bevy/examples/ecs/observers.rs
Joona Aalto 21b78b5990
Implement From translation and rotation for isometries (#15733)
# Objective

Several of our APIs (namely gizmos and bounding) use isometries on
current Bevy main. This is nicer than separate properties in a lot of
cases, but users have still expressed usability concerns.

One problem is that in a lot of cases, you only care about e.g.
translation, so you end up with this:

```rust
gizmos.cross_2d(
    Isometry2d::from_translation(Vec2::new(-160.0, 120.0)),
    12.0,
    FUCHSIA,
);
```

The isometry adds quite a lot of length and verbosity, and isn't really
that relevant since only the translation is important here.

It would be nice if you could use the translation directly, and only
supply an isometry if both translation and rotation are needed. This
would make the following possible:

```rust
gizmos.cross_2d(Vec2::new(-160.0, 120.0), 12.0, FUCHSIA);
```

removing a lot of verbosity.

## Solution

Implement `From<Vec2>` and `From<Rot2>` for `Isometry2d`, and
`From<Vec3>`, `From<Vec3A>`, and `From<Quat>` for `Isometry3d`. These
are lossless conversions that fit the semantics of `From`.

This makes the proposed API possible! The methods must now simply take
an `impl Into<IsometryNd>`, and this works:

```rust
gizmos.cross_2d(Vec2::new(-160.0, 120.0), 12.0, FUCHSIA);
```
2024-10-08 16:09:28 +00:00

221 lines
6.9 KiB
Rust

//! Demonstrates how to observe life-cycle triggers as well as define custom ones.
use bevy::{
prelude::*,
utils::{HashMap, HashSet},
};
use rand::{Rng, SeedableRng};
use rand_chacha::ChaCha8Rng;
fn main() {
App::new()
.add_plugins(DefaultPlugins)
.init_resource::<SpatialIndex>()
.add_systems(Startup, setup)
.add_systems(Update, (draw_shapes, handle_click))
// Observers are systems that run when an event is "triggered". This observer runs whenever
// `ExplodeMines` is triggered.
.observe(
|trigger: Trigger<ExplodeMines>,
mines: Query<&Mine>,
index: Res<SpatialIndex>,
mut commands: Commands| {
// You can access the trigger data via the `Observer`
let event = trigger.event();
// Access resources
for e in index.get_nearby(event.pos) {
// Run queries
let mine = mines.get(e).unwrap();
if mine.pos.distance(event.pos) < mine.size + event.radius {
// And queue commands, including triggering additional events
// Here we trigger the `Explode` event for entity `e`
commands.trigger_targets(Explode, e);
}
}
},
)
// This observer runs whenever the `Mine` component is added to an entity, and places it in a simple spatial index.
.observe(on_add_mine)
// This observer runs whenever the `Mine` component is removed from an entity (including despawning it)
// and removes it from the spatial index.
.observe(on_remove_mine)
.run();
}
#[derive(Component)]
struct Mine {
pos: Vec2,
size: f32,
}
impl Mine {
fn random(rand: &mut ChaCha8Rng) -> Self {
Mine {
pos: Vec2::new(
(rand.gen::<f32>() - 0.5) * 1200.0,
(rand.gen::<f32>() - 0.5) * 600.0,
),
size: 4.0 + rand.gen::<f32>() * 16.0,
}
}
}
#[derive(Event)]
struct ExplodeMines {
pos: Vec2,
radius: f32,
}
#[derive(Event)]
struct Explode;
fn setup(mut commands: Commands) {
commands.spawn(Camera2d);
commands.spawn(
TextBundle::from_section(
"Click on a \"Mine\" to trigger it.\n\
When it explodes it will trigger all overlapping mines.",
TextStyle {
color: Color::WHITE,
..default()
},
)
.with_style(Style {
position_type: PositionType::Absolute,
top: Val::Px(12.),
left: Val::Px(12.),
..default()
}),
);
let mut rng = ChaCha8Rng::seed_from_u64(19878367467713);
commands
.spawn(Mine::random(&mut rng))
// Observers can watch for events targeting a specific entity.
// This will create a new observer that runs whenever the Explode event
// is triggered for this spawned entity.
.observe(explode_mine);
// We want to spawn a bunch of mines. We could just call the code above for each of them.
// That would create a new observer instance for every Mine entity. Having duplicate observers
// generally isn't worth worrying about as the overhead is low. But if you want to be maximally efficient,
// you can reuse observers across entities.
//
// First, observers are actually just entities with the Observer component! The `observe()` functions
// you've seen so far in this example are just shorthand for manually spawning an observer.
let mut observer = Observer::new(explode_mine);
// As we spawn entities, we can make this observer watch each of them:
for _ in 0..1000 {
let entity = commands.spawn(Mine::random(&mut rng)).id();
observer.watch_entity(entity);
}
// By spawning the Observer component, it becomes active!
commands.spawn(observer);
}
fn on_add_mine(
trigger: Trigger<OnAdd, Mine>,
query: Query<&Mine>,
mut index: ResMut<SpatialIndex>,
) {
let mine = query.get(trigger.entity()).unwrap();
let tile = (
(mine.pos.x / CELL_SIZE).floor() as i32,
(mine.pos.y / CELL_SIZE).floor() as i32,
);
index.map.entry(tile).or_default().insert(trigger.entity());
}
// Remove despawned mines from our index
fn on_remove_mine(
trigger: Trigger<OnRemove, Mine>,
query: Query<&Mine>,
mut index: ResMut<SpatialIndex>,
) {
let mine = query.get(trigger.entity()).unwrap();
let tile = (
(mine.pos.x / CELL_SIZE).floor() as i32,
(mine.pos.y / CELL_SIZE).floor() as i32,
);
index.map.entry(tile).and_modify(|set| {
set.remove(&trigger.entity());
});
}
fn explode_mine(trigger: Trigger<Explode>, query: Query<&Mine>, mut commands: Commands) {
// If a triggered event is targeting a specific entity you can access it with `.entity()`
let id = trigger.entity();
let Some(mut entity) = commands.get_entity(id) else {
return;
};
info!("Boom! {:?} exploded.", id.index());
entity.despawn();
let mine = query.get(id).unwrap();
// Trigger another explosion cascade.
commands.trigger(ExplodeMines {
pos: mine.pos,
radius: mine.size,
});
}
// Draw a circle for each mine using `Gizmos`
fn draw_shapes(mut gizmos: Gizmos, mines: Query<&Mine>) {
for mine in &mines {
gizmos.circle_2d(
mine.pos,
mine.size,
Color::hsl((mine.size - 4.0) / 16.0 * 360.0, 1.0, 0.8),
);
}
}
// Trigger `ExplodeMines` at the position of a given click
fn handle_click(
mouse_button_input: Res<ButtonInput<MouseButton>>,
camera: Query<(&Camera, &GlobalTransform)>,
windows: Query<&Window>,
mut commands: Commands,
) {
let (camera, camera_transform) = camera.single();
if let Some(pos) = windows
.single()
.cursor_position()
.and_then(|cursor| camera.viewport_to_world(camera_transform, cursor).ok())
.map(|ray| ray.origin.truncate())
{
if mouse_button_input.just_pressed(MouseButton::Left) {
commands.trigger(ExplodeMines { pos, radius: 1.0 });
}
}
}
#[derive(Resource, Default)]
struct SpatialIndex {
map: HashMap<(i32, i32), HashSet<Entity>>,
}
/// Cell size has to be bigger than any `TriggerMine::radius`
const CELL_SIZE: f32 = 64.0;
impl SpatialIndex {
// Lookup all entities within adjacent cells of our spatial index
fn get_nearby(&self, pos: Vec2) -> Vec<Entity> {
let tile = (
(pos.x / CELL_SIZE).floor() as i32,
(pos.y / CELL_SIZE).floor() as i32,
);
let mut nearby = Vec::new();
for x in -1..2 {
for y in -1..2 {
if let Some(mines) = self.map.get(&(tile.0 + x, tile.1 + y)) {
nearby.extend(mines.iter());
}
}
}
nearby
}
}