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23 commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Zachary Harrold
d70595b667
Add core and alloc over std Lints (#15281)
# Objective

- Fixes #6370
- Closes #6581

## Solution

- Added the following lints to the workspace:
  - `std_instead_of_core`
  - `std_instead_of_alloc`
  - `alloc_instead_of_core`
- Used `cargo +nightly fmt` with [item level use
formatting](https://rust-lang.github.io/rustfmt/?version=v1.6.0&search=#Item%5C%3A)
to split all `use` statements into single items.
- Used `cargo clippy --workspace --all-targets --all-features --fix
--allow-dirty` to _attempt_ to resolve the new linting issues, and
intervened where the lint was unable to resolve the issue automatically
(usually due to needing an `extern crate alloc;` statement in a crate
root).
- Manually removed certain uses of `std` where negative feature gating
prevented `--all-features` from finding the offending uses.
- Used `cargo +nightly fmt` with [crate level use
formatting](https://rust-lang.github.io/rustfmt/?version=v1.6.0&search=#Crate%5C%3A)
to re-merge all `use` statements matching Bevy's previous styling.
- Manually fixed cases where the `fmt` tool could not re-merge `use`
statements due to conditional compilation attributes.

## Testing

- Ran CI locally

## Migration Guide

The MSRV is now 1.81. Please update to this version or higher.

## Notes

- This is a _massive_ change to try and push through, which is why I've
outlined the semi-automatic steps I used to create this PR, in case this
fails and someone else tries again in the future.
- Making this change has no impact on user code, but does mean Bevy
contributors will be warned to use `core` and `alloc` instead of `std`
where possible.
- This lint is a critical first step towards investigating `no_std`
options for Bevy.

---------

Co-authored-by: François Mockers <francois.mockers@vleue.com>
2024-09-27 00:59:59 +00:00
Matty
61a1530c56
Make bevy_math's libm feature use libm for all f32methods with unspecified precision (#14693)
# Objective

Closes #14474

Previously, the `libm` feature of bevy_math would just pass the same
feature flag down to glam. However, bevy_math itself had many uses of
floating-point arithmetic with unspecified precision. For example,
`f32::sin_cos` and `f32::powi` have unspecified precision, which means
that the exact details of their output are not guaranteed to be stable
across different systems and/or versions of Rust. This means that users
of bevy_math could observe slightly different behavior on different
systems if these methods were used.

The goal of this PR is to make it so that the `libm` feature flag
actually guarantees some degree of determinacy within bevy_math itself
by switching to the libm versions of these functions when the `libm`
feature is enabled.

## Solution

bevy_math now has an internal module `bevy_math::ops`, which re-exports
either the standard versions of the operations or the libm versions
depending on whether the `libm` feature is enabled. For example,
`ops::sin` compiles to `f32::sin` without the `libm` feature and to
`libm::sinf` with it.

This approach has a small shortfall, which is that `f32::powi` (integer
powers of floating point numbers) does not have an equivalent in `libm`.
On the other hand, this method is only used for squaring and cubing
numbers in bevy_math. Accordingly, this deficit is covered by the
introduction of a trait `ops::FloatPow`:
```rust
pub(crate) trait FloatPow {
    fn squared(self) -> Self;
    fn cubed(self) -> Self;
}
```

Next, each current usage of the unspecified-precision methods has been
replaced by its equivalent in `ops`, so that when `libm` is enabled, the
libm version is used instead. The exception, of course, is that
`.powi(2)`/`.powi(3)` have been replaced with `.squared()`/`.cubed()`.

Finally, the usage of the plain `f32` methods with unspecified precision
is now linted out of bevy_math (and hence disallowed in CI). For
example, using `f32::sin` within bevy_math produces a warning that tells
the user to use the `ops::sin` version instead.

## Testing

Ran existing tests. It would be nice to check some benchmarks on NURBS
things once #14677 merges. I'm happy to wait until then if the rest of
this PR is fine.

---

## Discussion

In the future, it might make sense to actually expose `bevy_math::ops`
as public if any downstream Bevy crates want to provide similar
determinacy guarantees. For now, it's all just `pub(crate)`.

This PR also only covers `f32`. If we find ourselves using `f64`
internally in parts of bevy_math for better robustness, we could extend
the module and lints to cover the `f64` versions easily enough.

I don't know how feasible it is, but it would also be nice if we could
standardize the bevy_math tests with the `libm` feature in CI, since
their success is currently platform-dependent (e.g. 8 of them fail on my
machine when run locally).

---------

Co-authored-by: IQuick 143 <IQuick143cz@gmail.com>
2024-08-12 16:13:36 +00:00
Robert Walter
70a18d26e2
Glam 0.28 update - adopted (#14613)
Basically it's https://github.com/bevyengine/bevy/pull/13792 with the
bumped versions of `encase` and `hexasphere`.

---------

Co-authored-by: Robert Swain <robert.swain@gmail.com>
Co-authored-by: Alice Cecile <alice.i.cecile@gmail.com>
2024-08-06 01:28:00 +00:00
Joona Aalto
e6261b0f5f
Add Dir2::from_xy_unchecked and Dir3::from_xyz_unchecked (#14587)
# Objective

Bevy's direction types have `new` and `new_unchecked` constructors, but
no unchecked variant for the `Dir2::from_xy` and `Dir3::from_xyz`
methods.

For me, this has several times lead to constructing directions like
this, in cases where the components of the direction are already known
to be normalized:

```rust
let normal = Dir2::new_unchecked(Vec2::new(-ray.direction.x.signum(), 0.0));
```

```rust
segment.direction =
    Dir2::new_unchecked(Vec2::new(-segment.direction.x, segment.direction.y));
```

For consistency and ergonomics, it would be nice to have unchecked
variants of `Dir2::from_xy` and `Dir3::from_xyz`:

```rust
let normal = Dir2::from_xy_unchecked(-ray.direction.x.signum(), 0.0);
```

```rust
segment.direction = Dir2::from_xy_unchecked(-segment.direction.x, segment.direction.y);
```

## Solution

Add `Dir2::from_xy_unchecked` and `Dir3::from_xyz_unchecked`.
2024-08-02 13:10:13 +00:00
IQuick 143
420f7f72dc
Fast renormalize (#14316)
# Objective

- Addresses part of #14302 .

## Solution

- Add a fast_remormalize method to Dir2/Dir3/Dir3A and Rot2.

## Testing

- Added tests too

---------

Co-authored-by: BD103 <59022059+BD103@users.noreply.github.com>
Co-authored-by: Jan Hohenheim <jan@hohenheim.ch>
Co-authored-by: Joona Aalto <jondolf.dev@gmail.com>
2024-07-22 18:42:48 +00:00
Matty
e13c72d8a4
Fix swapped docs for Rot2::rotation_to/from_y (#14307)
# Objective

Fixes #14301 

## Solution

Swap them so that they are no longer swapped.
2024-07-14 17:00:41 +00:00
Alice Cecile
2165f2218f
Rename Rotation2d to Rot2 (#13694)
# Objective

- `Rotation2d` is a very long name for a commonly used type.

## Solution

- Rename it to `Rot2` to match `glam`'s naming convention (e.g. `Vec2`)

I ran a poll, and `Rot2` was the favorite of the candidate names.

This is not actually a breaking change, since `Rotation2d` has not been
shipped yet.

---------

Co-authored-by: Alice Cecile <alice.i.cecil@gmail.com>
2024-06-05 21:51:13 +00:00
Matty
39609f1708
Dir2 -> Rotation2d conversions (#13670)
# Objective

Filling a hole in the API: Previously, there was no particularly
ergonomic way to go from, e.g., a pair of directions to the rotation
that links them.

## Solution

We introduce a small suite of API methods to `Dir2` to address this:
```rust
/// Get the rotation that rotates this direction to `other`.
pub fn rotation_to(self, other: Self) -> Rotation2d { //... }

/// Get the rotation that rotates `other` to this direction.
pub fn rotation_from(self, other: Self) -> Rotation2d { //... }

/// Get the rotation that rotates the X-axis to this direction.
pub fn rotation_from_x(self) -> Rotation2d { //... }

/// Get the rotation that rotates this direction to the X-axis.
pub fn rotation_to_x(self) -> Rotation2d { //... }

/// Get the rotation that rotates this direction to the Y-axis.
pub fn rotation_from_y(self) -> Rotation2d { //... }

/// Get the rotation that rotates the Y-axis to this direction.
pub fn rotation_to_y(self) -> Rotation2d { //... }
```

I also removed some language from the `Rotation2d` docs that is
misleading: the radian and angle conversion functions are already clear
about which angles they spit out, and `Rotation2d` itself doesn't have
any bounds on angles or anything.
2024-06-04 14:44:29 +00:00
Alice Cecile
cca4fc76de
Add compass direction constants to Dir2 (#13636)
# Objective

When working on `leafwing-input-manager` and in my games, I've found
these compass directions to be both clear and useful when attempting to
describe angles in 2 dimensions.

This was directly used when mapping gamepad inputs into 4-way movement
as a virtual dpad, and I expect other uses are common in games.

## Solution

- Add constants corresponding to the 4 cardinal and 4 semi-cardinal
directions.

## Testing

- I've validated the quadrants of each of the directions through
self-review.

---------

Co-authored-by: Alice Cecile <alice.i.cecil@gmail.com>
2024-06-03 15:14:13 +00:00
Olle Lukowski
8c7f73ab81
Move bevy_math Reflect impls (#13520)
# Objective

Fixes #13456 

## Solution

Moved `bevy_math`'s `Reflect` impls from `bevy_reflect` to `bevy_math`.


### Quick note
I accidentally used the same commit message while resolving a merge
conflict (first time I had to resolve a conflict). Sorry about that.
2024-05-27 14:15:22 +00:00
Ben Harper
ec01c2dc45
New circular primitives: Arc2d, CircularSector, CircularSegment (#13482)
# Objective

Adopted #11748

## Solution

I've rebased on main to fix the merge conflicts. ~~Not quite ready to
merge yet~~

* Clippy is happy and the tests are passing, but...
* ~~The new shapes in `examples/2d/2d_shapes.rs` don't look right at
all~~ Never mind, looks like radians and degrees just got mixed up at
some point?
* I have updated one doc comment based on a review in the original PR.

---------

Co-authored-by: Alexis "spectria" Horizon <spectria.limina@gmail.com>
Co-authored-by: Alexis "spectria" Horizon <118812919+spectria-limina@users.noreply.github.com>
Co-authored-by: Joona Aalto <jondolf.dev@gmail.com>
Co-authored-by: Alice Cecile <alice.i.cecile@gmail.com>
Co-authored-by: Ben Harper <ben@tukom.org>
2024-05-23 16:12:46 +00:00
Vitaliy Sapronenko
da1e6e63ff
Mention of Vec normalization for Dir::new (#13483)
# Objective

- Fixes #13429 .

## Solution

- Improved docs for methods `new`, `new_and_length` of `Dir2`, `Dir3`,
`Dir3A`.
2024-05-23 15:20:21 +00:00
Vitaliy Sapronenko
151e198d94
Add slerp function for Dir2, Dir3, Dir3A (#13451)
# Objective

- Fixes #13407 .

## Solution

- Used Quat and Rotation2d.

## Testing

- Added tests based on 0°, 30°, 45°, 60° and 90° angles
2024-05-21 21:13:32 +00:00
Matty
4da11fda77
Add AXES iterators for Dir types (#13305)
# Objective

Sometimes it's nice to iterate over all the coordinate axes using
something like `Vec3::AXES`. This was not available for the
corresponding `Dir` types and now it is.

## Solution

We already have things like `Dir2::X`, `Dir3::Z` and so on, so I just
threw them in an array like the vector types do it. I also slightly
refactored the sphere gizmo code to use `Dir3::AXES` and operate on
directions instead of using `Dir3::new_unchecked`.

## Testing

I looked at the sphere in the `3d_gizmos` example and it seems to work,
so I assume I didn't break anything.
2024-05-09 23:30:44 +00:00
NiseVoid
414abb4959
Use Vec3A for 3D bounding volumes and raycasts (#13087)
# Objective

- People have reported bounding volumes being slower than their existing
solution because it doesn't use SIMD aligned types.

## Solution

- Use `Vec3A` internally for bounding volumes, accepting `Into<Vec3A>`
wherever possible
- Change some code to make it more likely SIMD operations are used.

---

## Changelog

- Use `Vec3A` for 3D bounding volumes and raycasts

## Migration Guide

- 3D bounding volumes now use `Vec3A` types internally, return values
from methods on them now return `Vec3A` instead of `Vec3`
2024-04-25 18:56:58 +00:00
BD103
84363f2fab
Remove redundant imports (#12817)
# Objective

- There are several redundant imports in the tests and examples that are
not caught by CI because additional flags need to be passed.

## Solution

- Run `cargo check --workspace --tests` and `cargo check --workspace
--examples`, then fix all warnings.
- Add `test-check` to CI, which will be run in the check-compiles job.
This should catch future warnings for tests. Examples are already
checked, but I'm not yet sure why they weren't caught.

## Discussion

- Should the `--tests` and `--examples` flags be added to CI, so this is
caught in the future?
- If so, #12818 will need to be merged first. It was also a warning
raised by checking the examples, but I chose to split off into a
separate PR.

---------

Co-authored-by: François Mockers <francois.mockers@vleue.com>
2024-04-01 19:59:08 +00:00
Brezak
ed44eb3913
Add a from Dir2 impl for Vec2 (#12594)
# Objective

Allow converting from `Dir2` to `Vec2` in generic code. Fixes #12529.

## Solution

Added a `From<Dir2>` impl for `Vec2`.
2024-03-20 14:21:50 +00:00
Multirious
70da903cec
Add methods to return the inner value for direction types (#12516)
# Objective

Currently in order to retrieve the inner values from direction types is
that you need to use the `Deref` trait or `From`/`Into`. `Deref` that is
currently implemented is an anti-pattern that I believe should be less
relied upon.
This pull-request add getters for retrieving the inner values for
direction types.

Advantages of getters:
- Let rust-analyzer to list out available methods for users to
understand better to on how to get the inner value. (This happens to me.
I really don't know how to get the value until I look through the source
code.)
- They are simple.
- Generally won't be ambiguous in most context. Traits such as
`From`/`Into` will require fully qualified syntax from time to time.
- Unsurprising result.

Disadvantages of getters:
- More verbose

Advantages of deref polymorphism:
- You reduce boilerplate for getting the value and call inner methods
by:
  ```rust
  let dir = Dir3::new(Vec3::UP).unwrap();
  // getting value
  let value = *dir;
  // instead of using getters
  let value = dir.vec3();

  // calling methods for the inner vector
  dir.xy();
  // instead of using getters
  dir.vec3().xy();
  ```

Disadvantages of deref polymorphism:
- When under more level of indirection, it will requires more
dereferencing which will get ugly in some part:
  ```rust
  // getting value
  let value = **dir;
  // instead of using getters
  let value = dir.vec3();

  // calling methods for the inner vector
  dir.xy();
  // instead of using getters
  dir.vec3().xy();
  ```

[More detail
here](https://rust-unofficial.github.io/patterns/anti_patterns/deref.html).


Edit: Update information for From/Into trait.
Edit: Advantages and disadvantages.

## Solution

Add `vec2` method for Dir2.
Add `vec3` method for Dir3.
Add `vec3a` method for Dir3A.
2024-03-18 17:49:58 +00:00
Joona Aalto
f89af0567b
Add Rotation2d (#11658)
# Objective

Rotating vectors is a very common task. It is required for a variety of
things both within Bevy itself and in many third party plugins, for
example all over physics and collision detection, and for things like
Bevy's bounding volumes and several gizmo implementations.

For 3D, we can do this using a `Quat`, but for 2D, we do not have a
clear and efficient option. `Mat2` can be used for rotating vectors if
created using `Mat2::from_angle`, but this is not obvious to many users,
it doesn't have many rotation helpers, and the type does not give any
guarantees that it represents a valid rotation.

We should have a proper type for 2D rotations. In addition to allowing
for potential optimization, it would allow us to have a consistent and
explicitly documented representation used throughout the engine, i.e.
counterclockwise and in radians.

## Representation

The mathematical formula for rotating a 2D vector is the following:

```
new_x = x * cos - y * sin
new_y = x * sin + y * cos
```

Here, `sin` and `cos` are the sine and cosine of the rotation angle.
Computing these every time when a vector needs to be rotated can be
expensive, so the rotation shouldn't be just an `f32` angle. Instead, it
is often more efficient to represent the rotation using the sine and
cosine of the angle instead of storing the angle itself. This can be
freely passed around and reused without unnecessary computations.

The two options are either a 2x2 rotation matrix or a unit complex
number where the cosine is the real part and the sine is the imaginary
part. These are equivalent for the most part, but the unit complex
representation is a bit more memory efficient (two `f32`s instead of
four), so I chose that. This is like Nalgebra's
[`UnitComplex`](https://docs.rs/nalgebra/latest/nalgebra/geometry/type.UnitComplex.html)
type, which can be used for the
[`Rotation2`](https://docs.rs/nalgebra/latest/nalgebra/geometry/type.Rotation2.html)
type.

## Implementation

Add a `Rotation2d` type represented as a unit complex number:

```rust
/// A counterclockwise 2D rotation in radians.
///
/// The rotation angle is wrapped to be within the `]-pi, pi]` range.
pub struct Rotation2d {
    /// The cosine of the rotation angle in radians.
    ///
    /// This is the real part of the unit complex number representing the rotation.
    pub cos: f32,
    /// The sine of the rotation angle in radians.
    ///
    /// This is the imaginary part of the unit complex number representing the rotation.
    pub sin: f32,
}
```

Using it is similar to using `Quat`, but in 2D:

```rust
let rotation = Rotation2d::radians(PI / 2.0);

// Rotate vector (also works on Direction2d!)
assert_eq!(rotation * Vec2::X, Vec2::Y);

// Get angle as degrees
assert_eq!(rotation.as_degrees(), 90.0);

// Getting sin and cos is free
let (sin, cos) = rotation.sin_cos();

// "Subtract" rotations
let rotation2 = Rotation2d::FRAC_PI_4; // there are constants!
let diff = rotation * rotation2.inverse();
assert_eq!(diff.as_radians(), PI / 4.0);

// This is equivalent to the above
assert_eq!(rotation2.angle_between(rotation), PI / 4.0);

// Lerp
let rotation1 = Rotation2d::IDENTITY;
let rotation2 = Rotation2d::FRAC_PI_2;
let result = rotation1.lerp(rotation2, 0.5);
assert_eq!(result.as_radians(), std::f32::consts::FRAC_PI_4);

// Slerp
let rotation1 = Rotation2d::FRAC_PI_4);
let rotation2 = Rotation2d::degrees(-180.0); // we can use degrees too!
let result = rotation1.slerp(rotation2, 1.0 / 3.0);
assert_eq!(result.as_radians(), std::f32::consts::FRAC_PI_2);
```

There's also a `From<f32>` implementation for `Rotation2d`, which means
that methods can still accept radians as floats if the argument uses
`impl Into<Rotation2d>`. This means that adding `Rotation2d` shouldn't
even be a breaking change.

---

## Changelog

- Added `Rotation2d`
- Bounding volume methods now take an `impl Into<Rotation2d>`
- Gizmo methods with rotation now take an `impl Into<Rotation2d>`

## Future use cases

- Collision detection (a type like this is quite essential considering
how common vector rotations are)
- `Transform` helpers (e.g. return a 2D rotation about the Z axis from a
`Transform`)
- The rotation used for `Transform2d` (#8268)
- More gizmos, maybe meshes... everything in 2D that uses rotation

---------

Co-authored-by: Tristan Guichaoua <33934311+tguichaoua@users.noreply.github.com>
Co-authored-by: Robert Walter <robwalter96@gmail.com>
Co-authored-by: IQuick 143 <IQuick143cz@gmail.com>
2024-03-11 19:11:57 +00:00
Joona Aalto
983da7677a
Improve error messages for denormalized directions (#12278)
# Objective

`Dir3` and `Dir3A` can be rotated using `Quat`s. However, if enough
floating point error accumulates or (more commonly) the rotation itself
is degenerate (like not normalized), the resulting direction can also
become denormalized.

Currently, with debug assertions enabled, it panics in these cases with
the message `rotated.is_normalized()`. This error message is unclear,
doesn't give information about *how* it is denormalized (like is the
length too large, NaN, or something else), and is overall not very
helpful. Panicking for small-ish error might also be a bit too strict,
and has lead to unwanted crashes in crates like `bevy_xpbd` (although it
has also helped in finding actual bugs).

The error message should be clearer and give more context, and it
shouldn't cause unwanted crashes.

## Solution

Change the `debug_assert!` to a warning for small error with a (squared
length) threshold of 2e-4 and a panic for clear error with a threshold
of 2e-2. The warnings mention the direction type and the length of the
denormalized vector.

Here's what the error and warning look like:

```
Error: `Dir3` is denormalized after rotation. The length is 1.014242.
```

```
Warning: `Dir3A` is denormalized after rotation. The length is 1.0001414.
```

I gave the same treatment to `new_unchecked`:

```
Error: The vector given to `Dir3::new_unchecked` is not normalized. The length is 1.014242.
```

```
Warning: The vector given to `Dir3A::new_unchecked` is not normalized. The length is 1.0001414.
```

---

## Discussion

### Threshold values

The thresholds are somewhat arbitrary. 2e-4 is what Glam uses for the
squared length in `is_normalized` (after I corrected it in
bitshifter/glam-rs#480), and 2e-2 is just what I thought could be a
clear sign of something being critically wrong. I can definitely tune
them if there are better thresholds though.

### Logging

`bevy_math` doesn't have `bevy_log`, so we can't use `warn!` or
`error!`. This is why I made it use just `eprintln!` and `panic!` for
now. Let me know if there's a better way of logging errors in
`bevy_math`.
2024-03-04 00:01:32 +00:00
Joona Aalto
6032978eba
Implement Mul between f32 and direction types (#12276)
# Objective

Bevy's `Dir3` and `Dir3A` only implement `Mul<f32>` and not vice versa,
and `Dir2` can not be multiplied by `f32` at all. They all should
implement multiplication both ways, just like Glam's vector types.

## Solution

Implement `Mul<Dir2>`, `Mul<Dir3>`, and `Mul<Dir3A>` for `f32`, and
`Mul<f32>` for `Dir2`.
2024-03-03 17:44:16 +00:00
Joona Aalto
f418de8eb6
Rename Direction2d/3d to Dir2/3 (#12189)
# Objective

Split up from #12017, rename Bevy's direction types.

Currently, Bevy has the `Direction2d`, `Direction3d`, and `Direction3dA`
types, which provide a type-level guarantee that their contained vectors
remain normalized. They can be very useful for a lot of APIs for safety,
explicitness, and in some cases performance, as they can sometimes avoid
unnecessary normalizations.

However, many consider them to be inconvenient to use, and opt for
standard vector types like `Vec3` because of this. One reason is that
the direction type names are a bit long and can be annoying to write (of
course you can use autocomplete, but just typing `Vec3` is still nicer),
and in some intances, the extra characters can make formatting worse.
The naming is also inconsistent with Glam's shorter type names, and
results in names like `Direction3dA`, which (in my opinion) are
difficult to read and even a bit ugly.

This PR proposes renaming the types to `Dir2`, `Dir3`, and `Dir3A`.
These names are nice and easy to write, consistent with Glam, and work
well for variants like the SIMD aligned `Dir3A`. As a bonus, it can also
result in nicer formatting in a lot of cases, which can be seen from the
diff of this PR.

Some examples of what it looks like: (copied from #12017)

```rust
// Before
let ray_cast = RayCast2d::new(Vec2::ZERO, Direction2d::X, 5.0);

// After
let ray_cast = RayCast2d::new(Vec2::ZERO, Dir2::X, 5.0);
```

```rust
// Before (an example using Bevy XPBD)
let hit = spatial_query.cast_ray(
    Vec3::ZERO,
    Direction3d::X,
    f32::MAX,
    true,
    SpatialQueryFilter::default(),
);

// After
let hit = spatial_query.cast_ray(
    Vec3::ZERO,
    Dir3::X,
    f32::MAX,
    true,
    SpatialQueryFilter::default(),
);
```

```rust
// Before
self.circle(
    Vec3::new(0.0, -2.0, 0.0),
    Direction3d::Y,
    5.0,
    Color::TURQUOISE,
);

// After (formatting is collapsed in this case)
self.circle(Vec3::new(0.0, -2.0, 0.0), Dir3::Y, 5.0, Color::TURQUOISE);
```

## Solution

Rename `Direction2d`, `Direction3d`, and `Direction3dA` to `Dir2`,
`Dir3`, and `Dir3A`.

---

## Migration Guide

The `Direction2d` and `Direction3d` types have been renamed to `Dir2`
and `Dir3`.

## Additional Context

This has been brought up on the Discord a few times, and we had a small
[poll](https://discord.com/channels/691052431525675048/1203087353850364004/1212465038711984158)
on this. `Dir2`/`Dir3`/`Dir3A` was quite unanimously chosen as the best
option, but of course it was a very small poll and inconclusive, so
other opinions are certainly welcome too.

---------

Co-authored-by: IceSentry <c.giguere42@gmail.com>
2024-02-28 22:48:43 +00:00
Joona Aalto
9bd6cc0a5e
Add Direction3dA and move direction types out of primitives (#12018)
# Objective

Split up from #12017, add an aligned version of `Direction3d` for SIMD,
and move direction types out of `primitives`.

## Solution

Add `Direction3dA` and move direction types into a new `direction`
module.

---

## Migration Guide

The `Direction2d`, `Direction3d`, and `InvalidDirectionError` types have
been moved out of `bevy::math::primitives`.

Before:

```rust
use bevy::math::primitives::Direction3d;
```

After:

```rust
use bevy::math::Direction3d;
```

---------

Co-authored-by: Alice Cecile <alice.i.cecile@gmail.com>
2024-02-26 13:57:49 +00:00