Commit graph

1952 commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Joona Aalto
c1a4b82762
Revert default mesh materials (#15930)
# Objective

Closes #15799.

Many rendering people and maintainers are in favor of reverting default
mesh materials added in #15524, especially as the migration to required
component is already large and heavily breaking.

## Solution

Revert default mesh materials, and adjust docs accordingly.

- Remove `extract_default_materials`
- Remove `clear_material_instances`, and move the logic back into
`extract_mesh_materials`
- Remove `HasMaterial2d` and `HasMaterial3d`
- Change default material handles back to pink instead of white
- 2D uses `Color::srgb(1.0, 0.0, 1.0)`, while 3D uses `Color::srgb(1.0,
0.0, 0.5)`. Not sure if this is intended.

There is now no indication at all about missing materials for `Mesh2d`
and `Mesh3d`. Having a mesh without a material renders nothing.

## Testing

I ran `2d_shapes`, `mesh2d_manual`, and `3d_shapes`, with and without
mesh material components.
2024-10-15 19:47:40 +00:00
Rob Parrett
424e563184
Make contributors example deterministic in CI (#15901)
# Objective

- Make the example deterministic when run with CI, so that the
[screenshot
comparison](https://thebevyflock.github.io/bevy-example-runner/) is
stable
- Preserve the "truly random on each run" behavior so that every page
load in the example showcase shows a different contributor first

## Solution

- Fall back to the static default contributor list in CI
- Store contributors in a `Vec` so that we can show repeats of the
fallback contributor list, giving the appearance of lots of overlapping
contributors in CI
- Use a shared seeded RNG throughout the app
- Give contributor birds a `z` value so that their depth is stable
- Remove the shuffle, which was redundant because contributors are first
collected into a hashmap
- `chain` the systems so that the physics is deterministic from run to
run

## Testing

```bash
echo '(setup: (fixed_frame_time: Some(0.05)), events: [(100, Screenshot), (500, AppExit)])' > config.ron
CI_TESTING_CONFIG=config.ron cargo run --example contributors --features=bevy_ci_testing
mv screenshot-100.png screenshot-100-a.png
CI_TESTING_CONFIG=config.ron cargo run --example contributors --features=bevy_ci_testing
diff screenshot-100.png screenshot-100-a.png
```

## Alternatives

I'd also be fine with removing this example from the list of examples
that gets screenshot-tested in CI. Coverage from other 2d examples is
probably adequate.

---------

Co-authored-by: Alice Cecile <alice.i.cecile@gmail.com>
2024-10-15 18:32:51 +00:00
Rob Parrett
d17de6c105
Fix panic due to malformed mesh in specialized_mesh_pipeline (#15899)
# Objective

Fixes #15891

## Solution

Just remove the invalid triangle. I'm assuming that line of code was
originally copied from one that was drawing a quad.

## Testing

- `cargo run --example specialized_mesh_pipeline`
- hover over over the triangles

Tested on macos
2024-10-15 02:34:33 +00:00
MiniaczQ
f602edad09
Text Rework cleanup (#15887)
# Objective

Cleanup naming and docs, add missing migration guide after #15591 

All text root nodes now use `Text` (UI) / `Text2d`.
All text readers/writers use `Text<Type>Reader`/`Text<Type>Writer`
convention.

---

## Migration Guide

Doubles as #15591 migration guide.

Text bundles (`TextBundle` and `Text2dBundle`) were removed in favor of
`Text` and `Text2d`.
Shared configuration fields were replaced with `TextLayout`, `TextFont`
and `TextColor` components.
Just `TextBundle`'s additional field turned into `TextNodeFlags`
component,
while `Text2dBundle`'s additional fields turned into `TextBounds` and
`Anchor` components.

Text sections were removed in favor of hierarchy-based approach.
For root text entities with `Text` or `Text2d` components, child
entities with `TextSpan` will act as additional text sections.
To still access text spans by index, use the new `TextUiReader`,
`Text2dReader` and `TextUiWriter`, `Text2dWriter` system parameters.
2024-10-15 02:32:34 +00:00
ickshonpe
b78a060af2
Clip to the UI node's content box (#15442)
# Objective

Change UI clipping to respect borders and padding.

Fixes #15335

## Solution

Based on #15163

1. Add a `padding` field to `Node`.
2. In `ui_layout_size` copy the padding values from taffy to
`Node::padding`.
4. Determine the node's content box (The innermost part of the node
excluding the padding and border).
5. In `update_clipping` perform the clipping intersection with the
node's content box.

## Notes

* `Rect` probably needs some helper methods for working with insets but
because `Rect` and `BorderRect` are in different crates it's awkward to
add them. Left for a follow up.
* We could have another `Overflow` variant (probably called
`Overflow::Hidden`) to that clips inside of the border box instead of
the content box. Left it out here as I'm not certain about the naming or
behaviour though. If this PR is adopted, it would be trivial to add a
`Hidden` variant in a follow up.
* Depending on UI scaling there are sometimes gaps in the layout:
<img width="532" alt="rounding-bug"
src="https://github.com/user-attachments/assets/cc29aa0d-44fe-403f-8f0e-cd28a8b1d1b3">
This is caused by existing bugs in `ui_layout_system`'s coordinates
rounding and not anything to do with the changes in this PR.

## Testing

This PR also changes the `overflow` example to display borders on the
overflow nodes so you can see how this works:

#### main (The image is clipped at the edges of the node, overwriting
the border).
<img width="722" alt="main_overflow"
src="https://github.com/user-attachments/assets/eb316cd0-fff8-46ee-b481-e0cd6bab3f5c">

#### this PR  (The image is clipped at the edges of the node's border).
<img width="711" alt="content-box-clip"
src="https://github.com/user-attachments/assets/fb302e56-9302-47b9-9a29-ec3e15fe9a9f">

## Migration Guide

Migration guide is on #15561

---------

Co-authored-by: UkoeHB <37489173+UkoeHB@users.noreply.github.com>
2024-10-15 02:05:08 +00:00
Clar Fon
e79bc7811d
Fix *most* clippy lints (#15906)
# Objective

Another clippy-lint fix: the goal is so that `ci lints` actually
displays the problems that a contributor caused, and not a bunch of
existing stuff in the repo. (when run on nightly)

## Solution

This fixes all but the `clippy::needless_lifetimes` lint, which will
result in substantially more fixes and be in other PR(s). I also
explicitly allow `non_local_definitions` since it is [not working
correctly, but will be
fixed](https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/131643).

A few things were manually fixed: for example, some places had an
explicitly defined `div_ceil` function that was used, which is no longer
needed since this function is stable on unsigned integers. Also, empty
lines in doc comments were handled individually.

## Testing

I ran `cargo clippy --workspace --all-targets --all-features --fix
--allow-staged` with the `clippy::needless_lifetimes` lint marked as
`allow` in `Cargo.toml` to avoid fixing that too. It now passes with all
but the listed lint.
2024-10-14 20:52:35 +00:00
Rob Parrett
9dd6f42b32
Alternative fix for mesh2d_manual example (#15883)
# Objective

Fixes #15847

Alternative to #15862. Would appreciate a rendering person signaling
preference for one or the other.

## Solution

Partially revert the changes made to this example in #15524.

Add comment explaining that the non-usage of the built-in color vertex
attribute is intentional.

## Testing

`cargo run --example mesh2d_manual`
2024-10-14 01:02:23 +00:00
Benjamin Brienen
93fc2d12cf
Remove incorrect equality comparisons for asset load error types (#15890)
# Objective

The type `AssetLoadError` has `PartialEq` and `Eq` impls, which is
problematic due to the fact that the `AssetLoaderError` and
`AddAsyncError` variants lie in their impls: they will return `true` for
any `Box<dyn Error>` with the same `TypeId`, even if the actual value is
different. This can lead to subtle bugs if a user relies on the equality
comparison to ensure that two values are equal.

The same is true for `DependencyLoadState`,
`RecursiveDependencyLoadState`.

More generally, it is an anti-pattern for large error types involving
dynamic dispatch, such as `AssetLoadError`, to have equality
comparisons. Directly comparing two errors for equality is usually not
desired -- if some logic needs to branch based on the value of an error,
it is usually more correct to check for specific variants and inspect
their fields.

As far as I can tell, the only reason these errors have equality
comparisons is because the `LoadState` enum wraps `AssetLoadError` for
its `Failed` variant. This equality comparison is only used to check for
`== LoadState::Loaded`, which we can easily replace with an `is_loaded`
method.

## Solution

Remove the `{Partial}Eq` impls from `LoadState`, which also allows us to
remove it from the error types.

## Migration Guide

The types `bevy_asset::AssetLoadError` and `bevy_asset::LoadState` no
longer support equality comparisons. If you need to check for an asset's
load state, consider checking for a specific variant using
`LoadState::is_loaded` or the `matches!` macro. Similarly, consider
using the `matches!` macro to check for specific variants of the
`AssetLoadError` type if you need to inspect the value of an asset load
error in your code.

`DependencyLoadState` and `RecursiveDependencyLoadState` are not
released yet, so no migration needed,

---------

Co-authored-by: Joseph <21144246+JoJoJet@users.noreply.github.com>
2024-10-14 01:00:45 +00:00
Pablo Reinhardt
d96a9d15f6
Migrate from Query::single and friends to Single (#15872)
# Objective

- closes #15866

## Solution

- Simply migrate where possible.

## Testing

- Expect that CI will do most of the work. Examples is another way of
testing this, as most of the work is in that area.
---

## Notes
For now, this PR doesn't migrate `QueryState::single` and friends as for
now, this look like another issue. So for example, QueryBuilders that
used single or `World::query` that used single wasn't migrated. If there
is a easy way to migrate those, please let me know.

Most of the uses of `Query::single` were removed, the only other uses
that I found was related to tests of said methods, so will probably be
removed when we remove `Query::single`.
2024-10-13 20:32:06 +00:00
NiseVoid
bdd0af6bfb
Deprecate SpatialBundle (#15830)
# Objective

- Required components replace bundles, but `SpatialBundle` is yet to be
deprecated

## Solution

- Deprecate `SpatialBundle`
- Insert `Transform` and `Visibility` instead in examples using it
- In `spawn` or `insert` inserting a default `Transform` or `Visibility`
with component already requiring either, remove those components from
the tuple

## Testing

- Did you test these changes? If so, how?
Yes, I ran the examples I changed and tests
- Are there any parts that need more testing?
The `gamepad_viewer` and and `custom_shader_instancing` examples don't
work as intended due to entirely unrelated code, didn't check main.
- How can other people (reviewers) test your changes? Is there anything
specific they need to know?
Run examples, or just check that all spawned values are identical
- If relevant, what platforms did you test these changes on, and are
there any important ones you can't test?
Linux, wayland trough x11 (cause that's the default feature)

---

## Migration Guide

`SpatialBundle` is now deprecated, insert `Transform` and `Visibility`
instead which will automatically insert all other components that were
in the bundle. If you do not specify these values and any other
components in your `spawn`/`insert` call already requires either of
these components you can leave that one out.

before:
```rust
commands.spawn(SpatialBundle::default());
```

after:
```rust
commands.spawn((Transform::default(), Visibility::default());
```
2024-10-13 17:28:22 +00:00
Joona Aalto
0e30b68b20
Add mesh picking backend and MeshRayCast system parameter (#15800)
# Objective

Closes #15545.

`bevy_picking` supports UI and sprite picking, but not mesh picking.
Being able to pick meshes would be extremely useful for various games,
tools, and our own examples, as well as scene editors and inspectors.
So, we need a mesh picking backend!

Luckily,
[`bevy_mod_picking`](https://github.com/aevyrie/bevy_mod_picking) (which
`bevy_picking` is based on) by @aevyrie already has a [backend for
it](74f0c3c0fb/backends/bevy_picking_raycast/src/lib.rs)
using [`bevy_mod_raycast`](https://github.com/aevyrie/bevy_mod_raycast).
As a side product of adding mesh picking, we also get support for
performing ray casts on meshes!

## Solution

Upstream a large chunk of the immediate-mode ray casting functionality
from `bevy_mod_raycast`, and add a mesh picking backend based on
`bevy_mod_picking`. Huge thanks to @aevyrie who did all the hard work on
these incredible crates!

All meshes are pickable by default. Picking can be disabled for
individual entities by adding `PickingBehavior::IGNORE`, like normal.
Or, if you want mesh picking to be entirely opt-in, you can set
`MeshPickingBackendSettings::require_markers` to `true` and add a
`RayCastPickable` component to the desired camera and target entities.

You can also use the new `MeshRayCast` system parameter to cast rays
into the world manually:

```rust
fn ray_cast_system(mut ray_cast: MeshRayCast, foo_query: Query<(), With<Foo>>) {
    let ray = Ray3d::new(Vec3::ZERO, Dir3::X);

    // Only ray cast against entities with the `Foo` component.
    let filter = |entity| foo_query.contains(entity);

    // Never early-exit. Note that you can change behavior per-entity.
    let early_exit_test = |_entity| false;

    // Ignore the visibility of entities. This allows ray casting hidden entities.
    let visibility = RayCastVisibility::Any;

    let settings = RayCastSettings::default()
        .with_filter(&filter)
        .with_early_exit_test(&early_exit_test)
        .with_visibility(visibility);

    // Cast the ray with the settings, returning a list of intersections.
    let hits = ray_cast.cast_ray(ray, &settings);
}
```

This is largely a direct port, but I did make several changes to match
our APIs better, remove things we don't need or that I think are
unnecessary, and do some general improvements to code quality and
documentation.

### Changes Relative to `bevy_mod_raycast` and `bevy_mod_picking`

- Every `Raycast` and "raycast" has been renamed to `RayCast` and "ray
cast" (similar reasoning as the "Naming" section in #15724)
- `Raycast` system param has been renamed to `MeshRayCast` to avoid
naming conflicts and to be explicit that it is not for colliders
- `RaycastBackend` has been renamed to `MeshPickingBackend`
- `RayCastVisibility` variants are now `Any`, `Visible`, and
`VisibleInView` instead of `Ignore`, `MustBeVisible`, and
`MustBeVisibleAndInView`
- `NoBackfaceCulling` has been renamed to `RayCastBackfaces`, to avoid
implying that it affects the rendering of backfaces for meshes (it
doesn't)
- `SimplifiedMesh` and `RayCastBackfaces` live near other ray casting
API types, not in their own 10 LoC module
- All intersection logic and types are in the same `intersections`
module, not split across several modules
- Some intersection types have been renamed to be clearer and more
consistent
	- `IntersectionData` -> `RayMeshHit` 
	- `RayHit` -> `RayTriangleHit`
- General documentation and code quality improvements

### Removed / Not Ported

- Removed unused ray helpers and types, like `PrimitiveIntersection`
- Removed getters on intersection types, and made their properties
public
- There is no `2d` feature, and `Raycast::mesh_query` and
`Raycast::mesh2d_query` have been merged into `MeshRayCast::mesh_query`,
which handles both 2D and 3D
- I assume this existed previously because `Mesh2dHandle` used to be in
`bevy_sprite`. Now both the 2D and 3D mesh are in `bevy_render`.
- There is no `debug` feature or ray debug rendering
- There is no deferred API (`RaycastSource`)
- There is no `CursorRayPlugin` (the picking backend handles this)

### Note for Reviewers

In case it's helpful, the [first
commit](281638ef10)
here is essentially a one-to-one port. The rest of the commits are
primarily refactoring and cleaning things up in the ways listed earlier,
as well as changes to the module structure.

It may also be useful to compare the original [picking
backend](74f0c3c0fb/backends/bevy_picking_raycast/src/lib.rs)
and [`bevy_mod_raycast`](https://github.com/aevyrie/bevy_mod_raycast) to
this PR. Feel free to mention if there are any changes that I should
revert or something I should not include in this PR.

## Testing

I tested mesh picking and relevant components in some examples, for both
2D and 3D meshes, and added a new `mesh_picking` example. I also
~~stole~~ ported over the [ray-mesh intersection
benchmark](dbc5ef32fe/benches/ray_mesh_intersection.rs)
from `bevy_mod_raycast`.

---

## Showcase

Below is a version of the `2d_shapes` example modified to demonstrate 2D
mesh picking. This is not included in this PR.


https://github.com/user-attachments/assets/7742528c-8630-4c00-bacd-81576ac432bf

And below is the new `mesh_picking` example:


https://github.com/user-attachments/assets/b65c7a5a-fa3a-4c2d-8bbd-e7a2c772986e

There is also a really cool new `mesh_ray_cast` example ported over from
`bevy_mod_raycast`:


https://github.com/user-attachments/assets/3c5eb6c0-bd94-4fb0-bec6-8a85668a06c9

---------

Co-authored-by: Aevyrie <aevyrie@gmail.com>
Co-authored-by: Trent <2771466+tbillington@users.noreply.github.com>
Co-authored-by: François Mockers <mockersf@gmail.com>
2024-10-13 17:24:19 +00:00
ickshonpe
6f7d0e5725
split up TextStyle (#15857)
# Objective

Currently text is recomputed unnecessarily on any changes to its color,
which is extremely expensive.

## Solution
Split up `TextStyle` into two separate components `TextFont` and
`TextColor`.

## Testing

I added this system to `many_buttons`:
```rust
fn set_text_colors_changed(mut colors: Query<&mut TextColor>) {
    for mut text_color in colors.iter_mut() {
        text_color.set_changed();
    }
}
```

reports ~4fps on main, ~50fps with this PR.

## Migration Guide
`TextStyle` has been renamed to `TextFont` and its `color` field has
been moved to a separate component named `TextColor` which newtypes
`Color`.
2024-10-13 17:06:22 +00:00
Piper
d82d6ff4e7
fix spatial audio examples (#15863)
# Objective

- Fixes #15837 

## Solution

- Change `Emitter` components to use `Stopwatch` to allow the time to be
tracked independently.

## Testing

- Changes were tested. 
- Run either the `spatial_audio_2d` or `spatial_audio_3d` example to
test

Co-authored-by: François Mockers <mockersf@gmail.com>
2024-10-13 17:05:20 +00:00
Rob Parrett
cdd71afde5
Fix panic in gamepad_viewer example when gamepad is connected (#15854)
# Objective

Fixes #15832

## Solution

It seems that this was just a transliteration mistake during #15591.

Update the correct text span index.

## Testing

I tested on macos with:

`cargo run --example gamepad_viewer`
- without gamepad connected
- with gamepad connected
- disconnecting and reconnecting gamepad while running
2024-10-11 16:40:21 +00:00
Rob Parrett
9cfb4a187f
Fix motion_blur example instructions (#15852)
# Objective

Fixes a mistake in the migration done in #15591.

## Solution

Restore a line of instructions that was accidentally dropped.

## Testing

`cargo run --example motion_blur`

Tested that instructions make sense and text updates correctly when keys
are pressed.
2024-10-11 15:35:34 +00:00
Rob Parrett
6ad6eaa873
Fix println in morph_targets example (#15851)
# Objective

This example uses `println` from a system, which we don't advise people
do. It also gives no context for the debug prints, which I assumed to be
stray debug code at first.

## Solution

Use `info!`, and add a small amount of context so the console output
looks deliberate.

## Testing

`cargo run --example morph_targets`
2024-10-11 15:35:22 +00:00
Andrew
6a39c33d49
Use oslog for ios (#13364)
# Objective

On mobile devices, it's best to use the OS's native logging due to the
difficulty of accessing the console. This is already done for Android.

This is an updated version of
https://github.com/bevyengine/bevy/pull/4462.

## Solution

This PR uses Absolucy's
[tracing-oslog](https://github.com/Absolucy/tracing-oslog) ([ZLib
license](https://github.com/Absolucy/tracing-oslog/blob/main/LICENSE.md))
for iOS in order to use Apple's `os_log`.

## Testing

I ran `examples/mobile` with the logging from `examples/app/logs.rs` on
an iOS device, I then checked the logs could be filtered in the MacOS
Console.app.

## Changelog

 - Change bevy_log to use Apple's os_log on iOS.

## Questions for Reviewers
It's worth noting that the dependency this adds hasn't had bug fixes
released in a few years, so we may want to consider one or more of:
 1. a feature flag to opt-in, and it would also allow `os_log` on MacOS
 2. merge as-is and have some (minor?) upstream bugs
 3. hold off on this PR until a suitable alternative dependency arises
 4. maintain our own implementation

## Future work

In a follow-up PR it might be good to make the `subsystem` field have a
better default value, like [this
one](https://github.com/bevyengine/bevy/blob/main/examples/mobile/bevy_mobile_example.xcodeproj/project.pbxproj#L363).
That value can be retrieved programmatically if we bind another system
API (For posterity in Swift this is `Bundle.main.bundleIdentifier`, but
the C/ObjC equivalent is likely easier to bind). This would almost
always be the correct value, while the current default is unlikely to
ever be correct.

---------

Co-authored-by: Dusty DeWeese <dustin.deweese@gmail.com>
Co-authored-by: Alice Cecile <alice.i.cecile@gmail.com>
Co-authored-by: Carter Anderson <mcanders1@gmail.com>
Co-authored-by: François Mockers <francois.mockers@vleue.com>
2024-10-11 08:58:14 +00:00
Rob Parrett
6701ad25db
Fix loading_screen example (#15845)
# Objective

Since #15641, `loading_screen` panics.

```
called `Result::unwrap()` on an `Err` value: MultipleEntities("bevy_ecs::query::state::QueryState<&mut bevy_render::view::visibility::Visibility, bevy_ecs::query::filter::With<loading_screen::LoadingScreen>>")
```

Before that PR, the camera did not have a `Visibility` component. But
`Visibility` is now a required component of `Camera`. So the query
matches multiple entities.

## Solution

Minimal change to make the example behave like it used to.

Plus a tiny drive-by cleanup to remove a redundant unwrap.

## Testing

`cargo run --example loading_screen`
2024-10-11 03:13:33 +00:00
Rob Parrett
ae0b7189bf
Fix formatting of irradiance_volumes example instructions (#15842)
# Objective

Fix minor text formatting issue introduced in #15033

Before:

<img width="1280" alt="image"
src="https://github.com/user-attachments/assets/cec4302b-a7cf-4afb-82f8-7354fa5fea00">

After:

<img width="1280" alt="image"
src="https://github.com/user-attachments/assets/ab62e58b-e563-4250-842f-90bed3a153a1">

## Solution

Add explicit linebreaks and `\` to ignore indentation on following
lines.

## Testing

`cargo run --example irradiance_volumes`
2024-10-11 03:12:33 +00:00
charlotte
dd812b3e49
Type safe retained render world (#15756)
# Objective

In the Render World, there are a number of collections that are derived
from Main World entities and are used to drive rendering. The most
notable are:
- `VisibleEntities`, which is generated in the `check_visibility` system
and contains visible entities for a view.
- `ExtractedInstances`, which maps entity ids to asset ids.

In the old model, these collections were trivially kept in sync -- any
extracted phase item could look itself up because the render entity id
was guaranteed to always match the corresponding main world id.

After #15320, this became much more complicated, and was leading to a
number of subtle bugs in the Render World. The main rendering systems,
i.e. `queue_material_meshes` and `queue_material2d_meshes`, follow a
similar pattern:

```rust
for visible_entity in visible_entities.iter::<With<Mesh2d>>() {
    let Some(mesh_instance) = render_mesh_instances.get_mut(visible_entity) else {
        continue;
    };
            
    // Look some more stuff up and specialize the pipeline...
            
    let bin_key = Opaque2dBinKey {
        pipeline: pipeline_id,
        draw_function: draw_opaque_2d,
        asset_id: mesh_instance.mesh_asset_id.into(),
        material_bind_group_id: material_2d.get_bind_group_id().0,
    };
    opaque_phase.add(
        bin_key,
        *visible_entity,
        BinnedRenderPhaseType::mesh(mesh_instance.automatic_batching),
    );
}
```

In this case, `visible_entities` and `render_mesh_instances` are both
collections that are created and keyed by Main World entity ids, and so
this lookup happens to work by coincidence. However, there is a major
unintentional bug here: namely, because `visible_entities` is a
collection of Main World ids, the phase item being queued is created
with a Main World id rather than its correct Render World id.

This happens to not break mesh rendering because the render commands
used for drawing meshes do not access the `ItemQuery` parameter, but
demonstrates the confusion that is now possible: our UI phase items are
correctly being queued with Render World ids while our meshes aren't.

Additionally, this makes it very easy and error prone to use the wrong
entity id to look up things like assets. For example, if instead we
ignored visibility checks and queued our meshes via a query, we'd have
to be extra careful to use `&MainEntity` instead of the natural
`Entity`.

## Solution

Make all collections that are derived from Main World data use
`MainEntity` as their key, to ensure type safety and avoid accidentally
looking up data with the wrong entity id:

```rust
pub type MainEntityHashMap<V> = hashbrown::HashMap<MainEntity, V, EntityHash>;
```

Additionally, we make all `PhaseItem` be able to provide both their Main
and Render World ids, to allow render phase implementors maximum
flexibility as to what id should be used to look up data.

You can think of this like tracking at the type level whether something
in the Render World should use it's "primary key", i.e. entity id, or
needs to use a foreign key, i.e. `MainEntity`.

## Testing

##### TODO:

This will require extensive testing to make sure things didn't break!
Additionally, some extraction logic has become more complicated and
needs to be checked for regressions.

## Migration Guide

With the advent of the retained render world, collections that contain
references to `Entity` that are extracted into the render world have
been changed to contain `MainEntity` in order to prevent errors where a
render world entity id is used to look up an item by accident. Custom
rendering code may need to be changed to query for `&MainEntity` in
order to look up the correct item from such a collection. Additionally,
users who implement their own extraction logic for collections of main
world entity should strongly consider extracting into a different
collection that uses `MainEntity` as a key.

Additionally, render phases now require specifying both the `Entity` and
`MainEntity` for a given `PhaseItem`. Custom render phases should ensure
`MainEntity` is available when queuing a phase item.
2024-10-10 18:47:04 +00:00
Rob Parrett
7fa77a383f
Fix auto_exposure example (#15827)
# Objective

Fixes #15824

## Solution

Looks like this was just a goof in migrating the example itself.

Added back in the rotation component of the transform that got dropped.

## Testing

`cargo run --example auto_exposure`
2024-10-10 17:24:26 +00:00
ZoOL
0944499f90
Update multi_asset_sync.rs (#15816)
Typo
2024-10-10 14:14:06 +00:00
Joona Aalto
bd0c74644f
Fix sprite and picking examples (#15803)
# Objective

Looks like #15489 broke some examples :) And there are some other issues
as well.

Gabe's brother Gabe is tiny in the `sprite_animation` example:


![kuva](https://github.com/user-attachments/assets/810ce110-ecd8-4ca5-94c8-a5655f381131)

Gabe is not running in the `sprite_picking` example, and (unrelated) is
also very blurry: (note that the screenshot is a bit zoomed in)


![kuva](https://github.com/user-attachments/assets/cb115a71-e3fe-41ed-817c-d5215c44adb5)

Unrelated to sprites, the text in the `simple_picking` example is way
too dark when hovered:


![kuva](https://github.com/user-attachments/assets/f0f9e331-8d03-44ea-becd-bf22ad68ea71)

## Solution

Both Gabes are now the correct size:


![kuva](https://github.com/user-attachments/assets/08eb936a-0341-471e-90f6-2e7067871e5b)

Gabe is crisp and running:


![kuva](https://github.com/user-attachments/assets/8fa158e8-2caa-4339-bbcd-2c14b7cfc04f)

The text has better contrast:


![kuva](https://github.com/user-attachments/assets/2af09523-0bdc-45a7-9149-50aa9c754957)
2024-10-09 23:51:28 +00:00
Tim
3da0ef048e
Remove the Component trait implementation from Handle (#15796)
# Objective

- Closes #15716
- Closes #15718

## Solution

- Replace `Handle<MeshletMesh>` with a new `MeshletMesh3d` component
- As expected there were some random things that needed fixing:
- A couple tests were storing handles just to prevent them from being
dropped I believe, which seems to have been unnecessary in some.
- The `SpriteBundle` still had a `Handle<Image>` field. I've removed
this.
- Tests in `bevy_sprite` incorrectly added a `Handle<Image>` field
outside of the `Sprite` component.
- A few examples were still inserting `Handle`s, switched those to their
corresponding wrappers.
- 2 examples that were still querying for `Handle<Image>` were changed
to query `Sprite`

## Testing

- I've verified that the changed example work now

## Migration Guide

`Handle` can no longer be used as a `Component`. All existing Bevy types
using this pattern have been wrapped in their own semantically
meaningful type. You should do the same for any custom `Handle`
components your project needs.

The `Handle<MeshletMesh>` component is now `MeshletMesh3d`.

The `WithMeshletMesh` type alias has been removed. Use
`With<MeshletMesh3d>` instead.
2024-10-09 21:10:01 +00:00
UkoeHB
a6be9b4ccd
Rename TextBlock to TextLayout (#15797)
# Objective

- Improve clarity when spawning a text block. See [this
discussion](https://github.com/bevyengine/bevy/pull/15591/#discussion_r1787083571).

## Solution

- Rename `TextBlock` to `TextLayout`.
2024-10-09 20:58:27 +00:00
UkoeHB
c2c19e5ae4
Text rework (#15591)
**Ready for review. Examples migration progress: 100%.**

# Objective

- Implement https://github.com/bevyengine/bevy/discussions/15014

## Solution

This implements [cart's
proposal](https://github.com/bevyengine/bevy/discussions/15014#discussioncomment-10574459)
faithfully except for one change. I separated `TextSpan` from
`TextSpan2d` because `TextSpan` needs to require the `GhostNode`
component, which is a `bevy_ui` component only usable by UI.

Extra changes:
- Added `EntityCommands::commands_mut` that returns a mutable reference.
This is a blocker for extension methods that return something other than
`self`. Note that `sickle_ui`'s `UiBuilder::commands` returns a mutable
reference for this reason.

## Testing

- [x] Text examples all work.

---

## Showcase

TODO: showcase-worthy

## Migration Guide

TODO: very breaking

### Accessing text spans by index

Text sections are now text sections on different entities in a
hierarchy, Use the new `TextReader` and `TextWriter` system parameters
to access spans by index.

Before:
```rust
fn refresh_text(mut query: Query<&mut Text, With<TimeText>>, time: Res<Time>) {
    let text = query.single_mut();
    text.sections[1].value = format_time(time.elapsed());
}
```

After:
```rust
fn refresh_text(
    query: Query<Entity, With<TimeText>>,
    mut writer: UiTextWriter,
    time: Res<Time>
) {
    let entity = query.single();
    *writer.text(entity, 1) = format_time(time.elapsed());
}
```

### Iterating text spans

Text spans are now entities in a hierarchy, so the new `UiTextReader`
and `UiTextWriter` system parameters provide ways to iterate that
hierarchy. The `UiTextReader::iter` method will give you a normal
iterator over spans, and `UiTextWriter::for_each` lets you visit each of
the spans.

---------

Co-authored-by: ickshonpe <david.curthoys@googlemail.com>
Co-authored-by: Carter Anderson <mcanders1@gmail.com>
2024-10-09 18:35:36 +00:00
Emerson Coskey
7d40e3ec87
Migrate bevy_sprite to required components (#15489)
# Objective

Continue migration of bevy APIs to required components, following
guidance of https://hackmd.io/@bevy/required_components/

## Solution

- Make `Sprite` require `Transform` and `Visibility` and
`SyncToRenderWorld`
- move image and texture atlas handles into `Sprite`
- deprecate `SpriteBundle`
- remove engine uses of `SpriteBundle`

## Testing

ran cargo tests on bevy_sprite and tested several sprite examples.

---

## Migration Guide

Replace all uses of `SpriteBundle` with `Sprite`. There are several new
convenience constructors: `Sprite::from_image`,
`Sprite::from_atlas_image`, `Sprite::from_color`.

WARNING: use of `Handle<Image>` and `TextureAtlas` as components on
sprite entities will NO LONGER WORK. Use the fields on `Sprite` instead.
I would have removed the `Component` impls from `TextureAtlas` and
`Handle<Image>` except it is still used within ui. We should fix this
moving forward with the migration.
2024-10-09 16:17:26 +00:00
Christian Hughes
219b5930f1
Rename App/World::observe to add_observer, EntityWorldMut::observe_entity to observe. (#15754)
# Objective

- Closes #15752

Calling the functions `App::observe` and `World::observe` doesn't make
sense because you're not "observing" the `App` or `World`, you're adding
an observer that listens for an event that occurs *within* the `World`.
We should rename them to better fit this.

## Solution

Renames:
- `App::observe` -> `App::add_observer`
- `World::observe` -> `World::add_observer`
- `Commands::observe` -> `Commands::add_observer`
- `EntityWorldMut::observe_entity` -> `EntityWorldMut::observe`

(Note this isn't a breaking change as the original rename was introduced
earlier this cycle.)

## Testing

Reusing current tests.
2024-10-09 15:39:29 +00:00
Joona Aalto
a2b53d46e7
Fix meshlet materials (#15755)
# Objective

After #15524, there are these bunny-shaped holes in rendering in the
meshlet example!


![broken](https://github.com/user-attachments/assets/9e9f20ec-b820-44df-b961-68a1dee44002)

This is because (1) they're using a raw asset handle instead of
`MeshMaterial3d`, and (2) the system that extracts mesh materials into
the render world has an unnecessary `With<Mesh3d>` filter, which makes
it not account for meshlets.

## Solution

Remove the redundant filter and use `MeshMaterial3d`. The bunnies got
some paint!


![fixed](https://github.com/user-attachments/assets/adb42556-fd4b-4000-8ca8-1356250dd532)
2024-10-09 15:39:10 +00:00
Rob Parrett
6f8f70b56d
Remove eprintln from 2d_screen_shake example (#15786)
# Objective

Remove debug print

## Solution

Remove it

## Testing

`cargo run --example 2d_screen_shake`
2024-10-09 14:15:24 +00:00
Jiří Švejda
3f683c728a
Fix missing Msaa::Off in scrolling_fog example (#15787)
# Objective

- The `scrolling_fog` example has a camera with the
`TemporalAntiAliasing` component, but it's missing the `Msaa::Off`
component, which leads to this warning being printed on current `main`:

```
WARN bevy_core_pipeline::taa: Temporal anti-aliasing requires MSAA to be disabled
```

## Solution

- This PR adds the `Msaa::Off` component to the example to explicitly
disable MSAA in favor of TAA.
2024-10-09 14:15:24 +00:00
Joona Aalto
bc352561c9
Migrate reflection probes to required components (#15737)
# Objective

Getting closer to the end! Another part of the required components
migration: reflection probes.

## Solution

As per the [proposal added by
Cart](https://hackmd.io/@bevy/required_components/%2FNmpIh0tGSiayGlswbfcEzw)
(Proposal 2), make `LightProbe` require `Transform` and `Visibility`,
and deprecate `ReflectionProbeBundle`.

Note that this proposal wasn't officially blessed yet, but it is the
only existing one that really works, so I implemented it here for
consideration.

## Testing

I ran the reflection probe example, and it appears to work.

---

## Migration Guide

`ReflectionProbeBundle` has been deprecated in favor of inserting the
`LightProbe` and `EnvironmentMapLight` components directly. Inserting
them will now automatically insert `Transform` and `Visibility`
components.

---------

Co-authored-by: Tim Blackbird <justthecooldude@gmail.com>
Co-authored-by: Alice Cecile <alice.i.cecile@gmail.com>
2024-10-08 23:59:27 +00:00
Tim
700123ec64
Replace Handle<AnimationGraph> component with a wrapper (#15742)
# Objective

- Closes #15717 

## Solution

- Wrap the handle in a new wrapper component: `AnimationGraphHandle`.

## Testing

Searched for all instances of `AnimationGraph` in the examples and
updated and tested those

## Migration Guide

`Handle<AnimationGraph>` is no longer a component. Instead, use the
`AnimationGraphHandle` component which contains a
`Handle<AnimationGraph>`.
2024-10-08 22:41:24 +00:00
François Mockers
26813d9732
easing_functions example: draw point closer to its curve (#15744)
# Objective

- After #15711 which added a column to the example, the point of a curve
was too close to the next curve

## Solution

- Make it closer to its own
2024-10-08 22:40:40 +00:00
Kristoffer Søholm
2d1b4939d2
Synchronize removed components with the render world (#15582)
# Objective

Fixes #15560
Fixes (most of) #15570

Currently a lot of examples (and presumably some user code) depend on
toggling certain render features by adding/removing a single component
to an entity, e.g. `SpotLight` to toggle a light. Because of the
retained render world this no longer works: Extract will add any new
components, but when it is removed the entity persists unchanged in the
render world.

## Solution

Add `SyncComponentPlugin<C: Component>` that registers
`SyncToRenderWorld` as a required component for `C`, and adds a
component hook that will clear all components from the render world
entity when `C` is removed. We add this plugin to
`ExtractComponentPlugin` which fixes most instances of the problem. For
custom extraction logic we can manually add `SyncComponentPlugin` for
that component.

We also rename `WorldSyncPlugin` to `SyncWorldPlugin` so we start a
naming convention like all the `Extract` plugins.

In this PR I also fixed a bunch of breakage related to the retained
render world, stemming from old code that assumed that `Entity` would be
the same in both worlds.

I found that using the `RenderEntity` wrapper instead of `Entity` in
data structures when referring to render world entities makes intent
much clearer, so I propose we make this an official pattern.

## Testing

Run examples like

```
cargo run --features pbr_multi_layer_material_textures --example clearcoat
cargo run --example volumetric_fog
```

and see that they work, and that toggles work correctly. But really we
should test every single example, as we might not even have caught all
the breakage yet.

---

## Migration Guide

The retained render world notes should be updated to explain this edge
case and `SyncComponentPlugin`

---------

Co-authored-by: Alice Cecile <alice.i.cecile@gmail.com>
Co-authored-by: Trashtalk217 <trashtalk217@gmail.com>
2024-10-08 22:23:17 +00:00
mrgzi
e995f71a9b
Improve fps_overlay example (#15739)
This PR improves the `fps_overlay` example by adding:

1. The ability to increase the overlay font size (previously, only
decreasing the size was supported).
2. A toggle for overlay color between red and green (previously, it only
changed from green to red without toggling back).
2024-10-08 22:17:55 +00:00
Matty
e563f86a1d
Simplified easing curves (#15711)
# Objective

Simplify the API surrounding easing curves. Broaden the base of types
that support easing.

## Solution

There is now a single library function, `easing_curve`, which constructs
a unit-parametrized easing curve between two values based on an
`EaseFunction`:
```rust
/// Given a `start` and `end` value, create a curve parametrized over [the unit interval]
/// that connects them, using the given [ease function] to determine the form of the
/// curve in between.
///
/// [the unit interval]: Interval::UNIT
/// [ease function]: EaseFunction
pub fn easing_curve<T: Ease>(start: T, end: T, ease_fn: EaseFunction) -> EasingCurve<T> { //... }
```

As this shows, the type of the output curve is generic only in `T`. In
particular, as long as `T` is `Reflect` (and `FromReflect` etc. — i.e.,
a standard "well-behaved" reflectable type), `EasingCurve<T>` is also
`Reflect`, and there is no special field handling nonsense. Therefore,
`EasingCurve` is the kind of thing that would be able to be easily
changed in an editor. This is made possible by storing the actual
`EaseFunction` on `EasingCurve<T>` instead of indirecting through some
kind of function type (which generally leads to issues with reflection).

The types that can be eased are those that implement a trait `Ease`:
```rust
/// A type whose values can be eased between.
///
/// This requires the construction of an interpolation curve that actually extends
/// beyond the curve segment that connects two values, because an easing curve may
/// extrapolate before the starting value and after the ending value. This is
/// especially common in easing functions that mimic elastic or springlike behavior.
pub trait Ease: Sized {
    /// Given `start` and `end` values, produce a curve with [unlimited domain]
    /// that:
    /// - takes a value equivalent to `start` at `t = 0`
    /// - takes a value equivalent to `end` at `t = 1`
    /// - has constant speed everywhere, including outside of `[0, 1]`
    ///
    /// [unlimited domain]: Interval::EVERYWHERE
    fn interpolating_curve_unbounded(start: &Self, end: &Self) -> impl Curve<Self>;
}
```

(I know, I know, yet *another* interpolation trait. See 'Future
direction'.)

The other existing easing functions from the previous version of this
module have also become new members of `EaseFunction`: `Linear`,
`Steps`, and `Elastic` (which maybe needs a different name). The latter
two are parametrized.

## Testing

Tested using the `easing_functions` example. I also axed the
`cubic_curve` example which was of questionable value and replaced it
with `eased_motion`, which uses this API in the context of animation:


https://github.com/user-attachments/assets/3c802992-6b9b-4b56-aeb1-a47501c29ce2


---

## Future direction

Morally speaking, `Ease` is incredibly similar to `StableInterpolate`.
Probably, we should just merge `StableInterpolate` into `Ease`, and then
make `SmoothNudge` an automatic extension trait of `Ease`. The reason I
didn't do that is that `StableInterpolate` is not implemented for
`VectorSpace` because of concerns about the `Color` types, and I wanted
to avoid controversy. I think that may be a good idea though.

As Alice mentioned before, we should also probably get rid of the
`interpolation` dependency.

The parametrized `Elastic` variant probably also needs some additional
work (e.g. renaming, in/out/in-out variants, etc.) if we want to keep
it.
2024-10-08 19:45:13 +00:00
Tim
9aef71bd9b
Replace Handle<M: UiMaterial> component with UiMaterialHandle wrapper (#15740)
# Objective

- Closes #15720

## Solution

Wrap the handle in a new wrapper component: `UiMaterialHandle`
It's not possible to match the naming convention of `MeshMaterial3d/2d`
here with the trait already being called `UiMaterial`

Should we consider renaming to `Material3d/2dHandle` and `Mesh3d/2d` to
`Mesh3d/2dHandle`?

- This shouldn't have any merge conflicts with #15591

## Testing

Tested the `ui_material` example

## Migration Guide

Let's defer the migration guide to the required component port. I just
want to yeet the `Component` impl on `Handle` in the meantime :)
2024-10-08 19:07:58 +00:00
JMS55
aa626e4f0b
Per-meshlet compressed vertex data (#15643)
# Objective
- Prepare for streaming by storing vertex data per-meshlet, rather than
per-mesh (this means duplicating vertices per-meshlet)
- Compress vertex data to reduce the cost of this

## Solution
The important parts are in from_mesh.rs, the changes to the Meshlet type
in asset.rs, and the changes in meshlet_bindings.wgsl. Everything else
is pretty secondary/boilerplate/straightforward changes.

- Positions are quantized in centimeters with a user-provided power of 2
factor (ideally auto-determined, but that's a TODO for the future),
encoded as an offset relative to the minimum value within the meshlet,
and then stored as a packed list of bits using the minimum number of
bits needed for each vertex position channel for that meshlet
- E.g. quantize positions (lossly, throws away precision that's not
needed leading to using less bits in the bitstream encoding)
- Get the min/max quantized value of each X/Y/Z channel of the quantized
positions within a meshlet
- Encode values relative to the min value of the meshlet. E.g. convert
from [min, max] to [0, max - min]
- The new max value in the meshlet is (max - min), which only takes N
bits, so we only need N bits to store each channel within the meshlet
(lossless)
- We can store the min value and that it takes N bits per channel in the
meshlet metadata, and reconstruct the position from the bitstream
- Normals are octahedral encoded and than snorm2x16 packed and stored as
a single u32.
- Would be better to implement the precise variant of octhedral encoding
for extra precision (no extra decode cost), but decided to keep it
simple for now and leave that as a followup
- Tried doing a quantizing and bitstream encoding scheme like I did for
positions, but struggled to get it smaller. Decided to go with this for
simplicity for now
- UVs are uncompressed and take a full 64bits per vertex which is
expensive
  - In the future this should be improved
- Tangents, as of the previous PR, are not explicitly stored and are
instead derived from screen space gradients
- While I'm here, split up MeshletMeshSaverLoader into two separate
types

Other future changes include implementing a smaller encoding of triangle
data (3 u8 indices = 24 bits per triangle currently), and more
disk-oriented compression schemes.

References:
* "A Deep Dive into UE5's Nanite Virtualized Geometry"
https://advances.realtimerendering.com/s2021/Karis_Nanite_SIGGRAPH_Advances_2021_final.pdf#page=128
(also available on youtube)
* "Towards Practical Meshlet Compression"
https://arxiv.org/pdf/2404.06359
* "Vertex quantization in Omniforce Game Engine"
https://daniilvinn.github.io/2024/05/04/omniforce-vertex-quantization.html

## Testing

- Did you test these changes? If so, how?
- Converted the stanford bunny, and rendered it with a debug material
showing normals, and confirmed that it's identical to what's on main.
EDIT: See additional testing in the comments below.
- Are there any parts that need more testing?
- Could use some more size comparisons on various meshes, and testing
different quantization factors. Not sure if 4 is a good default. EDIT:
See additional testing in the comments below.
- Also did not test runtime performance of the shaders. EDIT: See
additional testing in the comments below.
- How can other people (reviewers) test your changes? Is there anything
specific they need to know?
- Use my unholy script, replacing the meshlet example
https://paste.rs/7xQHk.rs (must make MeshletMesh fields pub instead of
pub crate, must add lz4_flex as a dev-dependency) (must compile with
meshlet and meshlet_processor features, mesh must have only positions,
normals, and UVs, no vertex colors or tangents)

---

## Migration Guide
- TBD by JMS55 at the end of the release
2024-10-08 18:42:55 +00:00
ickshonpe
99b9a2fcd7
box shadow (#15204)
# Objective

UI box shadow support

Adds a new component `BoxShadow`:

```rust
pub struct BoxShadow {
    /// The shadow's color
    pub color: Color,
    /// Horizontal offset
    pub x_offset: Val,
    /// Vertical offset
    pub y_offset: Val,
    /// Horizontal difference in size from the occluding uninode
    pub spread_radius: Val,
    /// Blurriness of the shadow
    pub blur_radius: Val,
}
```

To use `BoxShadow`, add the component to any Bevy UI node and a shadow
will be drawn beneath that node.
Also adds a resource `BoxShadowSamples` that can be used to adjust the
shadow quality.

#### Notes
* I'm not super happy with the field names. Maybe we need a `struct Size
{ width: Val, height: Val }` type or something.
* The shader isn't very optimised but I don't see that it's too
important for now as the number of shadows being rendered is not going
to be massive most of the time. I think it's more important to get the
API and geometry correct with this PR.
* I didn't implement an inset property, it's not essential and can
easily be added in a follow up.
* Shadows are only rendered for uinodes, not for images or text.
* Batching isn't supported, it would need out-of-the-scope-of-this-pr
changes to the way the UI handles z-ordering for it to be effective.

# Showcase

```cargo run --example box_shadow -- --samples 4```

<img width="391" alt="br" src="https://github.com/user-attachments/assets/4e8add96-dc93-46e0-9e35-d995eb0943ad">

```cargo run --example box_shadow -- --samples 10```

<img width="391" alt="s10"
src="https://github.com/user-attachments/assets/ecb384c9-4012-4cd6-9dea-5180904bf28e">
2024-10-08 16:26:17 +00:00
Liam Gallagher
f1fbb668f9
Watching versions of bevy/get and bevy/list with HTTP SSE (#15608)
## Objective

Add a way to stream BRP requests when the data changes.

## Solution

#### BRP Side (reusable for other transports)

Add a new method handler type that returns a optional value. This
handler is run in update and if a value is returned it will be sent on
the message channel. Custom watching handlers can be added with
`RemotePlugin::with_watching_method`.

#### HTTP Side

If a request comes in with `+watch` in the method, it will respond with
`text/event-stream` rather than a single response.

## Testing

I tested with the podman HTTP client. This client has good support for
SSE's if you want to test it too.

## Parts I want some opinions on

- For separating watching methods I chose to add a `+watch` suffix to
the end kind of like `content-type` headers. A get would be
`bevy/get+watch`.
- Should watching methods send an initial response with everything or
only respond when a change happens? Currently the later is what happens.

## Future work

- The `bevy/query` method would also benefit from this but that
condition will be quite complex so I will leave that to later.

---------

Co-authored-by: Zachary Harrold <zac@harrold.com.au>
2024-10-08 16:21:46 +00:00
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
m-edlund
8d53c0af91
improve sub view example with dynamic viewports (#15681)
# Objective

- Adds better comments and includes an example where the aspect ratio
between `size` and `full_size` differ
- Fixes #15576

## Solution

- Viewports are dynamically scaled to window size

## Testing

- Tested with moving the window around and by manually setting the
window scaling factor
- Just to make sure nothing else is going on, someone on macOS should
also test this

## Showcase

Since calculating padding from window size is a hassle, the example now
looks a bit more squished together:


![image](https://github.com/user-attachments/assets/68609cf2-5a67-49bd-8e0b-910bfd17f4d8)
2024-10-08 16:07:31 +00:00
Shane Celis
320d53c1d2
Vary transforms for custom_skinned_mesh example (#15710)
# Objective

Enhance the [custom skinned mesh
example](https://bevyengine.org/examples/animation/custom-skinned-mesh/)
to show some variety and clarify what the transform does to the mesh.

## Solution


https://github.com/user-attachments/assets/c919db74-6e77-4f33-ba43-0f40a88042b3

Add variety and clarity with the following changes:

- vary transform changes,
- use a UV texture,
- and show transform changes via gizmos.

(Maybe it'd be worth turning on wireframe rendering to show what happens
to the mesh. I think it'd be nice visually but might make the code a
little noisy.)

## Testing

I exercised it on my x86 macOS computer. It'd be good to have it
validated on Windows, Linux, and WASM.

---

## Showcase

- Custom skinned mesh example varies the transforms changes and uses a
UV test texture.
2024-10-08 12:37:46 +00:00
IceSentry
4bf647ff3b
Add Order Independent Transparency (#14876)
# Objective

- Alpha blending can easily fail in many situations and requires sorting
on the cpu

## Solution

- Implement order independent transparency (OIT) as an alternative to
alpha blending
- The implementation uses 2 passes
- The first pass records all the fragments colors and position to a
buffer that is the size of N layers * the render target resolution.
- The second pass sorts the fragments, blends them and draws them to the
screen. It also currently does manual depth testing because early-z
fails in too many cases in the first pass.

## Testing

- We've been using this implementation at foresight in production for
many months now and we haven't had any issues related to OIT.

---

## Showcase


![image](https://github.com/user-attachments/assets/157f3e32-adaf-4782-b25b-c10313b9bc43)

![image](https://github.com/user-attachments/assets/bef23258-0c22-4b67-a0b8-48a9f571c44f)

## Future work

- Add an example showing how to use OIT for a custom material
- Next step would be to implement a per-pixel linked list to reduce
memory use
- I'd also like to investigate using a BinnedRenderPhase instead of a
SortedRenderPhase. If it works, it would make the transparent pass
significantly faster.

---------

Co-authored-by: Kristoffer Søholm <k.soeholm@gmail.com>
Co-authored-by: JMS55 <47158642+JMS55@users.noreply.github.com>
Co-authored-by: Charlotte McElwain <charlotte.c.mcelwain@gmail.com>
2024-10-07 23:50:28 +00:00
Tim
e7b83acadc
Fix shader_prepass example (#15719)
Simple fix for another missed piece in the port to required components
2024-10-07 23:45:20 +00:00
Tim
0c959f7700
Fix query_gltf_primitives example (#15715)
This example was missed during the port to required components for
meshes and materials.
Easy fix, I checked that it works as it did in the PR that added the
example (#13912).
2024-10-07 23:03:16 +00:00
Mohamed Osama
91bed8ce51
Screen shake example (#15567)
# Objective

Closes https://github.com/bevyengine/bevy/issues/15564

## Solution

Adds a screen shake example.

---------

Co-authored-by: Alice Cecile <alice.i.cecile@gmail.com>
2024-10-07 21:14:07 +00:00
François Mockers
1869e45c49
fix some of the ease functions from interpolation (#15706)
# Objective

- Followup to #15675
- Some of the functions are wrong, noticed in #15703: `Sine`, `Elastic`
and `Back`

## Solution

- Fix them and make them deterministic


![ease-fixed-functions](https://github.com/user-attachments/assets/8a4d5c0c-36fa-4a49-a189-5b832dc24721)
2024-10-07 19:08:32 +00:00
François Mockers
01387101df
add example for ease functions (#15703)
# Objective

- Followup to #15675 
- Add an example showcasing the functions

## Solution

- Add an example showcasing the functions
- Some of the functions from the interpolation crate are messed up,
fixed in #15706


![ease](https://github.com/user-attachments/assets/1f3b2b80-23d2-45c7-8b08-95b2e870aa02)

---------

Co-authored-by: Alice Cecile <alice.i.cecile@gmail.com>
Co-authored-by: Joona Aalto <jondolf.dev@gmail.com>
2024-10-07 18:31:43 +00:00
Tim
d454db8e58
Rename the Pickable component and fix incorrect documentation (#15707)
# Objective

- Rename `Pickable` to `PickingBehavior` to counter the easily-made
assumption that the component is required. It is optional
- Fix and clarify documentation
- The docs in `crates/bevy_ui/src/picking_backend.rs` were incorrect
about the necessity of `Pickable`
- Plus two minor code quality changes in this commit
(7c2e75f48d)

Closes #15632
2024-10-07 17:09:57 +00:00
Trashtalk217
d1bd46d45e
Deprecate get_or_spawn (#15652)
# Objective

After merging retained rendering world #15320, we now have a good way of
creating a link between worlds (*HIYAA intensifies*). This means that
`get_or_spawn` is no longer necessary for that function. Entity should
be opaque as the warning above `get_or_spawn` says. This is also part of
#15459.

I'm deprecating `get_or_spawn_batch` in a different PR in order to keep
the PR small in size.

## Solution

Deprecate `get_or_spawn` and replace it with `get_entity` in most
contexts. If it's possible to query `&RenderEntity`, then the entity is
synced and `render_entity.id()` is initialized in the render world.

## Migration Guide

If you are given an `Entity` and you want to do something with it, use
`Commands.entity(...)` or `World.entity(...)`. If instead you want to
spawn something use `Commands.spawn(...)` or `World.spawn(...)`. If you
are not sure if an entity exists, you can always use `get_entity` and
match on the `Option<...>` that is returned.

---------

Co-authored-by: Alice Cecile <alice.i.cecile@gmail.com>
2024-10-07 16:08:22 +00:00
Ida "Iyes
31409ebc61
Add Image methods for easy access to a pixel's color (#10392)
# Objective

If you want to draw / generate images from the CPU, such as:
 - to create procedurally-generated assets
- for games whose artstyle is best implemented by poking pixels directly
from the CPU, instead of using shaders

It is currently very unergonomic to do in Bevy, because you have to deal
with the raw bytes inside `image.data`, take care of the pixel format,
etc.

## Solution

This PR adds some helper methods to `Image` for pixel manipulation.
These methods allow you to use Bevy's user-friendly `Color` struct to
read and write the colors of pixels, at arbitrary coordinates (specified
as `UVec3` to support any texture dimension). They handle
encoding/decoding to the `Image`s `TextureFormat`, incl. any sRGB
conversion.

While we are at it, also add methods to help with direct access to the
raw bytes. It is now easy to compute the offset where the bytes of a
specific pixel coordinate are found, or to just get a Rust slice to
access them.

Caveat: `Color` roundtrips are obviously going to be lossy for non-float
`TextureFormat`s. Using `set_color_at` followed by `get_color_at` will
return a different value, due to the data conversions involved (such as
`f32` -> `u8` -> `f32` for the common `Rgba8UnormSrgb` texture format).
Be careful when comparing colors (such as checking for a color you wrote
before)!

Also adding a new example: `cpu_draw` (under `2d`), to showcase these
new APIs.

---

## Changelog

### Added

 - `Image` APIs for easy access to the colors of specific pixels.

---------

Co-authored-by: Pascal Hertleif <killercup@gmail.com>
Co-authored-by: François <mockersf@gmail.com>
Co-authored-by: ltdk <usr@ltdk.xyz>
2024-10-07 14:38:41 +00:00
Liam Gallagher
d016e52843
Spelling (#15686)
Fix two spelling mistakes
2024-10-07 00:10:04 +00:00
mahkoh
f37f5fd281
Fix transparent_window example on wayland (#15262)
Wayland only supports pre-multiplied alpha. Behavior on X11 seems
unchanged.

# Objective

- Fix #10929 on wayland.

## Solution

- Request pre-multiplied alpha.

## Testing

- Ran the example locally.
2024-10-06 20:07:46 +00:00
Bude
6edb78a8c3
Inverse bevy_render bevy_winit dependency and move cursor to bevy_winit (#15649)
# Objective

- `bevy_render` should not depend on `bevy_winit`
- Fixes #15565

## Solution

- `bevy_render` no longer depends on `bevy_winit`
- The following is behind the `custom_cursor` feature
- Move custom cursor code from `bevy_render` to `bevy_winit` behind the
`custom_cursor` feature
- `bevy_winit` now depends on `bevy_render` (for `Image` and
`TextureFormat`)
- `bevy_winit` now depends on `bevy_asset` (for `Assets`, `Handle` and
`AssetId`)
  - `bevy_winit` now depends on `bytemuck` (already in tree)
- Custom cursor code in `bevy_winit` reworked to use `AssetId` (other
than that it is taken over 1:1)
- Rework `bevy_winit` custom cursor interface visibility now that the
logic is all contained in `bevy_winit`

## Testing

- I ran the screenshot and window_settings examples
- Tested on linux wayland so far

---

## Migration Guide

`CursorIcon` and `CustomCursor` previously provided by
`bevy::render::view::cursor` is now available from `bevy::winit`.
A new feature `custom_cursor` enables this functionality (default
feature).
2024-10-06 18:25:50 +00:00
poopy
d9190e4ff6
Add Support for Triggering Events via AnimationEvents (#15538)
# Objective

Add support for events that can be triggered from animation clips. This
is useful when you need something to happen at a specific time in an
animation. For example, playing a sound every time a characters feet
hits the ground when walking.

Closes #15494 

## Solution

Added a new field to `AnimationClip`: `events`, which contains a list of
`AnimationEvent`s. These are automatically triggered in
`animate_targets` and `trigger_untargeted_animation_events`.

## Testing

Added a couple of tests and example (`animation_events.rs`) to make sure
events are triggered when expected.

---

## Showcase

`Events` need to also implement `AnimationEvent` and `Reflect` to be
used with animations.

```rust
#[derive(Event, AnimationEvent, Reflect)]
struct SomeEvent;
```

Events can be added to an `AnimationClip` by specifying a time and
event.

```rust
// trigger an event after 1.0 second
animation_clip.add_event(1.0, SomeEvent);
```

And optionally, providing a target id.

```rust
let id = AnimationTargetId::from_iter(["shoulder", "arm", "hand"]);
animation_clip.add_event_to_target(id, 1.0, HandEvent);
```

I modified the `animated_fox` example to show off the feature.

![CleanShot 2024-10-05 at 02 41
57](https://github.com/user-attachments/assets/0bb47db7-24f9-4504-88f1-40e375b89b1b)

---------

Co-authored-by: Matty <weatherleymatthew@gmail.com>
Co-authored-by: Chris Biscardi <chris@christopherbiscardi.com>
Co-authored-by: François Mockers <francois.mockers@vleue.com>
2024-10-06 10:03:05 +00:00
ickshonpe
92f39354a3
Display the bounds of each text node in the text_debug ui example (#15622)
# Objective

Add a background colour to each text node in the `text_debug` example to
visualize their bounds.

## Showcase

<img width="961" alt="deb"
src="https://github.com/user-attachments/assets/deec3e15-b0f0-411f-9af1-597587ac2a83">

In the bottom right you can see the empty space at the bottom of the
text node, making it much more obvious that there is a bug causing the
size of the bounds to be calculated incorrectly.
2024-10-05 22:48:57 +00:00
mgi388
7c03ca2562
Fix QuerySingle -> Single missed in example (#15667)
Missed in https://github.com/bevyengine/bevy/pull/15507
2024-10-05 22:24:03 +00:00
Joona Aalto
25bfa80e60
Migrate cameras to required components (#15641)
# Objective

Yet another PR for migrating stuff to required components. This time,
cameras!

## Solution

As per the [selected
proposal](https://hackmd.io/tsYID4CGRiWxzsgawzxG_g#Combined-Proposal-1-Selected),
deprecate `Camera2dBundle` and `Camera3dBundle` in favor of `Camera2d`
and `Camera3d`.

Adding a `Camera` without `Camera2d` or `Camera3d` now logs a warning,
as suggested by Cart [on
Discord](https://discord.com/channels/691052431525675048/1264881140007702558/1291506402832945273).
I would personally like cameras to work a bit differently and be split
into a few more components, to avoid some footguns and confusing
semantics, but that is more controversial, and shouldn't block this core
migration.

## Testing

I ran a few 2D and 3D examples, and tried cameras with and without
render graphs.

---

## Migration Guide

`Camera2dBundle` and `Camera3dBundle` have been deprecated in favor of
`Camera2d` and `Camera3d`. Inserting them will now also insert the other
components required by them automatically.
2024-10-05 01:59:52 +00:00
Patrick Walton
0094bcbc07
Implement additive blending for animation graphs. (#15631)
*Additive blending* is an ubiquitous feature in game engines that allows
animations to be concatenated instead of blended. The canonical use case
is to allow a character to hold a weapon while performing arbitrary
poses. For example, if you had a character that needed to be able to
walk or run while attacking with a weapon, the typical workflow is to
have an additive blend node that combines walking and running animation
clips with an animation clip of one of the limbs performing a weapon
attack animation.

This commit adds support for additive blending to Bevy. It builds on top
of the flexible infrastructure in #15589 and introduces a new type of
node, the *add node*. Like blend nodes, add nodes combine the animations
of their children according to their weights. Unlike blend nodes,
however, add nodes don't normalize the weights to 1.0.

The `animation_masks` example has been overhauled to demonstrate the use
of additive blending in combination with masks. There are now controls
to choose an animation clip for every limb of the fox individually.

This patch also fixes a bug whereby masks were incorrectly accumulated
with `insert()` during the graph threading phase, which could cause
corruption of computed masks in some cases.

Note that the `clip` field has been replaced with an `AnimationNodeType`
enum, which breaks `animgraph.ron` files. The `Fox.animgraph.ron` asset
has been updated to the new format.

Closes #14395.

## Showcase


https://github.com/user-attachments/assets/52dfe05f-fdb3-477a-9462-ec150f93df33

## Migration Guide

* The `animgraph.ron` format has changed to accommodate the new
*additive blending* feature. You'll need to change `clip` fields to
instances of the new `AnimationNodeType` enum.
2024-10-04 22:13:22 +00:00
Eero Lehtinen
d0edbdac78
Fix cargo-ndk build command (#15648)
# Objective

- Fix cargo-ndk build command documentation in readme.

```sh
❯ cargo ndk -t arm64-v8a build -o android_example/app/src/main/jniLibs
    Building arm64-v8a (aarch64-linux-android)
error: unexpected argument '-o' found
```

## Solution

- Move "build" to the end of the command.

## Testing

- With the new command order building works.
```sh
❯ cargo ndk -t arm64-v8a -o android_example/app/src/main/jniLibs build
    Building arm64-v8a (aarch64-linux-android)
   Compiling bevy_ptr v0.15.0-dev (/home/eero/repos/bevy/crates/bevy_ptr)
   Compiling bevy_macro_utils v0.15.0-dev (/home/eero/repos/bevy/crates/bevy_macro_utils)
   Compiling event-listener v5.3.1

... rest of compilation ...
```
2024-10-04 19:20:25 +00:00
Tim
2526410096
Clean up the simple_picking example (#15633)
## Solution

- Removed superfluous `Pickable` components
- Slightly simplified the code for updating the text color
- Removed the `Pointer<Click>` observer from the mesh entirely since
that doesn't support picking yet
2024-10-04 01:31:21 +00:00
MiniaczQ
acea4e7e6f
Better warnings about invalid parameters (#15500)
# Objective

System param validation warnings should be configurable and default to
"warn once" (per system).

Fixes: #15391

## Solution

`SystemMeta` is given a new `ParamWarnPolicy` field.
The policy decides whether warnings will be emitted by each system param
when it fails validation.
The policy is updated by the system after param validation fails.

Example warning:
```
2024-09-30T18:10:04.740749Z  WARN bevy_ecs::system::function_system: System fallible_params::do_nothing_fail_validation will not run because it requested inaccessible system parameter Single<(), (With<Player>, With<Enemy>)>
```

Currently, only the first invalid parameter is displayed.

Warnings can be disabled on function systems using
`.param_never_warn()`.
(there is also `.with_param_warn_policy(policy)`)

## Testing

Ran `fallible_params` example.

---------

Co-authored-by: SpecificProtagonist <vincentjunge@posteo.net>
2024-10-03 13:16:55 +00:00
Patrick Walton
ca8dd06146
Impose a more sensible ordering for animation graph evaluation. (#15589)
This is an updated version of #15530. Review comments were addressed.

This commit changes the animation graph evaluation to be operate in a
more sensible order and updates the semantics of blend nodes to conform
to [the animation composition RFC]. Prior to this patch, a node graph
like this:

```
	    ┌─────┐
	    │     │
	    │  1  │
	    │     │
	    └──┬──┘
	       │
       ┌───────┴───────┐
       │               │
       ▼               ▼
    ┌─────┐         ┌─────┐
    │     │         │     │
    │  2  │         │  3  │
    │     │         │     │
    └──┬──┘         └──┬──┘
       │               │
   ┌───┴───┐       ┌───┴───┐
   │       │       │       │
   ▼       ▼       ▼       ▼
┌─────┐ ┌─────┐ ┌─────┐ ┌─────┐
│     │ │     │ │     │ │     │
│  4  │ │  6  │ │  5  │ │  7  │
│     │ │     │ │     │ │     │
└─────┘ └─────┘ └─────┘ └─────┘
```

Would be evaluated as (((4 ⊕ 5) ⊕ 6) ⊕ 7), with the blend (lerp/slerp)
operation notated as ⊕. As quaternion multiplication isn't commutative,
this is very counterintuitive and will especially lead to trouble with
the forthcoming additive blending feature (#15198).

This patch fixes the issue by changing the evaluation order to
postorder, with children of a node evaluated in ascending order by node
index.

To do so, this patch revamps `AnimationCurve` to be based on an
*evaluation stack* and a *blend register*. During target evaluation, the
graph evaluator traverses the graph in postorder. When encountering a
clip node, the evaluator pushes the possibly-interpolated value onto the
evaluation stack. When encountering a blend node, the evaluator pops
values off the stack into the blend register, accumulating weights as
appropriate. When the graph is completely evaluated, the top element on
the stack is *committed* to the property of the component.

A new system, the *graph threading* system, is added in order to cache
the sorted postorder traversal to avoid the overhead of sorting children
at animation evaluation time. Mask evaluation has been moved to this
system so that the graph only has to be traversed at most once per
frame. Unlike the `ActiveAnimation` list, the *threaded graph* is cached
from frame to frame and only has to be regenerated when the animation
graph asset changes.

This patch currently regresses the `animate_target` performance in
`many_foxes` by around 50%, resulting in an FPS loss of about 2-3 FPS.
I'd argue that this is an acceptable price to pay for a much more
intuitive system. In the future, we can mitigate the regression with a
fast path that avoids consulting the graph if only one animation is
playing. However, in the interest of keeping this patch simple, I didn't
do so here.

[the animation composition RFC]:
https://github.com/bevyengine/rfcs/blob/main/rfcs/51-animation-composition.md

# Objective

- Describe the objective or issue this PR addresses.
- If you're fixing a specific issue, say "Fixes #X".

## Solution

- Describe the solution used to achieve the objective above.

## Testing

- Did you test these changes? If so, how?
- Are there any parts that need more testing?
- How can other people (reviewers) test your changes? Is there anything
specific they need to know?
- If relevant, what platforms did you test these changes on, and are
there any important ones you can't test?

---

## Showcase

> This section is optional. If this PR does not include a visual change
or does not add a new feature, you can delete this section.

- Help others understand the result of this PR by showcasing your
awesome work!
- If this PR adds a new feature or public API, consider adding a brief
pseudo-code snippet of it in action
- If this PR includes a visual change, consider adding a screenshot,
GIF, or video
  - If you want, you could even include a before/after comparison!
- If the Migration Guide adequately covers the changes, you can delete
this section

While a showcase should aim to be brief and digestible, you can use a
toggleable section to save space on longer showcases:

<details>
  <summary>Click to view showcase</summary>

```rust
println!("My super cool code.");
```

</details>

## Migration Guide

> This section is optional. If there are no breaking changes, you can
delete this section.

- If this PR is a breaking change (relative to the last release of
Bevy), describe how a user might need to migrate their code to support
these changes
- Simply adding new functionality is not a breaking change.
- Fixing behavior that was definitely a bug, rather than a questionable
design choice is not a breaking change.

---------

Co-authored-by: Alice Cecile <alice.i.cecile@gmail.com>
2024-10-03 00:36:42 +00:00
Tim
ca709ffb5a
Cleanup clearcoat example (#15594)
The components needed for `DirectionalLight` are added automatically
since #15554
`create_point_light` already existed and returns a `PointLight` with
these same settings
2024-10-02 16:15:27 +00:00
Dragoș Tiselice
ba7907cae7
Added visibility bitmask as an alternative SSAO method (#13454)
Early implementation. I still have to fix the documentation and consider
writing a small migration guide.

Questions left to answer:

* [x] should thickness be an overridable constant?
* [x] is there a better way to implement `Eq`/`Hash` for `SSAOMethod`?
* [x] do we want to keep the linear sampler for the depth texture?
* [x] is there a better way to separate the logic than preprocessor
macros?


![vbao](https://github.com/bevyengine/bevy/assets/4136413/2a8a0389-2add-4c2e-be37-e208e52dcd25)

## Migration guide

SSAO algorithm was changed from GTAO to VBAO (visibility bitmasks). A
new field, `constant_object_thickness`, was added to
`ScreenSpaceAmbientOcclusion`. `ScreenSpaceAmbientOcclusion` also lost
its `Eq` and `Hash` implementations.

---------

Co-authored-by: JMS55 <47158642+JMS55@users.noreply.github.com>
2024-10-02 13:43:35 +00:00
Tim
461305b3d7
Revert "Have EntityCommands methods consume self for easier chaining" (#15523)
As discussed in #15521

- Partial revert of #14897, reverting the change to the methods to
consume `self`
- The `insert_if` method is kept

The migration guide of #14897 should be removed
Closes #15521

---------

Co-authored-by: Alice Cecile <alice.i.cecile@gmail.com>
2024-10-02 12:47:26 +00:00
Viktor Gustavsson
f86ee32576
Add UI GhostNode (#15341)
# Objective

- Fixes #14826 
- For context, see #15238

## Solution
Add a `GhostNode` component to `bevy_ui` and update all the relevant
systems to use it to traverse for UI children.

- [x] `ghost_hierarchy` module
  - [x] Add `GhostNode`
- [x] Add `UiRootNodes` system param for iterating (ghost-aware) UI root
nodes
- [x] Add `UiChildren` system param for iterating (ghost-aware) UI
children
- [x] Update `layout::ui_layout_system`
  - [x] Use ghost-aware root nodes for camera updates
  - [x] Update and remove children in taffy
    - [x] Initial spawn
    - [x] Detect changes on nested UI children
- [x] Use ghost-aware children traversal in
`update_uinode_geometry_recursive`
- [x] Update the rest of the UI systems to use the ghost hierarchy
  - [x] `stack::ui_stack_system`
  - [x] `update::`
    - [x] `update_clipping_system`
    - [x] `update_target_camera_system`
  - [x] `accessibility::calc_name`

## Testing
- [x] Added a new example `ghost_nodes` that can be used as a testbed.
- [x] Added unit tests for _some_ of the traversal utilities in
`ghost_hierarchy`
- [x] Ensure this fulfills the needs for currently known use cases
  - [x] Reactivity libraries (test with `bevy_reactor`)
- [ ] Text spans (mentioned by koe [on
discord](https://discord.com/channels/691052431525675048/1285371432460881991/1285377442998915246))
  
---
## Performance
[See comment
below](https://github.com/bevyengine/bevy/pull/15341#issuecomment-2385456820)

## Migration guide
Any code that previously relied on `Parent`/`Children` to iterate UI
children may now want to use `bevy_ui::UiChildren` to ensure ghost nodes
are skipped, and their first descendant Nodes included.

UI root nodes may now be children of ghost nodes, which means
`Without<Parent>` might not query all root nodes. Use
`bevy_ui::UiRootNodes` where needed to iterate root nodes instead.

## Potential future work
- Benchmarking/optimizations of hierarchies containing lots of ghost
nodes
- Further exploration of UI hierarchies and markers for root nodes/leaf
nodes to create better ergonomics for things like `UiLayer` (world-space
ui)

---------

Co-authored-by: Alice Cecile <alice.i.cecile@gmail.com>
Co-authored-by: UkoeHB <37489173+UkoeHB@users.noreply.github.com>
2024-10-02 00:24:28 +00:00
Joona Aalto
22af24aacf
Migrate motion blur, TAA, SSAO, and SSR to required components (#15572)
# Objective

Again, a step forward in the migration to required components: a bunch
of camera rendering cormponents!

Note that this does not include the camera components themselves yet,
because the naming and API for `Camera` hasn't been fully decided yet.

## Solution

As per the [selected
proposals](https://hackmd.io/@bevy/required_components/%2FpiqD9GOdSFKZZGzzh3C7Uw):

- Deprecate `MotionBlurBundle` in favor of the `MotionBlur` component
- Deprecate `TemporalAntiAliasBundle` in favor of the
`TemporalAntiAliasing` component
- Deprecate `ScreenSpaceAmbientOcclusionBundle` in favor of the
`ScreenSpaceAmbientOcclusion` component
- Deprecate `ScreenSpaceReflectionsBundle` in favor of the
`ScreenSpaceReflections` component

---

## Migration Guide

`MotionBlurBundle`, `TemporalAntiAliasBundle`,
`ScreenSpaceAmbientOcclusionBundle`, and `ScreenSpaceReflectionsBundle`
have been deprecated in favor of the `MotionBlur`,
`TemporalAntiAliasing`, `ScreenSpaceAmbientOcclusion`, and
`ScreenSpaceReflections` components instead. Inserting them will now
also insert the other components required by them automatically.
2024-10-01 22:45:31 +00:00
Joona Aalto
ed151e756c
Migrate audio to required components (#15573)
# Objective

What's that? Another PR for the grand migration to required components?
This time, audio!

## Solution

Deprecate `AudioSourceBundle`, `AudioBundle`, and `PitchBundle`, as per
the [chosen
proposal](https://hackmd.io/@bevy/required_components/%2Fzxgp-zMMRUCdT7LY1ZDQwQ).

However, we cannot call the component `AudioSource`, because that's what
the stored asset is called. I deliberated on a few names, like
`AudioHandle`, or even just `Audio`, but landed on `AudioPlayer`, since
it's probably the most accurate and "nice" name for this. Open to
alternatives though.

---

## Migration Guide

Replace all insertions of `AudioSoucreBundle`, `AudioBundle`, and
`PitchBundle` with the `AudioPlayer` component. The other components
required by it will now be inserted automatically.

In cases where the generics cannot be inferred, you may need to specify
them explicitly. For example:

```rust
commands.spawn(AudioPlayer::<AudioSource>(asset_server.load("sounds/sick_beats.ogg")));
```
2024-10-01 22:43:29 +00:00
Tim
eb51b4c28e
Migrate scenes to required components (#15579)
# Objective

A step in the migration to required components: scenes!

## Solution

As per the [selected
proposal](https://hackmd.io/@bevy/required_components/%2FPJtNGVMMQhyM0zIvCJSkbA):
- Deprecate `SceneBundle` and `DynamicSceneBundle`.
- Add `SceneRoot` and `DynamicSceneRoot` components, which wrap a
`Handle<Scene>` and `Handle<DynamicScene>` respectively.

## Migration Guide
Asset handles for scenes and dynamic scenes must now be wrapped in the
`SceneRoot` and `DynamicSceneRoot` components. Raw handles as components
no longer spawn scenes.

Additionally, `SceneBundle` and `DynamicSceneBundle` have been
deprecated. Instead, use the scene components directly.

Previously:
```rust
let model_scene = asset_server.load(GltfAssetLabel::Scene(0).from_asset("model.gltf"));

commands.spawn(SceneBundle {
    scene: model_scene,
    transform: Transform::from_xyz(-4.0, 0.0, -3.0),
    ..default()
});
```
Now:
```rust
let model_scene = asset_server.load(GltfAssetLabel::Scene(0).from_asset("model.gltf"));

commands.spawn((
    SceneRoot(model_scene),
    Transform::from_xyz(-4.0, 0.0, -3.0),
));
```
2024-10-01 22:42:11 +00:00
UkoeHB
ead84e0e3d
Rename BreakLineOn to LineBreak (#15583)
# Objective

- Improve code quality in preparation for
https://github.com/bevyengine/bevy/discussions/15014

## Solution

- Rename BreakLineOn to LineBreak.

## Migration Guide

`BreakLineOn` was renamed to `LineBreak`, and paramters named
`linebreak_behavior` were renamed to `linebreak`.
2024-10-01 22:30:50 +00:00
Litttle_fish
e924df0e1a
Add features to switch NativeActivity and GameActivity usage (#12095)
# Objective

Add two features to switch bevy to use `NativeActivity` or
`GameActivity` on Android, use `GameActivity` by default.

Also close  #12058 and probably #12026 .

## Solution

Add two features to the corresponding crates so you can toggle it, like
what `winit` and `android-activity` crate did.

---

## Changelog

Removed default `NativeActivity` feature implementation for Android,
added two new features to enable `NativeActivity` and `GameActivity`,
and use `GameActivity` by default.

## Migration Guide

Because `cargo-apk` is not compatible with `GameActivity`,
building/running using `cargo apk build/run -p bevy_mobile_example` is
no longer possible.
Users should follow the new workflow described in document.

---------

Co-authored-by: François Mockers <francois.mockers@vleue.com>
Co-authored-by: BD103 <59022059+BD103@users.noreply.github.com>
Co-authored-by: Rich Churcher <rich.churcher@gmail.com>
2024-10-01 22:23:48 +00:00
Joona Aalto
54006b107b
Migrate meshes and materials to required components (#15524)
# Objective

A big step in the migration to required components: meshes and
materials!

## Solution

As per the [selected
proposal](https://hackmd.io/@bevy/required_components/%2Fj9-PnF-2QKK0on1KQ29UWQ):

- Deprecate `MaterialMesh2dBundle`, `MaterialMeshBundle`, and
`PbrBundle`.
- Add `Mesh2d` and `Mesh3d` components, which wrap a `Handle<Mesh>`.
- Add `MeshMaterial2d<M: Material2d>` and `MeshMaterial3d<M: Material>`,
which wrap a `Handle<M>`.
- Meshes *without* a mesh material should be rendered with a default
material. The existence of a material is determined by
`HasMaterial2d`/`HasMaterial3d`, which is required by
`MeshMaterial2d`/`MeshMaterial3d`. This gets around problems with the
generics.

Previously:

```rust
commands.spawn(MaterialMesh2dBundle {
    mesh: meshes.add(Circle::new(100.0)).into(),
    material: materials.add(Color::srgb(7.5, 0.0, 7.5)),
    transform: Transform::from_translation(Vec3::new(-200., 0., 0.)),
    ..default()
});
```

Now:

```rust
commands.spawn((
    Mesh2d(meshes.add(Circle::new(100.0))),
    MeshMaterial2d(materials.add(Color::srgb(7.5, 0.0, 7.5))),
    Transform::from_translation(Vec3::new(-200., 0., 0.)),
));
```

If the mesh material is missing, previously nothing was rendered. Now,
it renders a white default `ColorMaterial` in 2D and a
`StandardMaterial` in 3D (this can be overridden). Below, only every
other entity has a material:

![Näyttökuva 2024-09-29
181746](https://github.com/user-attachments/assets/5c8be029-d2fe-4b8c-ae89-17a72ff82c9a)

![Näyttökuva 2024-09-29
181918](https://github.com/user-attachments/assets/58adbc55-5a1e-4c7d-a2c7-ed456227b909)

Why white? This is still open for discussion, but I think white makes
sense for a *default* material, while *invalid* asset handles pointing
to nothing should have something like a pink material to indicate that
something is broken (I don't handle that in this PR yet). This is kind
of a mix of Godot and Unity: Godot just renders a white material for
non-existent materials, while Unity renders nothing when no materials
exist, but renders pink for invalid materials. I can also change the
default material to pink if that is preferable though.

## Testing

I ran some 2D and 3D examples to test if anything changed visually. I
have not tested all examples or features yet however. If anyone wants to
test more extensively, it would be appreciated!

## Implementation Notes

- The relationship between `bevy_render` and `bevy_pbr` is weird here.
`bevy_render` needs `Mesh3d` for its own systems, but `bevy_pbr` has all
of the material logic, and `bevy_render` doesn't depend on it. I feel
like the two crates should be refactored in some way, but I think that's
out of scope for this PR.
- I didn't migrate meshlets to required components yet. That can
probably be done in a follow-up, as this is already a huge PR.
- It is becoming increasingly clear to me that we really, *really* want
to disallow raw asset handles as components. They caused me a *ton* of
headache here already, and it took me a long time to find every place
that queried for them or inserted them directly on entities, since there
were no compiler errors for it. If we don't remove the `Component`
derive, I expect raw asset handles to be a *huge* footgun for users as
we transition to wrapper components, especially as handles as components
have been the norm so far. I personally consider this to be a blocker
for 0.15: we need to migrate to wrapper components for asset handles
everywhere, and remove the `Component` derive. Also see
https://github.com/bevyengine/bevy/issues/14124.

---

## Migration Guide

Asset handles for meshes and mesh materials must now be wrapped in the
`Mesh2d` and `MeshMaterial2d` or `Mesh3d` and `MeshMaterial3d`
components for 2D and 3D respectively. Raw handles as components no
longer render meshes.

Additionally, `MaterialMesh2dBundle`, `MaterialMeshBundle`, and
`PbrBundle` have been deprecated. Instead, use the mesh and material
components directly.

Previously:

```rust
commands.spawn(MaterialMesh2dBundle {
    mesh: meshes.add(Circle::new(100.0)).into(),
    material: materials.add(Color::srgb(7.5, 0.0, 7.5)),
    transform: Transform::from_translation(Vec3::new(-200., 0., 0.)),
    ..default()
});
```

Now:

```rust
commands.spawn((
    Mesh2d(meshes.add(Circle::new(100.0))),
    MeshMaterial2d(materials.add(Color::srgb(7.5, 0.0, 7.5))),
    Transform::from_translation(Vec3::new(-200., 0., 0.)),
));
```

If the mesh material is missing, a white default material is now used.
Previously, nothing was rendered if the material was missing.

The `WithMesh2d` and `WithMesh3d` query filter type aliases have also
been removed. Simply use `With<Mesh2d>` or `With<Mesh3d>`.

---------

Co-authored-by: Tim Blackbird <justthecooldude@gmail.com>
Co-authored-by: Carter Anderson <mcanders1@gmail.com>
2024-10-01 21:33:17 +00:00
Joona Aalto
0fe17b8b30
Migrate fog volumes to required components (#15568)
# Objective

Another part of the migration to required components: fog volumes!

## Solution

Deprecate `FogVolumeBundle` and make `FogVolume` require `Transform` and
`Visibility`, as per the [chosen
proposal](https://hackmd.io/@bevy/required_components/%2FcO7JPSAQR5G0J_j5wNwtOQ).

---

## Migration Guide

Replace all insertions of `FogVolumeBundle` with the `Visibility`
component. The other components required by it will now be inserted
automatically.
2024-10-01 19:51:22 +00:00
aecsocket
1df8238e8d
bevy_asset: Improve NestedLoader API (#15509)
# Objective

The `NestedLoader` API as it stands right now is somewhat lacking:

- It consists of several types `NestedLoader`, `UntypedNestedLoader`,
`DirectNestedLoader`, and `UntypedDirectNestedLoader`, where a typestate
pattern on `NestedLoader` would be make it more obvious what it does,
and allow centralising the documentation
- The term "untyped" in the asset loader code is overloaded. It can mean
either:
- we have literally no idea what the type of this asset will be when we
load it (I dub this "unknown type")
- we know what type of asset it will be, but we don't know it statically
- we only have a TypeId (I dub this "dynamic type" / "erased")
- There is no way to get an `UntypedHandle` (erased) given a `TypeId`

## Solution

Changes `NestedLoader` into a type-state pattern, adding two type
params:
- `T` determines the typing
- `StaticTyped`, the default, where you pass in `A` statically into `fn
load<A>() -> ..`
- `DynamicTyped`, where you give a `TypeId`, giving you a
`UntypedHandle`
- `UnknownTyped`, where you have literally no idea what type of asset
you're loading, giving you a `Handle<LoadedUntypedAsset>`
- `M` determines the "mode" (bikeshedding TBD, I couldn't come up with a
better name)
- `Deferred`, the default, won't load the asset when you call `load`,
but it does give you a `Handle` to it (this is nice since it can be a
sync fn)
- `Immediate` will load the asset as soon as you call it, and give you
access to it, but you must be in an async context to call it

Changes some naming of internals in `AssetServer` to fit the new
definitions of "dynamic type" and "unknown type". Note that I didn't do
a full pass over this code to keep the diff small. That can probably be
done in a new PR - I think the definiton I laid out of unknown type vs.
erased makes it pretty clear where each one applies.

<details>
<summary>Old issue</summary>

The only real problem I have with this PR is the requirement to pass in
`type_name` (from `core::any::type_name`) into Erased. Users might not
have that type name, only the ID, and it just seems sort of weird to
*have* to give an asset type name. However, the reason we need it is
because of this:
```rs
    pub(crate) fn get_or_create_path_handle_erased(
        &mut self,
        path: AssetPath<'static>,
        type_id: TypeId,
        type_name: &str,
        loading_mode: HandleLoadingMode,
        meta_transform: Option<MetaTransform>,
    ) -> (UntypedHandle, bool) {
        let result = self.get_or_create_path_handle_internal(
            path,
            Some(type_id),
            loading_mode,
            meta_transform,
        );
        // it is ok to unwrap because TypeId was specified above
        unwrap_with_context(result, type_name).unwrap()
    }

pub(crate) fn unwrap_with_context<T>(
    result: Result<T, GetOrCreateHandleInternalError>,
    type_name: &str,
) -> Option<T> {
    match result {
        Ok(value) => Some(value),
        Err(GetOrCreateHandleInternalError::HandleMissingButTypeIdNotSpecified) => None,
        Err(GetOrCreateHandleInternalError::MissingHandleProviderError(_)) => {
            panic!("Cannot allocate an Asset Handle of type '{type_name}' because the asset type has not been initialized. \
                    Make sure you have called app.init_asset::<{type_name}>()")
        }
    }
}
```
This `unwrap_with_context` is literally the only reason we need the
`type_name`. Potentially, this can be turned into an `impl
Into<Option<&str>>`, and output a different error message if the type
name is missing. Since if we are loading an asset where we only know the
type ID, by definition we can't output that error message, since we
don't have the type name. I'm open to suggestions on this.

</details>

## Testing

Not sure how to test this, since I kept most of the actual NestedLoader
logic the same. The only new API is loading an `UntypedHandle` when in
the `DynamicTyped, Immediate` state.

## Migration Guide

Code which uses `bevy_asset`'s `LoadContext::loader` / `NestedLoader`
will see some naming changes:
- `untyped` is replaced by `with_unknown_type`
- `with_asset_type` is replaced by `with_static_type`
- `with_asset_type_id` is replaced by `with_dynamic_type`
- `direct` is replaced by `immediate` (the opposite of "immediate" is
"deferred")
2024-10-01 14:14:04 +00:00
m-edlund
c323db02e0
Add sub_camera_view, enabling sheared projection (#15537)
# Objective

- This PR fixes #12488

## Solution

- This PR adds a new property to `Camera` that emulates the
functionality of the
[setViewOffset()](https://threejs.org/docs/#api/en/cameras/PerspectiveCamera.setViewOffset)
API in three.js.
- When set, the perspective and orthographic projections will restrict
the visible area of the camera to a part of the view frustum defined by
`offset` and `size`.

## Testing

- In the new `camera_sub_view` example, a fixed, moving and control sub
view is created for both perspective and orthographic projection
- Run the example with `cargo run --example camera_sub_view`
- The code can be tested by adding a `SubCameraView` to a camera

---

## Showcase


![image](https://github.com/user-attachments/assets/75ac45fc-d75d-4664-8ef6-ff7865297c25)

- Left Half: Perspective Projection
- Right Half: Orthographic Projection
- Small boxes in order:
  - Sub view of the left half of the full image
- Sub view moving from the top left to the bottom right of the full
image
  - Sub view of the full image (acting as a control)
- Large box: No sub view

<details>
  <summary>Shortened camera setup of `camera_sub_view` example</summary>

```rust
    // Main perspective Camera
    commands.spawn(Camera3dBundle {
        transform,
        ..default()
    });

    // Perspective camera left half
    commands.spawn(Camera3dBundle {
        camera: Camera {
            sub_camera_view: Some(SubCameraView {
                // Set the sub view camera to the left half of the full image
                full_size: uvec2(500, 500),
                offset: ivec2(0, 0),
                size: uvec2(250, 500),
            }),
            order: 1,
            ..default()
        },
        transform,
        ..default()
    });

    // Perspective camera moving
    commands.spawn((
        Camera3dBundle {
            camera: Camera {
                sub_camera_view: Some(SubCameraView {
                    // Set the sub view camera to a fifth of the full view and
                    // move it in another system
                    full_size: uvec2(500, 500),
                    offset: ivec2(0, 0),
                    size: uvec2(100, 100),
                }),
                order: 2,
                ..default()
            },
            transform,
            ..default()
        },
        MovingCameraMarker,
    ));

    // Perspective camera control
    commands.spawn(Camera3dBundle {
        camera: Camera {
            sub_camera_view: Some(SubCameraView {
                // Set the sub view to the full image, to ensure that it matches
                // the projection without sub view
                full_size: uvec2(450, 450),
                offset: ivec2(0, 0),
                size: uvec2(450, 450),
            }),
            order: 3,
            ..default()
        },
        transform,
        ..default()
    });

    // Main orthographic camera
    commands.spawn(Camera3dBundle {
        projection: OrthographicProjection {
          ...
        }
        .into(),
        camera: Camera {
            order: 4,
            ..default()
        },
        transform,
        ..default()
    });

    // Orthographic camera left half
    commands.spawn(Camera3dBundle {
        projection: OrthographicProjection {
          ...
        }
        .into(),
        camera: Camera {
            sub_camera_view: Some(SubCameraView {
                // Set the sub view camera to the left half of the full image
                full_size: uvec2(500, 500),
                offset: ivec2(0, 0),
                size: uvec2(250, 500),
            }),
            order: 5,
            ..default()
        },
        transform,
        ..default()
    });

    // Orthographic camera moving
    commands.spawn((
        Camera3dBundle {
            projection: OrthographicProjection {
              ...
            }
            .into(),
            camera: Camera {
                sub_camera_view: Some(SubCameraView {
                    // Set the sub view camera to a fifth of the full view and
                    // move it in another system
                    full_size: uvec2(500, 500),
                    offset: ivec2(0, 0),
                    size: uvec2(100, 100),
                }),
                order: 6,
                ..default()
            },
            transform,
            ..default()
        },
        MovingCameraMarker,
    ));

    // Orthographic camera control
    commands.spawn(Camera3dBundle {
        projection: OrthographicProjection {
          ...
        }
        .into(),
        camera: Camera {
            sub_camera_view: Some(SubCameraView {
                // Set the sub view to the full image, to ensure that it matches
                // the projection without sub view
                full_size: uvec2(450, 450),
                offset: ivec2(0, 0),
                size: uvec2(450, 450),
            }),
            order: 7,
            ..default()
        },
        transform,
        ..default()
    });
```

</details>
2024-10-01 14:11:24 +00:00
Joona Aalto
de888a373d
Migrate lights to required components (#15554)
# Objective

Another step in the migration to required components: lights!

Note that this does not include `EnvironmentMapLight` or reflection
probes yet, because their API hasn't been fully chosen yet.

## Solution

As per the [selected
proposals](https://hackmd.io/@bevy/required_components/%2FLLnzwz9XTxiD7i2jiUXkJg):

- Deprecate `PointLightBundle` in favor of the `PointLight` component
- Deprecate `SpotLightBundle` in favor of the `PointLight` component
- Deprecate `DirectionalLightBundle` in favor of the `DirectionalLight`
component

## Testing

I ran some examples with lights.

---

## Migration Guide

`PointLightBundle`, `SpotLightBundle`, and `DirectionalLightBundle` have
been deprecated. Use the `PointLight`, `SpotLight`, and
`DirectionalLight` components instead. Adding them will now insert the
other components required by them automatically.
2024-10-01 03:20:43 +00:00
Kristoffer Søholm
73af2b7d29
Cleanup unneeded lifetimes in bevy_asset (#15546)
# Objective

Fixes #15541

A bunch of lifetimes were added during the Assets V2 rework, but after
moving to async traits in #12550 they can be elided. That PR mentions
that this might be the case, but apparently it wasn't followed up on at
the time.

~~I ended up grepping for `<'a` and finding a similar case in
`bevy_reflect` which I also fixed.~~ (edit: that one was needed
apparently)

Note that elided lifetimes are unstable in `impl Trait`. If that gets
stabilized then we can elide even more.

## Solution

Remove the extra lifetimes.

## Testing

Everything still compiles. If I have messed something up there is a
small risk that some user code stops compiling, but all the examples
still work at least.

---

## Migration Guide

The traits `AssetLoader`, `AssetSaver` and `Process` traits from
`bevy_asset` now use elided lifetimes. If you implement these then
remove the named lifetime.
2024-09-30 21:54:59 +00:00
Matty
429987ebf8
Curve-based animation (#15434)
# Objective

This PR extends and reworks the material from #15282 by allowing
arbitrary curves to be used by the animation system to animate arbitrary
properties. The goals of this work are to:
- Allow far greater flexibility in how animations are allowed to be
defined in order to be used with `bevy_animation`.
- Delegate responsibility over keyframe interpolation to `bevy_math` and
the `Curve` libraries and reduce reliance on keyframes in animation
definitions generally.
- Move away from allowing the glTF spec to completely define animations
on a mechanical level.

## Solution

### Overview

At a high level, curves have been incorporated into the animation system
using the `AnimationCurve` trait (closely related to what was
`Keyframes`). From the top down:

1. In `animate_targets`, animations are driven by `VariableCurve`, which
is now a thin wrapper around a `Box<dyn AnimationCurve>`.
2. `AnimationCurve` is something built out of a `Curve`, and it tells
the animation system how to use the curve's output to actually mutate
component properties. The trait looks like this:
```rust
/// A low-level trait that provides control over how curves are actually applied to entities
/// by the animation system.
///
/// Typically, this will not need to be implemented manually, since it is automatically
/// implemented by [`AnimatableCurve`] and other curves used by the animation system
/// (e.g. those that animate parts of transforms or morph weights). However, this can be
/// implemented manually when `AnimatableCurve` is not sufficiently expressive.
///
/// In many respects, this behaves like a type-erased form of [`Curve`], where the output
/// type of the curve is remembered only in the components that are mutated in the
/// implementation of [`apply`].
///
/// [`apply`]: AnimationCurve::apply
pub trait AnimationCurve: Reflect + Debug + Send + Sync {
    /// Returns a boxed clone of this value.
    fn clone_value(&self) -> Box<dyn AnimationCurve>;

    /// The range of times for which this animation is defined.
    fn domain(&self) -> Interval;

    /// Write the value of sampling this curve at time `t` into `transform` or `entity`,
    /// as appropriate, interpolating between the existing value and the sampled value
    /// using the given `weight`.
    fn apply<'a>(
        &self,
        t: f32,
        transform: Option<Mut<'a, Transform>>,
        entity: EntityMutExcept<'a, (Transform, AnimationPlayer, Handle<AnimationGraph>)>,
        weight: f32,
    ) -> Result<(), AnimationEvaluationError>;
}
```
3. The conversion process from a `Curve` to an `AnimationCurve` involves
using wrappers which communicate the intent to animate a particular
property. For example, here is `TranslationCurve`, which wraps a
`Curve<Vec3>` and uses it to animate `Transform::translation`:
```rust
/// This type allows a curve valued in `Vec3` to become an [`AnimationCurve`] that animates
/// the translation component of a transform.
pub struct TranslationCurve<C>(pub C);
```

### Animatable Properties

The `AnimatableProperty` trait survives in the transition, and it can be
used to allow curves to animate arbitrary component properties. The
updated documentation for `AnimatableProperty` explains this process:
<details>
  <summary>Expand AnimatableProperty example</summary

An `AnimatableProperty` is a value on a component that Bevy can animate.

You can implement this trait on a unit struct in order to support
animating
custom components other than transforms and morph weights. Use that type
in
conjunction with `AnimatableCurve` (and perhaps
`AnimatableKeyframeCurve`
to define the animation itself). For example, in order to animate font
size of a
text section from 24 pt. to 80 pt., you might use:

```rust
#[derive(Reflect)]
struct FontSizeProperty;

impl AnimatableProperty for FontSizeProperty {
    type Component = Text;
    type Property = f32;
    fn get_mut(component: &mut Self::Component) -> Option<&mut Self::Property> {
        Some(&mut component.sections.get_mut(0)?.style.font_size)
    }
}
```

You can then create an `AnimationClip` to animate this property like so:

```rust
let mut animation_clip = AnimationClip::default();
animation_clip.add_curve_to_target(
    animation_target_id,
    AnimatableKeyframeCurve::new(
        [
            (0.0, 24.0),
            (1.0, 80.0),
        ]
    )
    .map(AnimatableCurve::<FontSizeProperty, _>::from_curve)
    .expect("Failed to create font size curve")
);
```

Here, the use of `AnimatableKeyframeCurve` creates a curve out of the
given keyframe time-value
pairs, using the `Animatable` implementation of `f32` to interpolate
between them. The
invocation of `AnimatableCurve::from_curve` with `FontSizeProperty`
indicates that the `f32`
output from that curve is to be used to animate the font size of a
`Text` component (as
configured above).


</details>

### glTF Loading

glTF animations are now loaded into `Curve` types of various kinds,
depending on what is being animated and what interpolation mode is being
used. Those types get wrapped into and converted into `Box<dyn
AnimationCurve>` and shoved inside of a `VariableCurve` just like
everybody else.

### Morph Weights

There is an `IterableCurve` abstraction which allows sampling these from
a contiguous buffer without allocating. Its only reason for existing is
that Rust disallows you from naming function types, otherwise we would
just use `Curve` with an iterator output type. (The iterator involves
`Map`, and the name of the function type would have to be able to be
named, but it is not.)

A `WeightsCurve` adaptor turns an `IterableCurve` into an
`AnimationCurve`, so it behaves like everything else in that regard.

## Testing

Tested by running existing animation examples. Interpolation logic has
had additional tests added within the `Curve` API to replace the tests
in `bevy_animation`. Some kinds of out-of-bounds errors have become
impossible.

Performance testing on `many_foxes` (`animate_targets`) suggests that
performance is very similar to the existing implementation. Here are a
couple trace histograms across different runs (yellow is this branch,
red is main).
<img width="669" alt="Screenshot 2024-09-27 at 9 41 50 AM"
src="https://github.com/user-attachments/assets/5ba4e9ac-3aea-452e-aaf8-1492acc2d7fc">
<img width="673" alt="Screenshot 2024-09-27 at 9 45 18 AM"
src="https://github.com/user-attachments/assets/8982538b-04cf-46b5-97b2-164c6bc8162e">

---

## Migration Guide

Most user code that does not directly deal with `AnimationClip` and
`VariableCurve` will not need to be changed. On the other hand,
`VariableCurve` has been completely overhauled. If you were previously
defining animation curves in code using keyframes, you will need to
migrate that code to use curve constructors instead. For example, a
rotation animation defined using keyframes and added to an animation
clip like this:
```rust
animation_clip.add_curve_to_target(
    animation_target_id,
    VariableCurve {
        keyframe_timestamps: vec![0.0, 1.0, 2.0, 3.0, 4.0],
        keyframes: Keyframes::Rotation(vec![
            Quat::IDENTITY,
            Quat::from_axis_angle(Vec3::Y, PI / 2.),
            Quat::from_axis_angle(Vec3::Y, PI / 2. * 2.),
            Quat::from_axis_angle(Vec3::Y, PI / 2. * 3.),
            Quat::IDENTITY,
        ]),
        interpolation: Interpolation::Linear,
    },
);
```

would now be added like this:
```rust
animation_clip.add_curve_to_target(
    animation_target_id,
    AnimatableKeyframeCurve::new([0.0, 1.0, 2.0, 3.0, 4.0].into_iter().zip([
        Quat::IDENTITY,
        Quat::from_axis_angle(Vec3::Y, PI / 2.),
        Quat::from_axis_angle(Vec3::Y, PI / 2. * 2.),
        Quat::from_axis_angle(Vec3::Y, PI / 2. * 3.),
        Quat::IDENTITY,
    ]))
    .map(RotationCurve)
    .expect("Failed to build rotation curve"),
);
```

Note that the interface of `AnimationClip::add_curve_to_target` has also
changed (as this example shows, if subtly), and now takes its curve
input as an `impl AnimationCurve`. If you need to add a `VariableCurve`
directly, a new method `add_variable_curve_to_target` accommodates that
(and serves as a one-to-one migration in this regard).

### For reviewers

The diff is pretty big, and the structure of some of the changes might
not be super-obvious:
- `keyframes.rs` became `animation_curves.rs`, and `AnimationCurve` is
based heavily on `Keyframes`, with the adaptors also largely following
suite.
- The Curve API adaptor structs were moved from `bevy_math::curve::mod`
into their own module `adaptors`. There are no functional changes to how
these adaptors work; this is just to make room for the specialized
reflection implementations since `mod.rs` was getting kind of cramped.
- The new module `gltf_curves` holds the additional curve constructions
that are needed by the glTF loader. Note that the loader uses a mix of
these and off-the-shelf `bevy_math` curve stuff.
- `animatable.rs` no longer holds logic related to keyframe
interpolation, which is now delegated to the existing abstractions in
`bevy_math::curve::cores`.

---------

Co-authored-by: Gino Valente <49806985+MrGVSV@users.noreply.github.com>
Co-authored-by: aecsocket <43144841+aecsocket@users.noreply.github.com>
2024-09-30 19:56:55 +00:00
rudderbucky
66717b04d3
Fix some typos in custom_post_processing.rs (#15539)
# Objective

- Fix some typos in the `custom_post_processing.rs` example

Co-authored-by: Alice Cecile <alice.i.cecile@gmail.com>
2024-09-30 18:55:46 +00:00
Trashtalk217
56f8e526dd
The Cooler 'Retain Rendering World' (#15320)
- Adopted from #14449
- Still fixes #12144.

## Migration Guide

The retained render world is a complex change: migrating might take one
of a few different forms depending on the patterns you're using.

For every example, we specify in which world the code is run. Most of
the changes affect render world code, so for the average Bevy user who's
using Bevy's high-level rendering APIs, these changes are unlikely to
affect your code.

### Spawning entities in the render world

Previously, if you spawned an entity with `world.spawn(...)`,
`commands.spawn(...)` or some other method in the rendering world, it
would be despawned at the end of each frame. In 0.15, this is no longer
the case and so your old code could leak entities. This can be mitigated
by either re-architecting your code to no longer continuously spawn
entities (like you're used to in the main world), or by adding the
`bevy_render::world_sync::TemporaryRenderEntity` component to the entity
you're spawning. Entities tagged with `TemporaryRenderEntity` will be
removed at the end of each frame (like before).

### Extract components with `ExtractComponentPlugin`

```
// main world
app.add_plugins(ExtractComponentPlugin::<ComponentToExtract>::default());
```

`ExtractComponentPlugin` has been changed to only work with synced
entities. Entities are automatically synced if `ComponentToExtract` is
added to them. However, entities are not "unsynced" if any given
`ComponentToExtract` is removed, because an entity may have multiple
components to extract. This would cause the other components to no
longer get extracted because the entity is not synced.

So be careful when only removing extracted components from entities in
the render world, because it might leave an entity behind in the render
world. The solution here is to avoid only removing extracted components
and instead despawn the entire entity.

### Manual extraction using `Extract<Query<(Entity, ...)>>`

```rust
// in render world, inspired by bevy_pbr/src/cluster/mod.rs
pub fn extract_clusters(
    mut commands: Commands,
    views: Extract<Query<(Entity, &Clusters, &Camera)>>,
) {
    for (entity, clusters, camera) in &views {
        // some code
        commands.get_or_spawn(entity).insert(...);
    }
}
```
One of the primary consequences of the retained rendering world is that
there's no longer a one-to-one mapping from entity IDs in the main world
to entity IDs in the render world. Unlike in Bevy 0.14, Entity 42 in the
main world doesn't necessarily map to entity 42 in the render world.

Previous code which called `get_or_spawn(main_world_entity)` in the
render world (`Extract<Query<(Entity, ...)>>` returns main world
entities). Instead, you should use `&RenderEntity` and
`render_entity.id()` to get the correct entity in the render world. Note
that this entity does need to be synced first in order to have a
`RenderEntity`.

When performing manual abstraction, this won't happen automatically
(like with `ExtractComponentPlugin`) so add a `SyncToRenderWorld` marker
component to the entities you want to extract.

This results in the following code:
```rust
// in render world, inspired by bevy_pbr/src/cluster/mod.rs
pub fn extract_clusters(
    mut commands: Commands,
    views: Extract<Query<(&RenderEntity, &Clusters, &Camera)>>,
) {
    for (render_entity, clusters, camera) in &views {
        // some code
        commands.get_or_spawn(render_entity.id()).insert(...);
    }
}

// in main world, when spawning
world.spawn(Clusters::default(), Camera::default(), SyncToRenderWorld)
```

### Looking up `Entity` ids in the render world

As previously stated, there's now no correspondence between main world
and render world `Entity` identifiers.

Querying for `Entity` in the render world will return the `Entity` id in
the render world: query for `MainEntity` (and use its `id()` method) to
get the corresponding entity in the main world.

This is also a good way to tell the difference between synced and
unsynced entities in the render world, because unsynced entities won't
have a `MainEntity` component.

---------

Co-authored-by: re0312 <re0312@outlook.com>
Co-authored-by: re0312 <45868716+re0312@users.noreply.github.com>
Co-authored-by: Periwink <charlesbour@gmail.com>
Co-authored-by: Anselmo Sampietro <ans.samp@gmail.com>
Co-authored-by: Emerson Coskey <56370779+ecoskey@users.noreply.github.com>
Co-authored-by: Alice Cecile <alice.i.cecile@gmail.com>
Co-authored-by: Christian Hughes <9044780+ItsDoot@users.noreply.github.com>
2024-09-30 18:51:43 +00:00
ickshonpe
c5742ff43e
Simplified ui_stack_system (#9889)
# Objective

`ui_stack_system` generates a tree of `StackingContexts` which it then
flattens to get the `UiStack`.

But there's no need to construct a new tree. We can query for nodes with
a global `ZIndex`, add those nodes to the root nodes list and then build
the `UiStack` from a walk of the existing layout tree, ignoring any
branches that have a global `Zindex`.

Fixes #9877

## Solution

Split the `ZIndex` enum into two separate components, `ZIndex` and
`GlobalZIndex`

Query for nodes with a `GlobalZIndex`, add those nodes to the root nodes
list and then build the `UiStack` from a walk of the existing layout
tree, filtering branches by `Without<GlobalZIndex>` so we don't revisit
nodes.

```
cargo run --profile stress-test --features trace_tracy --example many_buttons
```

<img width="672" alt="ui-stack-system-walk-split-enum"
src="https://github.com/bevyengine/bevy/assets/27962798/11e357a5-477f-4804-8ada-c4527c009421">

(Yellow is this PR, red is main)

---

## Changelog
`Zindex`
* The `ZIndex` enum has been split into two separate components `ZIndex`
(which replaces `ZIndex::Local`) and `GlobalZIndex` (which replaces
`ZIndex::Global`). An entity can have both a `ZIndex` and
`GlobalZIndex`, in comparisons `ZIndex` breaks ties if two
`GlobalZIndex` values are equal.

`ui_stack_system`
* Instead of generating a tree of `StackingContexts`, query for nodes
with a `GlobalZIndex`, add those nodes to the root nodes list and then
build the `UiStack` from a walk of the existing layout tree, filtering
branches by `Without<GlobalZIndex` so we don't revisit nodes.

## Migration Guide

The `ZIndex` enum has been split into two separate components `ZIndex`
(which replaces `ZIndex::Local`) and `GlobalZIndex` (which replaces
`ZIndex::Global`). An entity can have both a `ZIndex` and
`GlobalZIndex`, in comparisons `ZIndex` breaks ties if two
`GlobalZindex` values are equal.

---------

Co-authored-by: Gabriel Bourgeois <gabriel.bourgeoisv4si@gmail.com>
Co-authored-by: Alice Cecile <alice.i.cecile@gmail.com>
Co-authored-by: UkoeHB <37489173+UkoeHB@users.noreply.github.com>
2024-09-30 18:43:57 +00:00
MiniaczQ
fc93e13c36
Populated (query) system param (#15488)
# Objective

Add a `Populated` system parameter that acts like `Query`, but prevents
system from running if there are no matching entities.

Fixes: #15302

## Solution

Implement the system param which newtypes the `Query`.
The only change is new validation, which fails if query is empty.

The new system param is used in `fallible_params` example.

## Testing

Ran `fallible_params` example.

---------

Co-authored-by: Alice Cecile <alice.i.cecile@gmail.com>
2024-09-30 18:05:00 +00:00
IceSentry
120d66482e
Clarify purpose of shader_instancing example (#15456)
# Objective

- The shader_instancing example can be misleading since it doesn't
explain that bevy has built in automatic instancing.

## Solution

- Explain that bevy has built in instancing and that this example is for
advanced users.
- Add a new automatic_instancing example that shows how to use the built
in automatic instancing
- Rename the shader_instancing example to custom_shader_instancing to
highlight that this is a more advanced implementation

---------

Co-authored-by: JMS55 <47158642+JMS55@users.noreply.github.com>
2024-09-30 17:39:58 +00:00
charlotte
40c26f80aa
Gpu readback (#15419)
# Objective

Adds a new `Readback` component to request for readback of a
`Handle<Image>` or `Handle<ShaderStorageBuffer>` to the CPU in a future
frame.

## Solution

We track the `Readback` component and allocate a target buffer to write
the gpu resource into and map it back asynchronously, which then fires a
trigger on the entity in the main world. This proccess is asynchronous,
and generally takes a few frames.

## Showcase

```rust
let mut buffer = ShaderStorageBuffer::from(vec![0u32; 16]);
buffer.buffer_description.usage |= BufferUsages::COPY_SRC;
let buffer = buffers.add(buffer);

commands
    .spawn(Readback::buffer(buffer.clone()))
    .observe(|trigger: Trigger<ReadbackComplete>| {
        info!("Buffer data from previous frame {:?}", trigger.event());
    });
```

---------

Co-authored-by: Kristoffer Søholm <k.soeholm@gmail.com>
Co-authored-by: IceSentry <IceSentry@users.noreply.github.com>
2024-09-30 17:28:55 +00:00
Clar Fon
af9b073b0f
Split TextureAtlasSources out of TextureAtlasLayout and make TextureAtlasLayout serializable (#15344)
# Objective

Mostly covers the first point in
https://github.com/bevyengine/bevy/issues/13713#issuecomment-2364786694

The idea here is that a lot of people want to load their own texture
atlases, and many of them do this by deserializing some custom version
of `TextureAtlasLayout`. This makes that a little easier by providing
`serde` impls for them.

## Solution

In order to make `TextureAtlasLayout` serializable, the custom texture
mappings that are added by `TextureAtlasBuilder` were separated into
their own type, `TextureAtlasSources`. The inner fields are made public
so people can create their own version of this type, although because it
embeds asset IDs, it's not as easily serializable. In particular,
atlases that are loaded directly (e.g. sprite sheets) will not have a
copy of this map, and so, don't need to construct it at all.

As an aside, since this is the very first thing in `bevy_sprite` with
`serde` impls, I've added a `serialize` feature to the crate and made
sure it gets activated when the `serialize` feature is enabled on the
parent `bevy` crate.

## Testing

I was kind of shocked that there isn't anywhere in the code besides a
single example that actually used this functionality, so, it was
relatively straightforward to do.

In #13713, among other places, folks have mentioned adding custom
serialization into their pipelines. It would be nice to hear from people
whether this change matches what they're doing in their code, and if
it's relatively seamless to adapt to. I suspect that the answer is yes,
but, that's mainly the only other kind of testing that can be added.

## Migration Guide

`TextureAtlasBuilder` no longer stores a mapping back to the original
images in `TextureAtlasLayout`; that functionality has been added to a
new struct, `TextureAtlasSources`, instead. This also means that the
signature for `TextureAtlasBuilder::finish` has changed, meaning that
calls of the form:

```rust
let (atlas_layout, image) = builder.build()?;
```

Will now change to the form:

```rust
let (atlas_layout, atlas_sources, image) = builder.build()?;
```

And instead of performing a reverse-lookup from the layout, like so:

```rust
let atlas_layout_handle = texture_atlases.add(atlas_layout.clone());
let index = atlas_layout.get_texture_index(&my_handle);
let handle = TextureAtlas {
    layout: atlas_layout_handle,
    index,
};
```

You can perform the lookup from the sources instead:

```rust
let atlas_layout = texture_atlases.add(atlas_layout);
let index = atlas_sources.get_texture_index(&my_handle);
let handle = TextureAtlas {
    layout: atlas_layout,
    index,
};
```

Additionally, `TextureAtlasSources` also has a convenience method,
`handle`, which directly combines the index and an existing
`TextureAtlasLayout` handle into a new `TextureAtlas`:

```rust
let atlas_layout = texture_atlases.add(atlas_layout);
let handle = atlas_sources.handle(atlas_layout, &my_handle);
```

## Extra notes

In the future, it might make sense to combine the three types returned
by `TextureAtlasBuilder` into their own struct, just so that people
don't need to assign variable names to all three parts. In particular,
when creating a version that can be loaded directly (like #11873), we
could probably use this new type.
2024-09-30 17:11:56 +00:00
Sou1gh0st
78a3aae81b
feat(gltf): add name component to gltf mesh primitive (#13912)
# Objective

- fixes https://github.com/bevyengine/bevy/issues/13473

## Solution

- When a single mesh is assigned multiple materials, it is divided into
several primitive nodes, with each primitive assigned a unique material.
Presently, these primitives are named using the format Mesh.index, which
complicates querying. To improve this, we can assign a specific name to
each primitive based on the material’s name, since each primitive
corresponds to one material exclusively.

## Testing

- I have included a simple example which shows how to query a material
and mesh part based on the new name component.

## Changelog
- adds `GltfMaterialName` component to the mesh entity of the gltf
primitive node.

---------

Co-authored-by: Alice Cecile <alice.i.cecile@gmail.com>
2024-09-30 16:51:52 +00:00
MiniaczQ
5289e18e0b
System param validation for observers, system registry and run once (#15526)
# Objective

Fixes #15394

## Solution

Observers now validate params.

System registry has a new error variant for when system running fails
due to invalid parameters.

Run once now returns a `Result<Out, RunOnceError>` instead of `Out`.
This is more inline with system registry, which also returns a result.

I'll address warning messages in #15500.

## Testing

Added one test for each case.

---

## Migration Guide

- `RunSystemOnce::run_system_once` and
`RunSystemOnce::run_system_once_with` now return a `Result<Out>` instead
of just `Out`

---------

Co-authored-by: Alice Cecile <alice.i.cecile@gmail.com>
Co-authored-by: Zachary Harrold <zac@harrold.com.au>
2024-09-30 01:00:39 +00:00
Sou1gh0st
39d96ef0fd
Implement volumetric fog support for both point lights and spotlights (#15361)
# Objective
- Fixes: https://github.com/bevyengine/bevy/issues/14451

## Solution
- Adding volumetric fog sampling code for both point lights and
spotlights.

## Testing
- I have modified the example of volumetric_fog.rs by adding a
volumetric point light and a volumetric spotlight.


https://github.com/user-attachments/assets/3eeb77a0-f22d-40a6-a48a-2dd75d55a877
2024-09-29 21:30:53 +00:00
JMS55
9cc7e7c080
Meshlet screenspace-derived tangents (#15084)
* Save 16 bytes per vertex by calculating tangents in the shader at
runtime, rather than storing them in the vertex data.
* Based on https://jcgt.org/published/0009/03/04,
https://www.jeremyong.com/graphics/2023/12/16/surface-gradient-bump-mapping.
* Fixed visbuffer resolve to use the updated algorithm that flips ddy
correctly
* Added some more docs about meshlet material limitations, and some
TODOs about transforming UV coordinates for the future.


![image](https://github.com/user-attachments/assets/222d8192-8c82-4d77-945d-53670a503761)

For testing add a normal map to the bunnies with StandardMaterial like
below, and then test that on both main and this PR (make sure to
download the correct bunny for each). Results should be mostly
identical.

```rust
normal_map_texture: Some(asset_server.load_with_settings(
    "textures/BlueNoise-Normal.png",
    |settings: &mut ImageLoaderSettings| settings.is_srgb = false,
)),
```
2024-09-29 18:39:25 +00:00
hshrimp
8316d89699
rename QuerySingle to Single (#15507)
# Objective

- Fixes #15504
2024-09-29 03:26:28 +00:00
MiniaczQ
c1486654d7
QuerySingle family of system params (#15476)
# Objective

Add the following system params:
- `QuerySingle<D, F>` - Valid if only one matching entity exists,
- `Option<QuerySingle<D, F>>` - Valid if zero or one matching entity
exists.

As @chescock pointed out, we don't need `Mut` variants.

Fixes: #15264

## Solution

Implement the type and both variants of system params.
Also implement `ReadOnlySystemParam` for readonly queries.

Added a new ECS example `fallible_params` which showcases `SingleQuery`
usage.
In the future we might want to add `NonEmptyQuery`,
`NonEmptyEventReader` and `Res` to it (or maybe just stop at mentioning
it).

## Testing

Tested with the example.
There is a lot of warning spam so we might want to implement #15391.
2024-09-28 19:35:27 +00:00
Liam Gallagher
60cf7ca025
Refactor BRP to allow for 3rd-party transports (#15438)
## Objective

Closes #15408 (somewhat)

## Solution

- Moved the existing HTTP transport to its own module with its own
plugin (`RemoteHttpPlugin`) (disabled on WASM)
- Swapped out the `smol` crate for the smaller crates it re-exports to
make it easier to keep out non-wasm code (HTTP transport needs
`async-io` which can't build on WASM)
- Added a new public `BrpSender` resource holding the matching sender
for the `BrpReceiver`' (formally `BrpMailbox`). This allows other crates
to send `BrpMessage`'s to the "mailbox".

## Testing

TODO

---------

Co-authored-by: Matty <weatherleymatthew@gmail.com>
2024-09-27 20:09:46 +00:00
s-puig
e788e3bc83
Implement gamepads as entities (#12770)
# Objective

- Significantly improve the ergonomics of gamepads and allow new
features

Gamepads are a bit unergonomic to work with, they use resources but
unlike other inputs, they are not limited to a single gamepad, to get
around this it uses an identifier (Gamepad) to interact with anything
causing all sorts of issues.

1. There are too many: Gamepads, GamepadSettings, GamepadInfo,
ButtonInput<T>, 2 Axis<T>.
2. ButtonInput/Axis generic methods become really inconvenient to use
e.g. any_pressed()
3. GamepadButton/Axis structs are unnecessary boilerplate:

```rust
for gamepad in gamepads.iter() {
        if button_inputs.just_pressed(GamepadButton::new(gamepad, GamepadButtonType::South)) {
            info!("{:?} just pressed South", gamepad);
        } else if button_inputs.just_released(GamepadButton::new(gamepad, GamepadButtonType::South))
        {
            info!("{:?} just released South", gamepad);
        }
}
```
4. Projects often need to create resources to store the selected gamepad
and have to manually check if their gamepad is still valid anyways.

- Previously attempted by #3419 and #12674


## Solution

- Implement gamepads as entities.

Using entities solves all the problems above and opens new
possibilities.

1. Reduce boilerplate and allows iteration

```rust
let is_pressed = gamepads_buttons.iter().any(|buttons| buttons.pressed(GamepadButtonType::South))
```
2. ButtonInput/Axis generic methods become ergonomic again 
```rust
gamepad_buttons.any_just_pressed([GamepadButtonType::Start, GamepadButtonType::Select])
```
3. Reduces the number of public components significantly (Gamepad,
GamepadSettings, GamepadButtons, GamepadAxes)
4. Components are highly convenient. Gamepad optional features could now
be expressed naturally (`Option<Rumble> or Option<Gyro>`), allows devs
to attach their own components and filter them, so code like this
becomes possible:
```rust
fn move_player<const T: usize>(
    player: Query<&Transform, With<Player<T>>>,
    gamepads_buttons: Query<&GamepadButtons, With<Player<T>>>,
) {
    if let Ok(gamepad_buttons) = gamepads_buttons.get_single() {
        if gamepad_buttons.pressed(GamepadButtonType::South) {
            // move player
        }
    }
}
```
---

## Follow-up

- [ ] Run conditions?
- [ ] Rumble component

# Changelog

## Added

TODO

## Changed

TODO

## Removed

TODO


## Migration Guide

TODO

---------

Co-authored-by: Carter Anderson <mcanders1@gmail.com>
2024-09-27 20:07:20 +00:00
Joona Aalto
39d6a745d2
Migrate visibility to required components (#15474)
# Objective

The next step in the migration to required components: Deprecate
`VisibilityBundle` and make `Visibility` require `InheritedVisibility`
and `ViewVisibility`, as per the [chosen
proposal](https://hackmd.io/@bevy/required_components/%2FcO7JPSAQR5G0J_j5wNwtOQ).

## Solution

Deprecate `VisibilityBundle` and make `Visibility` require
`InheritedVisibility` and `ViewVisibility`.

I chose not to deprecate `SpatialBundle` yet, as doing so would mean
that we need to manually add `Visibility` to a bunch of places. It will
be nicer once meshes, sprites, lights, fog, and cameras have been
migrated, since they will require `Transform` and `Visibility` and
therefore not need manually added defaults for them.

---

## Migration Guide

Replace all insertions of `VisibilityBundle` with the `Visibility`
component. The other components required by it will now be inserted
automatically.
2024-09-27 19:06:16 +00:00
Emerson Coskey
b04947d44f
Migrate bevy_transform to required components (#14964)
The first step in the migration to required components! This PR removes
`GlobalTransform` from all user-facing code, since it's now added
automatically wherever `Transform` is used.

## Testing

- None of the examples I tested were broken, and I assume breaking
transforms in any way would be visible *everywhere*

---

## Changelog

- Make `Transform` require `GlobalTransform`
~~- Remove `GlobalTransform` from all engine bundles~~
- Remove in-engine insertions of GlobalTransform and TransformBundle
- Deprecate `TransformBundle`
- update docs to reflect changes

## Migration Guide

Replace all insertions of `GlobalTransform` and/or `TransformBundle`
with `Transform` alone.

---------

Co-authored-by: Alice Cecile <alice.i.cecile@gmail.com>
Co-authored-by: Tim <JustTheCoolDude@gmail.com>
2024-09-27 17:06:48 +00:00
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
ickshonpe
0fe33c3bba
use precomputed border values (#15163)
# Objective

Fixes #15142

## Solution

* Moved all the UI border geometry calculations that were scattered
through the UI extraction functions into `ui_layout_system`.
* Added a `border: BorderRect` field to `Node` to store the border size
computed by `ui_layout_system`.
* Use the border values returned from Taffy rather than calculate them
ourselves during extraction.
* Removed the `logical_rect` and `physical_rect` methods from `Node` the
descriptions and namings are deceptive, it's better to create the rects
manually instead.
* Added a method `outline_radius` to `Node` that calculates the border
radius of outlines.
* For border values `ExtractedUiNode` takes `BorderRect` and
`ResolvedBorderRadius` now instead of raw `[f32; 4]` values and converts
them in `prepare_uinodes`.
* Removed some unnecessary scaling and clamping of border values
(#15142).
* Added a `BorderRect::ZERO` constant.
* Added an `outlined_node_size` method to `Node`.

## Testing

Added some non-uniform borders to the border example. Everything seems
to be in order:

<img width="626" alt="nub"
src="https://github.com/user-attachments/assets/258ed8b5-1a9e-4ac5-99c2-6bf25c0ef31c">

## Migration Guide

The `logical_rect` and `physical_rect` methods have been removed from
`Node`. Use `Rect::from_center_size` with the translation and node size
instead.

The types of the fields border and border_radius of `ExtractedUiNode`
have been changed to `BorderRect` and `ResolvedBorderRadius`
respectively.

---------

Co-authored-by: UkoeHB <37489173+UkoeHB@users.noreply.github.com>
Co-authored-by: akimakinai <105044389+akimakinai@users.noreply.github.com>
2024-09-26 23:10:35 +00:00