github.com/bevyengine/bevy/issues/14852#issuecomment-2481401769.
- The example still feels too complicated.
    - "Why do I have to make this graph to play one animation?"
- "Why can't I choose and play the animation in one step and avoid this
temporary component?"
    - I think this requires engine changes.
- I originally started on a separate example of multiple meshes
([branch](https://github.com/bevyengine/bevy/compare/main...greeble-dev:bevy:animated-mesh-multiple)).
- I decided that the user could probably work this out themselves from
the single animation example.
    - But maybe still worth following through.

# Testing

`cargo run --example animated_mesh`

---------

Co-authored-by: Rob Parrett <robparrett@gmail.com>
2025-01-20 21:12:06 +00:00
.cargo Fix typos in config_fast_builds.toml (#16025) 2024-10-20 16:50:40 +00:00
.github Run example validation jobs on ubuntu-latest (#17169) 2025-01-20 12:51:48 +00:00
assets Add external assets to .gitignore (#17388) 2025-01-17 01:20:14 +00:00
benches Relationships (non-fragmenting, one-to-many) (#17398) 2025-01-18 22:20:30 +00:00
crates Text 2d alignment fix (#17365) 2025-01-20 20:54:32 +00:00
docs Fix a few typos (#17292) 2025-01-10 22:48:30 +00:00
docs-template Fix a few typos (#17292) 2025-01-10 22:48:30 +00:00
errors Remove all deprecated code (#16338) 2025-01-05 20:33:39 +00:00
examples Make the animated_mesh example more intuitive (#17421) 2025-01-20 21:12:06 +00:00
src Move #![warn(clippy::allow_attributes, clippy::allow_attributes_without_reason)] to the workspace Cargo.toml (#17374) 2025-01-15 01:14:58 +00:00
tests Relationships (non-fragmenting, one-to-many) (#17398) 2025-01-18 22:20:30 +00:00
tools Create bevy_platform_support Crate (#17250) 2025-01-20 20:45:30 +00:00
.gitattributes Enforce linux-style line endings for .rs and .toml (#3197) 2021-11-26 21:05:35 +00:00
.gitignore Gitignore all target folders (#16336) 2024-11-11 18:48:11 +00:00
Cargo.toml Add external assets to .gitignore (#17388) 2025-01-17 01:20:14 +00:00
clippy.toml Migrate to core::hint::black_box() (#16980) 2024-12-29 19:33:42 +00:00
CODE_OF_CONDUCT.md Update CODE_OF_CONDUCT.md 2020-08-19 20:25:58 +01:00
CONTRIBUTING.md Reworded the CONTRIBUTING.md doc (#16849) 2024-12-17 19:18:34 +00:00
CREDITS.md Programmed soundtrack example (#12774) 2024-03-29 20:32:30 +00:00
deny.toml Ignore the 'instant is unmaintained' advisory. (#16763) 2024-12-11 17:25:55 +00:00
LICENSE-APACHE Let the project page support GitHub's new ability to display open source licenses (#4966) 2022-06-08 17:55:57 +00:00
LICENSE-MIT Let the project page support GitHub's new ability to display open source licenses (#4966) 2022-06-08 17:55:57 +00:00
README.md Update Contributor's Guide link in README.md (#16592) 2024-12-02 15:18:19 +00:00
rustfmt.toml Simpler lint fixes: makes ci lints work but disables a lint for now (#15376) 2024-09-24 11:42:59 +00:00
typos.toml Make typos config stricter (#17202) 2025-01-07 02:01:55 +00:00

Bevy

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What is Bevy?

Bevy is a refreshingly simple data-driven game engine built in Rust. It is free and open-source forever!

WARNING

Bevy is still in the early stages of development. Important features are missing. Documentation is sparse. A new version of Bevy containing breaking changes to the API is released approximately once every 3 months. We provide migration guides, but we can't guarantee migrations will always be easy. Use only if you are willing to work in this environment.

MSRV: Bevy relies heavily on improvements in the Rust language and compiler. As a result, the Minimum Supported Rust Version (MSRV) is generally close to "the latest stable release" of Rust.

Design Goals

  • Capable: Offer a complete 2D and 3D feature set
  • Simple: Easy for newbies to pick up, but infinitely flexible for power users
  • Data Focused: Data-oriented architecture using the Entity Component System paradigm
  • Modular: Use only what you need. Replace what you don't like
  • Fast: App logic should run quickly, and when possible, in parallel
  • Productive: Changes should compile quickly ... waiting isn't fun

About

  • Features: A quick overview of Bevy's features.
  • News: A development blog that covers our progress, plans and shiny new features.

Docs

Community

Before contributing or participating in discussions with the community, you should familiarize yourself with our Code of Conduct.

  • Discord: Bevy's official discord server.
  • Reddit: Bevy's official subreddit.
  • GitHub Discussions: The best place for questions about Bevy, answered right here!
  • Bevy Assets: A collection of awesome Bevy projects, tools, plugins and learning materials.

Contributing

If you'd like to help build Bevy, check out the Contributor's Guide. For simple problems, feel free to open an issue or PR and tackle it yourself!

For more complex architecture decisions and experimental mad science, please open an RFC (Request For Comments) so we can brainstorm together effectively!

Getting Started

We recommend checking out the Quick Start Guide for a brief introduction.

Follow the Setup guide to ensure your development environment is set up correctly. Once set up, you can quickly try out the examples by cloning this repo and running the following commands:

# Switch to the correct version (latest release, default is main development branch)
git checkout latest
# Runs the "breakout" example
cargo run --example breakout

To draw a window with standard functionality enabled, use:

use bevy::prelude::*;

fn main(){
  App::new()
    .add_plugins(DefaultPlugins)
    .run();
}

Fast Compiles

Bevy can be built just fine using default configuration on stable Rust. However for really fast iterative compiles, you should enable the "fast compiles" setup by following the instructions here.

Bevy Cargo Features

This list outlines the different cargo features supported by Bevy. These allow you to customize the Bevy feature set for your use-case.

Thanks

Bevy is the result of the hard work of many people. A huge thanks to all Bevy contributors, the many open source projects that have come before us, the Rust gamedev ecosystem, and the many libraries we build on.

A huge thanks to Bevy's generous sponsors. Bevy will always be free and open source, but it isn't free to make. Please consider sponsoring our work if you like what we're building.

This project is tested with BrowserStack.

License

Bevy is free, open source and permissively licensed! Except where noted (below and/or in individual files), all code in this repository is dual-licensed under either:

at your option. This means you can select the license you prefer! This dual-licensing approach is the de-facto standard in the Rust ecosystem and there are very good reasons to include both.

Some of the engine's code carries additional copyright notices and license terms due to their external origins. These are generally BSD-like, but exact details vary by crate: If the README of a crate contains a 'License' header (or similar), the additional copyright notices and license terms applicable to that crate will be listed. The above licensing requirement still applies to contributions to those crates, and sections of those crates will carry those license terms. The license field of each crate will also reflect this. For example, bevy_mikktspace has code under the Zlib license (as well as a copyright notice when choosing the MIT license).

The assets included in this repository (for our examples) typically fall under different open licenses. These will not be included in your game (unless copied in by you), and they are not distributed in the published bevy crates. See CREDITS.md for the details of the licenses of those files.

Your contributions

Unless you explicitly state otherwise, any contribution intentionally submitted for inclusion in the work by you, as defined in the Apache-2.0 license, shall be dual licensed as above, without any additional terms or conditions.