# Objective
GlobalTransform's current methods make it unintuitive, long and clunky
to access just the rotation or just the scale.
## Solution
Dedicated just_rotation() and scale() methods to access just these
properties.
I'm not sure about the naming, I chose just_rotation() to show that try
to indicate there is a waste since it also computes the other fields.
## Testing
- Did you test these changes? If so, how?
I tried logging the methods with a rotating and scaling cube and the
values were correct.
- Are there any parts that need more testing?
My methods are based on existing bevy/glam methods so should be correct
from the getgo.
- How can other people (reviewers) test your changes? Is there anything
specific they need to know?
Probably the easiest is using the 3d_rotations example, adding scaling
to it and then logging the methods I added
---
## Showcase
```rust
fn log(gt_query: Query<&GlobalTransform>) {
for global_transform in gt_query().iter() {
println!("{} {}", global_transform.just_rotation(), global_transform.scale());
}
}
```
---------
Co-authored-by: Sigma-dev <antonin.programming@gmail.com>
Co-authored-by: Alice Cecile <alice.i.cecile@gmail.com>
# Objective
- fix formatting issue in "mesh_view_binding.wgsl"
_note: As naga-oil preprocessor match the whole line when finding an
"#endif",
It's just for external formatting tool and consistency._
## Solution
Trivial change.
Add '//' before the closing comment of the "#endif"
# Objective
gpu based mesh uniform construction in the `GpuPreprocessNode` is
currently in `Core3d`. The node iterates all views and schedules the
uniform construction for each. so
- when there are multiple 3d cameras, it runs multiple times on each
view
- if a view wants to render meshes but doesn't use the `Core3d` graph,
the camera must run later than at least one `Core3d`-based camera (or
add the node to its own graph, duplicating the work)
- If views want to share mesh uniforms there is no way to avoid running
the preprocessing for every view
## Solution
- move the node to the top level of the rendergraph, before the camera
driver node
- make the `PreprocessBindGroup` `clone`able, and add a
`SkipGpuPreprocessing` component to allow opting out per view
# Objective
Currently, if we have two cameras with the same output texture, one with
`CameraOutputMode::Write` and one with `CameraOutputMode::Skip`, it is
possible for the `CameraOutputMode::Write` camera to be assigned alpha
blending (which is the fallback blending when multiple cameras write to
the same output texture), although it is the only camera writing to the
output texture. This may or may not happen every restart of the app,
because the camera iteration order in prepare_view_upscaling_pipelines
isn't consistent. Since this is random behaviour I consider this a bug
and didn't add a migration guide.
## Solution
In `prepare_view_upscaling_pipelines` make sure we don't consider
cameras with CameraOutputMode::Skip to be outputting something to the
output texture.
## Testing
I ran a few examples to make sure nothing obvious is broken. There is no
example using CameraOutputMode::Skip, so I only tested the change in my
own App where this was relevant, which however isn't public.
# Objective
- Choose LOD based on normal simplification error in addition to
position error
- Update meshoptimizer to 0.22, which has a bunch of simplifier
improvements
## Testing
- Did you test these changes? If so, how?
- Visualize normals, and compare LOD changes before and after. Normals
no longer visibly change as the LOD cut changes.
- Are there any parts that need more testing?
- No
- How can other people (reviewers) test your changes? Is there anything
specific they need to know?
- Run the meshlet example in this PR and on main and move around to
change the LOD cut. Before running each example, in
meshlet_mesh_material.wgsl, replace `let color = vec3(rand_f(&rng),
rand_f(&rng), rand_f(&rng));` with `let color =
(vertex_output.world_normal + 1.0) / 2.0;`. Make sure to download the
appropriate bunny asset for each branch!
# Objective
1. UI texture slicing chops and scales an image to fit the size of a
node and isn't meant to place any constraints on the size of the node
itself, but because the required components changes required `ImageSize`
and `ContentSize` for nodes with `UiImage`, texture sliced nodes are
laid out using an `ImageMeasure`.
2. In 0.14 users could spawn a `(UiImage, NodeBundle)` which would
display an image stretched to fill the UI node's bounds ignoring the
image's instrinsic size. Now that `UiImage` requires `ContentSize`,
there's no option to display an image without its size placing
constrains on the UI layout (unless you force the `Node` to a fixed
size, but that's not a solution).
3. It's desirable that the `Sprite` and `UiImage` share similar APIs.
Fixes#16109
## Solution
* Remove the `Component` impl from `ImageScaleMode`.
* Add a `Stretch` variant to `ImageScaleMode`.
* Add a field `scale_mode: ImageScaleMode` to `Sprite`.
* Add a field `mode: UiImageMode` to `UiImage`.
* Add an enum `UiImageMode` similar to `ImageScaleMode` but with
additional UI specific variants.
* Remove the queries for `ImageScaleMode` from Sprite and UI extraction,
and refer to the new fields instead.
* Change `ui_layout_system` to update measure funcs on any change to
`ContentSize`s to enable manual clearing without removing the component.
* Don't add a measure unless `UiImageMode::Auto` is set in
`update_image_content_size_system`. Mutably deref the `Mut<ContentSize>`
if the `UiImage` is changed to force removal of any existing measure
func.
## Testing
Remove all the constraints from the ui_texture_slice example:
```rust
//! This example illustrates how to create buttons with their textures sliced
//! and kept in proportion instead of being stretched by the button dimensions
use bevy::{
color::palettes::css::{GOLD, ORANGE},
prelude::*,
winit::WinitSettings,
};
fn main() {
App::new()
.add_plugins(DefaultPlugins)
// Only run the app when there is user input. This will significantly reduce CPU/GPU use.
.insert_resource(WinitSettings::desktop_app())
.add_systems(Startup, setup)
.add_systems(Update, button_system)
.run();
}
fn button_system(
mut interaction_query: Query<
(&Interaction, &Children, &mut UiImage),
(Changed<Interaction>, With<Button>),
>,
mut text_query: Query<&mut Text>,
) {
for (interaction, children, mut image) in &mut interaction_query {
let mut text = text_query.get_mut(children[0]).unwrap();
match *interaction {
Interaction::Pressed => {
**text = "Press".to_string();
image.color = GOLD.into();
}
Interaction::Hovered => {
**text = "Hover".to_string();
image.color = ORANGE.into();
}
Interaction::None => {
**text = "Button".to_string();
image.color = Color::WHITE;
}
}
}
}
fn setup(mut commands: Commands, asset_server: Res<AssetServer>) {
let image = asset_server.load("textures/fantasy_ui_borders/panel-border-010.png");
let slicer = TextureSlicer {
border: BorderRect::square(22.0),
center_scale_mode: SliceScaleMode::Stretch,
sides_scale_mode: SliceScaleMode::Stretch,
max_corner_scale: 1.0,
};
// ui camera
commands.spawn(Camera2d);
commands
.spawn(Node {
width: Val::Percent(100.0),
height: Val::Percent(100.0),
align_items: AlignItems::Center,
justify_content: JustifyContent::Center,
..default()
})
.with_children(|parent| {
for [w, h] in [[150.0, 150.0], [300.0, 150.0], [150.0, 300.0]] {
parent
.spawn((
Button,
Node {
// width: Val::Px(w),
// height: Val::Px(h),
// horizontally center child text
justify_content: JustifyContent::Center,
// vertically center child text
align_items: AlignItems::Center,
margin: UiRect::all(Val::Px(20.0)),
..default()
},
UiImage::new(image.clone()),
ImageScaleMode::Sliced(slicer.clone()),
))
.with_children(|parent| {
// parent.spawn((
// Text::new("Button"),
// TextFont {
// font: asset_server.load("fonts/FiraSans-Bold.ttf"),
// font_size: 33.0,
// ..default()
// },
// TextColor(Color::srgb(0.9, 0.9, 0.9)),
// ));
});
}
});
}
```
This should result in a blank window, since without any constraints the
texture slice image nodes should be zero-sized. But in main the image
nodes are given the size of the underlying unsliced source image
`textures/fantasy_ui_borders/panel-border-010.png`:
<img width="321" alt="slicing"
src="https://github.com/user-attachments/assets/cbd74c9c-14cd-4b4d-93c6-7c0152bb05ee">
For this PR need to change the lines:
```
UiImage::new(image.clone()),
ImageScaleMode::Sliced(slicer.clone()),
```
to
```
UiImage::new(image.clone()).with_mode(UiImageMode::Sliced(slicer.clone()),
```
and then nothing should be rendered, as desired.
---------
Co-authored-by: Carter Anderson <mcanders1@gmail.com>
# Objective
The schedule graph can easily confirm whether a set is contained or not.
This helps me in my personal project where I write an extension trait
for `Schedule` and I want to configure a specific set in its methods.
The set in question has a run condition though and I don't want to add
that condition to the same schedule as many times as the trait methods
are called. Since the non-pub set is unknown to the schedule until then,
a `contains_set` is sufficient.
It is probably trivial to add a method that returns an `Option<NodeId>`
as well but as I personally don't need it I did not add that. If it is
desired I can do so here though. It might be unneeded to have a
`contains_set` then because one could check `is_some` on the returned id
in that case.
An argument against that is that future changes may be easier if only a
`contains_set` needs to be ported.
## Solution
Added `ScheduleGraph::contains_set`.
## Testing
I put the below showcase code into a temporary unit test and it worked.
If wanted I add it as a test too but I did not see that other more
somewhat complicated methods have tests
---
## Showcase
```rs
#[derive(ScheduleLabel, Debug, Default, Clone, Copy, PartialEq, Eq, Hash)]
struct MySchedule;
#[derive(SystemSet, Debug, Default, Clone, Copy, PartialEq, Eq, Hash)]
struct MySet;
let mut schedule = Schedule::new(MySchedule);
assert_eq!(schedule.graph().contains_set(MySet), false);
schedule.configure_sets(MySet);
assert_eq!(schedule.graph().contains_set(MySet), true);
```
# Objective
- `CircularSegment` and `CircularSector` are well defined 2D shapes with
both an area and a perimeter.
# Solution
- This PR implements `perimeter` for both and moves the existsing `area`
functions into the `Measured2d` implementations.
## Testing
- The `arc_tests` have been extended to also check for perimeters.
# Objective
Currently there's no way to change the window's cursor icon with the
`custom_cursor` feature **disabled**. You should still be able to set
system cursor icons.
Connections:
- https://github.com/bevyengine/bevy/pull/15649
## Solution
Move some `custom_cursor` feature gates around, as to expose the
`CursorIcon` type again.
Note this refactoring was mainly piloted by hunting after the compiler
warnings -- I shouldn't have missed anything, but FYI.
## Testing
Disabled the `custom_cursor` feature, ran the `window_settings` example.
# Objective
#14273 changed `Msaa` to be a component rather than a resource. However,
the documentation still says that it is a resource. This tripped me up
during migration to 0.15 until I looked at the type definition.
Additionally, the docs have some unnecessary repetition and some grammar
mistakes, and they don't link to camera documentation.
## Solution
Fix up the docs!
# Objective
When merging two meshes, we need to find the offset of indices for the
second mesh. Currently it is done by inserting empty positions if
positions is not set.
Although practically it is not an issue, this does not feel right:
- We did not have positions before, then why we have positions after
merge?
- Moreover, if positions are not set, but uvs are not empty, computed
offset will be zero, while it should be equal to the number of uvs.
## Solution
Use `Mesh::count_vertices` to find the number of vertices.
## Testing
Looking hard.
# Objective
There's integer overflow in `Mesh::merge` in branches like this:
405fa3e8ea/crates/bevy_mesh/src/mesh.rs (L857-L859)
we truncate `u32` to `u16` and ignore integer overflow on `u16`. This
may lead to unexpected results when the number of vertices exceeds
`u16::MAX`.
## Solution
Convert indices storage to `u32` when necessary.
## Testing
- Unit test added for `extend` function
- For changes in `Mesh`, I presume it is already tested elsewhere
# Objective
- Fixes#15757
## Solution
- Add the platform specific property `prefers_home_indicator_hidden` to
bevy's Window configuration, and applying it by invoking
`with_prefers_home_indicator_hidden` in `winit`.
## Testing
- I have tested the `bevy_mobile_example` on the iOS platform.
## Showcase
- Currently, the `prefers_home_indicator_hidden` is enabled in the
bevy_mobile_example demo. You can test it with an iOS device. The home
indicator will disappear after several seconds of inactivity in the
bottom areas.
---------
Co-authored-by: Alice Cecile <alice.i.cecile@gmail.com>
# Objective
Fix#15841
## Solution
Added an update schedule as recommended in the issue.
## Testing
Doc test is run and passes.
Ran the example in a test app before and after adding the line.
## Showcase
Before:
```
PS C:\Users\BenjaminBrienen\source\bevy_experiment_test> cargo run
Blocking waiting for file lock on build directory
Compiling bevy_experiment_test v0.1.0 (C:\Users\BenjaminBrienen\source\bevy_experiment_test)
Finished `dev` profile [unoptimized + debuginfo] target(s) in 1m 41s
Running `target\debug\bevy_experiment_test.exe`
```
(nothing happens)
After:
```
PS C:\Users\BenjaminBrienen\source\bevy_experiment_test> cargo run
Blocking waiting for file lock on build directory
Compiling bevy_experiment_test v0.1.0 (C:\Users\BenjaminBrienen\source\bevy_experiment_test)
Finished `dev` profile [unoptimized + debuginfo] target(s) in 14.64s
Running `target\debug\bevy_experiment_test.exe`
system of subapp is executing and the Counter: 10
```
Fixes a small divergence between `bevy_mod_picking` and the up-streamed
`bevy_picking`: Both have a `Pointer<E>` constructor with the same
types, but in a different order.
This is part of work being done on `bevy_mod_picking` to simplify the
migration to `bevy_picking`.
# Objective
Make all the methods and associated functions belonging to
`ComputedNode` const.
## Solution
Constify (except for `inner_radius` which uses non-const `min` and
`max`).
---------
Co-authored-by: Alice Cecile <alice.i.cecile@gmail.com>
# Objective
Fixes#15676
## Solution
`remove` returns the removed item
Add `take`
## Testing
None yet
## Migration Guide
If you don't need the returned value from `remove`, discard it.
# Objective
The `ContentSize` requirement on `UiImage` got lost during merge
conflict fixes, causing some images such as the icons on the `game_menu`
example to disappear.
Fixes#16136
## Solution
Require `ContentSize` on `UiImage` again.
---------
Co-authored-by: Alice Cecile <alice.i.cecile@gmail.com>
# Objective
Taffy added layout rounding a while ago but it had a couple of bugs and
caused some problems with the fussy `ab_glyph` text implementation. So I
disabled Taffy's builtin rounding and added some hacks ad hoc that fixed
(some) of those issues. Since then though Taffy's rounding algorithm has
improved while we've changed layout a lot and migrated to `cosmic-text`
so those hacks don't help any more and in some cases cause significant
problems.
Also our rounding implementation only rounds to the nearest logical
pixel, whereas Taffy rounds to the nearest physical pixel meaning it's
much more accurate with high dpi displays.
fixes#15197
## Some examples of layout rounding errors visible in the UI examples
These errors are much more obvious at high scale factor, you might not
see any problems at a scale factor of 1.
`cargo run --example text_wrap_debug`
<img width="1000" alt="text_debug_gaps"
src="https://github.com/user-attachments/assets/5a584016-b8e2-487b-8842-f0f359077391">
The narrow horizontal and vertical lines are gaps in the layout caused
by errors in the coordinate rounding.
`cargo run --example text_debug`
<img width="1000" alt="text_debug"
src="https://github.com/user-attachments/assets/a4b37c02-a2fd-441c-a7bd-cd7a1a72e7dd">
The two text blocks here are aligned right to the same boundary but in
this screen shot you can see that the lower block is one pixel off to
the left. Because the size of this text node changes between frames with
the reported framerate the rounding errors cause it to jump left and
right.
## Solution
Remove all our custom rounding hacks and reenable Taffy's layout
rounding.
The gaps in the `text_wrap_debug` example are gone:
<img width="1000" alt="text_wrap_debug_fix"
src="https://github.com/user-attachments/assets/92d2dd97-30c6-4ac8-99f1-6d65358995a7">
This doesn't fix some of the gaps that occur between borders and content
but they seem appear to be a rendering problem as they disappear with
`UiAntiAlias::Off` set.
## Testing
Run the examples as described above in the `Objective` section. With
this PR the problems mentioned shouldn't appear.
Also added an example in a separate PR #16096 `layout_rounding_debug`
for identifying these issues.
## Migration Guide
`UiSurface::get_layout` now also returns the final sizes before
rounding. Call `.0` on the `Ok` result to get the previously returned
`taffy::Layout` value.
---------
Co-authored-by: Rob Parrett <robparrett@gmail.com>
# Objective
- Fixes#16122
When the wayland feature is not enabled, xwayland is used on wayland.
Nvidia drivers are somewhat bugged on linux and return outdated surfaces
on xwayland for seemingly no reason. Oftentimes at startup we get into
an infine loop where the surface is permanently outdated and nothing (or
sometimes only the first frame) is drawn on the screen.
## Solution
After experimenting I found that we can safely call configure again and
the issue seems to resolve itsef. After this change I couldn't reproduce
the original issue after many tries. More testing is probably needed
though.
The main issue is that `get_current_texture` fails sometimes because the
surface remains outdated even after configuring. It would be better to
just properly handle and never panic when `get_current_texture` fails.
This way we always call configure when outdated and bail when getting
the swapchain fails instead of crashing. The number of special cases is
also reduced.
## Testing
I tested the example "rotation" manually by trying to move around.
It works with X11 and Xwayland and the non panicing code paths didn't
change so other platforms aren't affected.
# Objective
- Display message for `AsBindGroupError::InvalidSamplerType` was not
correctly displaying the binding index
## Solution
- Simple typo fix
## Testing
- Tested locally
## Methodology
A good metric that correlates with compile time is the amount of code
generated by the compiler itself; even if the end binary is exactly the
same size, having more copies of the same code can really slow down
compile time, since it has to figure out whether it needs to include
them or not.
The measurement for this used was the [`cargo-llvm-lines`
crate](https://docs.rs/crate/cargo-llvm-lines) which can measure which
functions are generating the most lines of LLVM IR, which generally
means more code compiled. The example compiled was the `breakout` game,
to choose something that touches a decent portion of the engine.
## Solution
Based upon the measurements, `bevy_ptr::OwnedPtr::make` was taking up
4061 lines of LLVM IR in the example code. So, I separated part of this
function into a less-monomorphised version to reduce the amount of
generated code. This was by far the most lines emitted by any single
function.
## Results
After this change, only 2560 lines are emitted, accounting for a 36%
decrease. I tried timing the results and it seemed like it did decrease
compile times a bit, but honestly, the data is really noisy and I can't
be bothered to compile bevy for hours on end to get enough data points.
The tweak feels like an improvement, so, I'll offer it, however small.
# Objective
Remove `calculated_` from the name `ComputedNode::calculated_size` as
redundant, It's obvious from context that it's the resolved size value
and it's inconsistant since none of other fields of `ComputedNode` have
a `calculated_` prefix.
## Alternatives
Rename all the fields of `ComputedNode` to `calculated_*`, this seems
worse.
# Objective
Make the following functions `const` that will be useful to define
colors as constants.
- `Color::srgb_from_array`
- `Color::srgba_u8`
- `Color::srgb_u8`
The last two require Rust 1.82.0.
## Solution
- Make them `const`
- Change MSRV to 1.82.0
## Testing
I tested bevy_color only. My machine does not have enough RAM capacity
to test the whole bevy.
`cargo test -p bevy_color`
# Objective
Missed this in the required components PR review. `ContentSize` isn't
used by regular UI nodes, only those with intrinsically sized content
that needs a measure func.
## Solution
Remove `ContentSize` from `Node`'s required components and add it to the
required components of `Text` and `UiImage`.
---------
Co-authored-by: Alice Cecile <alice.i.cecile@gmail.com>
# Objective
`UiImage` isn't just a general image component now, it's the defining
component for the image widget so it belongs in the image widget's
module.
# Objective
Order independent transparency can filter fragment writes based on the
alpha value and it is currently hard-coded to anything higher than 0.0.
By making that value configurable, users can optimize fragment writes,
potentially reducing the number of layers needed and improving
performance in favor of some transparency quality.
## Solution
This PR adds `alpha_threshold` to the
OrderIndependentTransparencySettings component and uses the struct to
configure a corresponding shader uniform. This uniform is then used
instead of the hard-coded value.
To configure OIT with a custom alpha threshold, use:
```rust
fn setup(mut commands: Commands) {
commands.spawn((
Camera3d::default(),
OrderIndependentTransparencySettings {
layer_count: 8,
alpha_threshold: 0.2,
},
));
}
```
## Testing
I tested this change using the included OIT example, as well as with two
additional projects.
## Migration Guide
If you previously explicitly initialized
OrderIndependentTransparencySettings with your own `layer_count`, you
will now have to add either a `..default()` statement or an explicit
`alpha_threshold` value:
```rust
fn setup(mut commands: Commands) {
commands.spawn((
Camera3d::default(),
OrderIndependentTransparencySettings {
layer_count: 16,
..default()
},
));
}
```
---------
Co-authored-by: JMS55 <47158642+JMS55@users.noreply.github.com>
# Objective
In `bevy_mod_picking` events are accessible through event listeners or
`EventReader`s. When I replaced event listeners with observers, I
removed the `EventReader` for simplicity. This adds it back.
## Solution
All picking events are now properly registered, and can be accessed
through `EventReader<Pointer<E>>`. `Pointer` now tracks the entity the
event targeted initially, and this can also be helpful in observers
(which don't currently do this).
## Testing
The picking examples run fine. This shouldn't really change anything.
---------
Co-authored-by: Aevyrie <aevyrie@gmail.com>
# Objective
- Mesh picking is noisy when a non triangle list is used
- Mesh picking runs even when users don't need it
- Resolve#16065
## Solution
- Don't add the mesh picking plugin by default
- Remove error spam
# Objective
- bevy_dev_tools 0.15.0-rc.1 failed to build docs
- it use bevy_text feature in bevy_ui but it's not enabled by default
- https://docs.rs/crate/bevy_dev_tools/0.15.0-rc.1
-
## Solution
- enable bevy_text feature of bevy_ui
# Objective
- `MeshPickingBackend` and `SpritePickingBackend` do not have the
`Plugin` suffix
- `DefaultPickingPlugins` is masquerading as a `Plugin` when in reality
it should be a `PluginGroup`
- Fixes#16081.
## Solution
- Rename some structures:
|Original Name|New Name|
|-|-|
|`MeshPickingBackend`|`MeshPickingPlugin`|
|`MeshPickingBackendSettings`|`MeshPickingSettings`|
|`SpritePickingBackend`|`SpritePickingPlugin`|
|`UiPickingBackendPlugin`|`UiPickingPlugin`|
- Make `DefaultPickingPlugins` a `PluginGroup`.
- Because `DefaultPickingPlugins` is within the `DefaultPlugins` plugin
group, I also added support for nested plugin groups to the
`plugin_group!` macro.
## Testing
- I used ripgrep to ensure all references were properly renamed.
- For the `plugin_group!` macro, I used `cargo expand` to manually
inspect the expansion of `DefaultPlugins`.
---
## Migration Guide
> [!NOTE]
>
> All 3 of the changed structures were added after 0.14, so this does
not need to be included in the 0.14 to 0.15 migration guide.
- `MeshPickingBackend` is now named `MeshPickingPlugin`.
- `MeshPickingBackendSettings` is now named `MeshPickingSettings`.
- `SpritePickingBackend` is now named `SpritePickingPlugin`.
- `UiPickingBackendPlugin` is now named `UiPickingPlugin`.
- `DefaultPickingPlugins` is now a a `PluginGroup` instead of a
`Plugin`.
# Objective
This PR introduces an `AsyncSeekForwardExt` trait, which I forgot in my
previous PR #14194.
This new trait is analogous to `AsyncSeekExt` and allows all
implementors of `AsyncSeekForward` to directly use the `seek_forward`
function in async contexts.
## Solution
- Implement a new `AsyncSeekForwardExt` trait
- Automatically implement this trait for all types that implement
`AsyncSeekForward`
## Showcase
This new trait allows a similar API to the previous Bevy version:
```rust
#[derive(Default)]
struct UniverseLoader;
#[derive(Asset, TypePath, Debug)]
struct JustALilAsteroid([u8; 128]);
impl AssetLoader for UniverseLoader {
type Asset = JustALilAsteroid;
type Settings = ();
type Error = std::io::Error;
async fn load<'a>(
&'a self,
reader: &'a mut Reader<'a>,
_settings: &'a Self::Settings,
_context: &'a mut LoadContext<'_>,
) -> Result<Self::Asset, Self::Error> {
// read the asteroids entry table
let entry_offset: u64 = /* ... */;
let current_offset: u64 = reader.seek_forward(0).await?;
// jump to the entry
reader.seek_forward(entry_offset - current_offset).await?;
let mut asteroid_buf = [0; 128];
reader.read_exact(&mut asteroid_buf).await?;
Ok(JustALilAsteroid(asteroid_buf))
}
fn extensions(&self) -> &[&str] {
&["celestial"]
}
}
```
The two additional linear texture samplers that PCSS added caused us to
blow past the limit on Apple Silicon macOS and WebGL. To fix the issue,
this commit adds a `--feature pbr_pcss` feature gate that disables PCSS
if not present.
Closes#15345.
Closes#15525.
Closes#15821.
---------
Co-authored-by: Carter Anderson <mcanders1@gmail.com>
Co-authored-by: IceSentry <IceSentry@users.noreply.github.com>
The PCSS PR #13497 increased the size of clusterable objects from 64
bytes to 80 bytes but didn't decrease the UBO size to compensate, so we
blew past the 16kB limit on WebGL 2. This commit fixes the issue by
lowering the maximum number of clusterable objects to 204, which puts us
under the 16kB limit again.
Closes#15998.
# Objective
- Follow up on #16044
- `extract_uinode_borders` uses `bevy_hierarchy` directly instead of
going through the traversal utilities, meaning it won't handle
`GhostNode`s properly.
## Solution
- Replaced the use of `bevy_hierarchy::Parent` with
`UIChildren::get_parent`
## Testing
- Ran the `overflow` example, clipping looks ok.
---
---------
Co-authored-by: Carter Anderson <mcanders1@gmail.com>
# Objective
1. Nodes with `Display::None` set are removed from the layout and have
no position or size. Outlines should not be drawn for a node with
`Display::None` set.
2. The outline and border colors are checked for transparency together.
If only one of the two is transparent, both will get queued.
3. The `node.is_empty()` check is insufficient to check if a border is
present since a non-zero sized node can have a zero width border.
## Solution
1. Add a check to `extract_uinode_borders` and ignore the node if
`Display::None` is set.
2. Filter the border and outline optional components by
`is_fully_transparent`.
3. Check if all the border widths are zero instead.
## Testing
I added dark cyan outlines around the left and right sections in the
`display_and_visibility` example. If you run the example and set the
outermost node to `Display::None` on the right, then you'll see the that
the outline on the left disappears.
# Objective
Fixes#16006
## Solution
We currently re-export `cosmic_text`, which is seemingly motivated by
the desire to use `cosmic_text::FontSystem` in `bevy_text` public APIs
instead of our `CosmicFontSystem` resource wrapper type.
This change makes `bevy_text` a "true" abstraction over `cosmic_text`
(it in fact, was already built to be that way generally and has this one
"leak").
This allows us to remove the `cosmic_text` re-export, which helps clean
up the Rust Analyzer imports and generally makes this a "cleaner" API.
# Objective
- Make the meshlet fill cluster buffers pass slightly faster
- Address https://github.com/bevyengine/bevy/issues/15920 for meshlets
- Added PreviousGlobalTransform as a required meshlet component to avoid
extra archetype moves, slightly alleviating
https://github.com/bevyengine/bevy/issues/14681 for meshlets
- Enforce that MeshletPlugin::cluster_buffer_slots is not greater than
2^25 (glitches will occur otherwise). Technically this field controls
post-lod/culling cluster count, and the issue is on pre-lod/culling
cluster count, but it's still valid now, and in the future this will be
more true.
Needs to be merged after https://github.com/bevyengine/bevy/pull/15846
and https://github.com/bevyengine/bevy/pull/15886
## Solution
- Old pass dispatched a thread per cluster, and did a binary search over
the instances to find which instance the cluster belongs to, and what
meshlet index within the instance it is.
- New pass dispatches a workgroup per instance, and has the workgroup
loop over all meshlets in the instance in order to write out the cluster
data.
- Use a push constant instead of arrayLength to fix the linked bug
- Remap 1d->2d dispatch for software raster only if actually needed to
save on spawning excess workgroups
## Testing
- Did you test these changes? If so, how?
- Ran the meshlet example, and an example with 1041 instances of 32217
meshlets per instance. Profiled the second scene with nsight, went from
0.55ms -> 0.40ms. Small savings. We're pretty much VRAM bandwidth bound
at this point.
- How can other people (reviewers) test your changes? Is there anything
specific they need to know?
- Run the meshlet example
## Changelog (non-meshlets)
- PreviousGlobalTransform now implements the Default trait
Take a bunch more improvements from @zeux's nanite.cpp code.
* Use position-only vertices (discard other attributes) to determine
meshlet connectivity for grouping
* Rather than using the lock borders flag when simplifying meshlet
groups, provide the locked vertices ourselves. The lock borders flag
locks the entire border of the meshlet group, but really we only want to
lock the edges between meshlet groups - outwards facing edges are fine
to unlock. This gives a really significant increase to the DAG quality.
* Add back stuck meshlets (group has only a single meshlet,
simplification failed) to the simplification queue to allow them to get
used later on and have another attempt at simplifying
* Target 8 meshlets per group instead of 4 (second biggest improvement
after manual locks)
* Provide a seed to metis for deterministic meshlet building
* Misc other improvements
We can remove the usage of unsafe after the next upstream meshopt
release, but for now we need to use the ffi function directly. I'll do
another round of improvements later, mainly attribute-aware
simplification and using spatial weights for meshlet grouping.
Need to merge https://github.com/bevyengine/bevy/pull/15846 first.
# Objective
- I made a mistake in #15902, specifically [this
diff](e2faedb99c)
-- the `point_light_count` variable is used for all point lights, not
just shadow mapped ones, so I cannot add `.min(max_texture_cubes)`
there. (Despite `spot_light_count` having `.min(..)`)
It may have broken code like this (where `index` is index of
`point_light` vec):
9930df83ed/crates/bevy_pbr/src/render/light.rs (L848-L850)
and also causes panic here:
9930df83ed/crates/bevy_pbr/src/render/light.rs (L1173-L1174)
## Solution
- Adds `.min(max_texture_cubes)` directly to the loop where texture
views for point lights are created.
## Testing
- `lighting` example (with the directional light removed; original
example doesn't crash as only 1 directional-or-spot light in total is
shadow-mapped on webgl) no longer crashes on webgl
# Objective
1. Prevent weird glitches with stray pixels scattered around the scene
![image](https://github.com/user-attachments/assets/f12adb38-5996-4dc7-bea6-bd326b7317e1)
2. Prevent weird glitchy full-screen triangles that pop-up and destroy
perf (SW rasterizing huge triangles is slow)
![image](https://github.com/user-attachments/assets/d3705427-13a5-47bc-a54b-756f0409da0b)
## Solution
1. Use floating point math in the SW rasterizer bounding box calculation
to handle negative verticss, and add backface culling
2. Force hardware raster for clusters that clip the near plane, and let
the hardware rasterizer handle the clipping
I also adjusted the SW rasterizer threshold to < 64 pixels (little bit
better perf in my test scene, but still need to do a more comprehensive
test), and enabled backface culling for the hardware raster pipeline.
## Testing
- Did you test these changes? If so, how?
- Yes, on an example scene. Issues no longer occur.
- Are there any parts that need more testing?
- No.
- How can other people (reviewers) test your changes? Is there anything
specific they need to know?
- Run the meshlet example.
# Objective
- bevy_remote Cargo.toml file references a readme that doesn't exist
- This is blocking releasing the rc
## Solution
- Remove the reference
# Objective
fixes#15502
Clipped borders and outlines aren't drawn correctly.
### Borders aren't clipped
Spawn two nodes with the same dimensions and border thickness, but clip
on of the nodes so that only its top left quarter is visible:
<img width="194" alt="clip"
src="https://github.com/user-attachments/assets/2d3f6d28-aa20-44df-967a-677725828294">
You can see that instead of clipping the border, instead the border is
scaled to fit inside of the unclipped section.
```rust
use bevy::color::palettes::css::BLUE;
use bevy::prelude::*;
use bevy::winit::WinitSettings;
fn main() {
App::new()
.add_plugins(DefaultPlugins)
.insert_resource(WinitSettings::desktop_app())
.add_systems(Startup, setup)
.run();
}
fn setup(mut commands: Commands) {
commands.spawn(Camera2d);
commands
.spawn(Node {
width: Val::Percent(100.),
height: Val::Percent(100.),
justify_content: JustifyContent::Center,
align_items: AlignItems::Center,
..Default::default()
})
.with_children(|commands| {
commands
.spawn(Node {
column_gap: Val::Px(10.),
..Default::default()
})
.with_children(|commands| {
commands
.spawn(Node {
width: Val::Px(100.),
height: Val::Px(100.),
overflow: Overflow::clip(),
..Default::default()
})
.with_child((
Node {
position_type: PositionType::Absolute,
width: Val::Px(100.),
height: Val::Px(100.),
border: UiRect::all(Val::Px(10.)),
..Default::default()
},
BackgroundColor(Color::WHITE),
BorderColor(BLUE.into()),
));
commands
.spawn(Node {
width: Val::Px(50.),
height: Val::Px(50.),
overflow: Overflow::clip(),
..Default::default()
})
.with_child((
Node {
position_type: PositionType::Absolute,
width: Val::Px(100.),
height: Val::Px(100.),
border: UiRect::all(Val::Px(10.)),
..Default::default()
},
BackgroundColor(Color::WHITE),
BorderColor(BLUE.into()),
));
});
});
}
```
You can also see this problem in the `overflow` example. If you hover
over any of the clipped nodes you'll see that the outline only wraps the
visible section of the node
### Outlines are clipped incorrectly
A UI nodes Outline's are drawn outside of its bounds, so applying the
local clipping rect to the outline doesn't make any sense.
Instead an `Outline` should be clipped using its parent's clipping rect.
## Solution
* Pass the `point` value into the vertex shader instead of calculating
it in the shader.
* In `extract_uinode_borders` use the parents clipping rect when
clipping outlines.
The extra parameter isn't a great solution I think, but I wanted to fix
borders for the 0.15 release and this is the most minimal approach I
could think of without replacing the whole shader and prepare function.
## Showcase
<img width="149" alt="clipp"
src="https://github.com/user-attachments/assets/19fbd3cc-e7cd-42e1-a5e0-fd92aad04dcd">
---------
Co-authored-by: Alice Cecile <alice.i.cecile@gmail.com>
# Objective
- Less code
- Better iterator (implements `size_hint` for example)
## Solution
- Use `either`
- This change is free because `bevy_animation` depends on `bevy_asset`,
which already depends on `either`
## Testing
CI
# Objective
Bevy seems to want to standardize on "American English" spellings. Not
sure if this is laid out anywhere in writing, but see also #15947.
While perusing the docs for `typos`, I noticed that it has a `locale`
config option and tried it out.
## Solution
Switch to `en-us` locale in the `typos` config and run `typos -w`
## Migration Guide
The following methods or fields have been renamed from `*dependants*` to
`*dependents*`.
- `ProcessorAssetInfo::dependants`
- `ProcessorAssetInfos::add_dependant`
- `ProcessorAssetInfos::non_existent_dependants`
- `AssetInfo::dependants_waiting_on_load`
- `AssetInfo::dependants_waiting_on_recursive_dep_load`
- `AssetInfos::loader_dependants`
- `AssetInfos::remove_dependants_and_labels`
Use the new `disqualified` crate in `QueryEntityError` to make the error
message more readable.
---
## Showcase
Old:
QueryDoesNotMatch(0v1 with components my_game::main::foo::A,
my_game::main::foo::B, bevy_pbr::light::point_light::PointLight,
bevy_render::primitives::CubemapFrusta,
bevy_pbr::bundle::CubemapVisibleEntities,
bevy_transform::components::transform::Transform,
bevy_transform::components::global_transform::GlobalTransform,
bevy_render::view::visibility::Visibility,
bevy_render::view::visibility::InheritedVisibility,
bevy_render::view::visibility::ViewVisibility,
bevy_render::sync_world::SyncToRenderWorld)
New:
QueryDoesNotMatch(0v1 with components A, B, PointLight, CubemapFrusta,
CubemapVisibleEntities, Transform, GlobalTransform, Visibility,
InheritedVisibility, ViewVisibility, SyncToRenderWorld)
---------
Co-authored-by: Alice Cecile <alice.i.cecile@gmail.com>
# Objective
Make compiler output more helpful when running `cargo check -p
bevy_mesh`. Currently it contains a lot of unreachable patterns/code
warnings due to features disabled by default.
## Solution
Mute the warnings.
## Testing
CI
# Objective
```
cargo check -p bevy_reflect
```
outputs a lot of warnings like:
```
warning: non-local `impl` definition, `impl` blocks should be written at the same level as their item
--> crates/bevy_reflect/src/impls/std.rs:223:13
|
223 | impl_type_path!($ty);
| ^-------------------
| |
| `TypePath` is not local
| move the `impl` block outside of this constant `_` and up 2 bodies
...
346 | / impl_reflect_for_atomic!(
347 | | ::core::sync::atomic::AtomicIsize,
| | --------------------------------- `AtomicIsize` is not local
348 | | ::core::sync::atomic::Ordering::SeqCst
349 | | );
| |_- in this macro invocation
|
= note: the macro `impl_type_path` defines the non-local `impl`, and may need to be changed
= note: the macro `impl_type_path` may come from an old version of the `bevy_reflect_derive` crate, try updating your dependency with `cargo update -p bevy_reflect_derive`
= note: an `impl` is never scoped, even when it is nested inside an item, as it may impact type checking outside of that item, which can be the case if neither the trait or the self type are at the same nesting level as the `impl`
= note: items in an anonymous const item (`const _: () = { ... }`) are treated as in the same scope as the anonymous const's declaration for the purpose of this lint
= note: `#[warn(non_local_definitions)]` on by default
= note: this warning originates in the macro `impl_type_path` which comes from the expansion of the macro `impl_reflect_for_atomic` (in Nightly builds, run with -Z macro-backtrace for more info)
```
## Solution
Move `impl_type_path!` into global scope. Warnings no longer pop up.
## Testing
CI
# Objective
Making work with `Indices` struct easier. Currently when building
indices in some quick-and-dirty code we need to do matches and handle
enum variants.
## Solution
`Indices::push` utility which works transparently with `U16` and `U32`
variants.
## Testing
Unit test added.
# Objective
Built-in observers & events should be `Reflect` so that components that
interact with them can be serialized in scenes. This is a similar pr to
#14259.
## Objective
Be able to depend on the crate for the types without bringing in
`smol-hyper` and other http dependencies.
## Solution
Create a new `HTTP` feature that is enabled by default.
# Objective
Make UI rendering optional.
Quite a few people have been experimenting with using Bevy UI for layout
and interaction but replacing the rendering with `bevy_prototype_lyon`
or whatever. It's awkward to do though as there is no way to disable the
existing UI rendering requiring users to create their own custom node
bundles and components. Also, you can't replace the UI's shader and a
number of other things.
This PR makes the setup and initialization of UI rendering for the
RenderApp optional. Then you can do whatever you want by replacing
`build_ui_render` with your own function. For instance, one that loads a
custom shader.
The UI layout and interaction components are still updated as normal.
## Solution
Add a field `enable_rendering` to `UiPlugin`.
Only call `build_ui_render` and initialize the `UiPipeline` if
`enable_rendering` is false.
I thought about implementing a "bevy_ui_render" feature but suspect
everything is too tightly coupled atm and it would be very fragile.
Similar to the struggles with the "bevy_text" feature but worse.
---
## Changelog
`UiPlugin`
* Added a bool field `enable_rendering`.
* Only calls `build_ui_render` and initializes the `UiPipeline` if
`enable_rendering` is true.
## Migration Guide
`UiPlugin` has a new field `enable_rendering`. If set to false, the UI's
rendering systems won't be added to the `RenderApp` and no UI elements
will be drawn. The layout and interaction components will still be
updated as normal.
# Objective
Adding a `WinitPlugin` to a `MinimalPlugins` setup is a bit tricky and
confusing due to having a terrible error message and no examples in the
repo.
## Solution
Document what you need to add.
# Objective
- Fixes https://github.com/bevyengine/bevy/issues/15871
(Camera is done in #15946)
## Solution
- Do the same as #15904 for other extraction systems
- Added missing `SyncComponentPlugin` for DOF, TAA, and SSAO
(According to the
[documentation](https://dev-docs.bevyengine.org/bevy/render/sync_component/struct.SyncComponentPlugin.html),
this plugin "needs to be added for manual extraction implementations."
We may need to check this is done.)
## Testing
Modified example locally to add toggles if not exist.
- [x] DOF - toggling DOF component and perspective in `depth_of_field`
example
- [x] TAA - toggling `Camera.is_active` and TAA component
- [x] clusters - not entirely sure, toggling `Camera.is_active` in
`many_lights` example (no crash/glitch even without this PR)
- [x] previous_view - toggling `Camera.is_active` in `skybox` (no
crash/glitch even without this PR)
- [x] lights - toggling `Visibility` of `DirectionalLight` in `lighting`
example
- [x] SSAO - toggling `Camera.is_active` and SSAO component in `ssao`
example
- [x] default UI camera view - toggling `Camera.is_active` (nop without
#15946 because UI defaults to some camera even if `DefaultCameraView` is
not there)
- [x] volumetric fog - toggling existence of volumetric light. Looks
like optimization, no change in behavior/visuals
# Objective
Switch to retained render world causes the extracted cameras in render
world to not be removed until camera in main world is despawned. When
extracting data from main world inactive cameras are skipped. Therefore
camera that was active and became inactive has a retained
`ExtractedCamera` component from previous frames (when it was active)
and is processed the same way as if it were active (there is no `active`
field on `ExtractedCamera`). This breakes switching between cameras in
`render_primitives` example.
Fixes#15822
## Solution
Fix it by removing `ExtractedCamera` and related components from
inactive cameras.
Note that despawning inactive camera seems to be bad option because they
are spawned using `SyncToRenderWorld` component.
## Testing
Switching camera in `render_primitives` example now works correctly.
---------
Co-authored-by: akimakinai <105044389+akimakinai@users.noreply.github.com>
# Objective
- The depth test was only using the final depth but it should be testing
each fragments
- Fully transparent fragments should not be added to the list
## Solution
- Test each fragment after sorting
## Testing
before:
TODO
after:
TODO
# Objective
- Fixes https://github.com/bevyengine/bevy/issues/13552
## Solution
- Thanks for the guidance from @DGriffin91, the current solution is to
transmit the light_map through the emissive channel to avoid increasing
the bandwidth of deferred shading.
- <del>Store lightmap sample result into G-Buffer and pass them into the
`Deferred Lighting Pipeline`, therefore we can get the correct indirect
lighting via the `apply_pbr_lighting` function.</del>
- <del>The original G-Buffer lacks storage for lightmap data, therefore
a new buffer is added. We can only use Rgba16Uint here due to the
32-byte limit on the render targets.</del>
## Testing
- Need to test all the examples that contains a prepass, with both the
forward and deferred rendering mode.
- I have tested the ones below.
- `lightmaps` (adjust the code based on the issue and check the
rendering result)
- `transmission` (it contains a prepass)
- `ssr` (it also uses the G-Bufffer)
- `meshlet` (forward and deferred)
- `pbr`
## Showcase
By updating the `lightmaps` example to use deferred rendering, this pull
request enables correct rendering result of the Cornell Box.
```
diff --git a/examples/3d/lightmaps.rs b/examples/3d/lightmaps.rs
index 564a3162b..11a748fba 100644
--- a/examples/3d/lightmaps.rs
+++ b/examples/3d/lightmaps.rs
@@ -1,12 +1,14 @@
//! Rendering a scene with baked lightmaps.
-use bevy::pbr::Lightmap;
+use bevy::core_pipeline::prepass::DeferredPrepass;
+use bevy::pbr::{DefaultOpaqueRendererMethod, Lightmap};
use bevy::prelude::*;
fn main() {
App::new()
.add_plugins(DefaultPlugins)
.insert_resource(AmbientLight::NONE)
+ .insert_resource(DefaultOpaqueRendererMethod::deferred())
.add_systems(Startup, setup)
.add_systems(Update, add_lightmaps_to_meshes)
.run();
@@ -19,10 +21,12 @@ fn setup(mut commands: Commands, asset_server: Res<AssetServer>) {
..default()
});
- commands.spawn(Camera3dBundle {
- transform: Transform::from_xyz(-278.0, 273.0, 800.0),
- ..default()
- });
+ commands
+ .spawn(Camera3dBundle {
+ transform: Transform::from_xyz(-278.0, 273.0, 800.0),
+ ..default()
+ })
+ .insert(DeferredPrepass);
}
fn add_lightmaps_to_meshes(
```
<img width="1280" alt="image"
src="https://github.com/user-attachments/assets/17fd3367-61cc-4c23-b956-e7cfc751af3c">
## Emissive Issue
**The emissive light object appears incorrectly rendered because the
alpha channel of emission is set to 1 in deferred rendering and 0 in
forward rendering, leading to different emissive light result. Could
this be a bug?**
```wgsl
// pbr_deferred_functions.wgsl - pbr_input_from_deferred_gbuffer
let emissive = rgb9e5::rgb9e5_to_vec3_(gbuffer.g);
if ((pbr.material.flags & STANDARD_MATERIAL_FLAGS_UNLIT_BIT) != 0u) {
pbr.material.base_color = vec4(emissive, 1.0);
pbr.material.emissive = vec4(vec3(0.0), 1.0);
} else {
pbr.material.base_color = vec4(pow(base_rough.rgb, vec3(2.2)), 1.0);
pbr.material.emissive = vec4(emissive, 1.0);
}
// pbr_functions.wgsl - apply_pbr_lighting
emissive_light = emissive_light * mix(1.0, view_bindings::view.exposure, emissive.a);
```
---------
Co-authored-by: JMS55 <47158642+JMS55@users.noreply.github.com>
# Objective
Continue improving the user experience of our UI Node API in the
direction specified by [Bevy's Next Generation Scene / UI
System](https://github.com/bevyengine/bevy/discussions/14437)
## Solution
As specified in the document above, merge `Style` fields into `Node`,
and move "computed Node fields" into `ComputedNode` (I chose this name
over something like `ComputedNodeLayout` because it currently contains
more than just layout info. If we want to break this up / rename these
concepts, lets do that in a separate PR). `Style` has been removed.
This accomplishes a number of goals:
## Ergonomics wins
Specifying both `Node` and `Style` is now no longer required for
non-default styles
Before:
```rust
commands.spawn((
Node::default(),
Style {
width: Val::Px(100.),
..default()
},
));
```
After:
```rust
commands.spawn(Node {
width: Val::Px(100.),
..default()
});
```
## Conceptual clarity
`Style` was never a comprehensive "style sheet". It only defined "core"
style properties that all `Nodes` shared. Any "styled property" that
couldn't fit that mold had to be in a separate component. A "real" style
system would style properties _across_ components (`Node`, `Button`,
etc). We have plans to build a true style system (see the doc linked
above).
By moving the `Style` fields to `Node`, we fully embrace `Node` as the
driving concept and remove the "style system" confusion.
## Next Steps
* Consider identifying and splitting out "style properties that aren't
core to Node". This should not happen for Bevy 0.15.
---
## Migration Guide
Move any fields set on `Style` into `Node` and replace all `Style`
component usage with `Node`.
Before:
```rust
commands.spawn((
Node::default(),
Style {
width: Val::Px(100.),
..default()
},
));
```
After:
```rust
commands.spawn(Node {
width: Val::Px(100.),
..default()
});
```
For any usage of the "computed node properties" that used to live on
`Node`, use `ComputedNode` instead:
Before:
```rust
fn system(nodes: Query<&Node>) {
for node in &nodes {
let computed_size = node.size();
}
}
```
After:
```rust
fn system(computed_nodes: Query<&ComputedNode>) {
for computed_node in &computed_nodes {
let computed_size = computed_node.size();
}
}
```
Resolves#15968. Since this feature never worked, and enabling it in the
`image` crate requires system dependencies, we've decided that it's best
to just remove it and let other plugin crates offer support for it as
needed.
## Migration Guide
AVIF images are no longer supported. They never really worked, and
require system dependencies (libdav1d) to work correctly, so, it's
better to simply offer this support via an unofficial plugin instead as
needed. The corresponding types have been removed from Bevy to account
for this.
# Objective
Fixes#15791.
As raised in #11022, scaling orthographic cameras is confusing! In Bevy
0.14, there were multiple completely redundant ways to do this, and no
clear guidance on which to use.
As a result, #15075 removed the `scale` field from
`OrthographicProjection` completely, solving the redundancy issue.
However, this resulted in an unintuitive API and a painful migration, as
discussed in #15791. Users simply want to change a single parameter to
zoom, rather than deal with the irrelevant details of how the camera is
being scaled.
## Solution
This PR reverts #15075, and takes an alternate, more nuanced approach to
the redundancy problem. `ScalingMode::WindowSize` was by far the biggest
offender. This was the default variant, and stored a float that was
*fully* redundant to setting `scale`.
All of the other variants contained meaningful semantic information and
had an intuitive scale. I could have made these unitless, storing an
aspect ratio, but this would have been a worse API and resulted in a
pointlessly painful migration.
In the course of this work I've also:
- improved the documentation to explain that you should just set `scale`
to zoom cameras
- swapped to named fields for all of the variants in `ScalingMode` for
more clarity about the parameter meanings
- substantially improved the `projection_zoom` example
- removed the footgunny `Mul` and `Div` impls for `ScalingMode`,
especially since these no longer have the intended effect on
`ScalingMode::WindowSize`.
- removed a rounding step because this is now redundant 🎉
## Testing
I've tested these changes as part of my work in the `projection_zoom`
example, and things seem to work fine.
## Migration Guide
`ScalingMode` has been refactored for clarity, especially on how to zoom
orthographic cameras and their projections:
- `ScalingMode::WindowSize` no longer stores a float, and acts as if its
value was 1. Divide your camera's scale by any previous value to achieve
identical results.
- `ScalingMode::FixedVertical` and `FixedHorizontal` now use named
fields.
---------
Co-authored-by: MiniaczQ <xnetroidpl@gmail.com>
# Objective
- Fixes#15963
## Solution
- Implement `TryFrom<Polygon<N> for ConvexPolygon<N>`
- Implement `From<ConvexPolygon<N>> for Polygon<N>`
- Remove `pub` from `vertices`
- Add `ConvexPolygon::vertices()` to get read only access to the
vertices of a convex polygon.
# Objective
As discussed in #15341, ghost nodes are a contentious and experimental
feature. In the interest of enabling ecosystem experimentation, we've
decided to keep them in Bevy 0.15.
That said, we don't use them internally, and don't expect third-party
crates to support them. If the experimentation returns a negative result
(they aren't very useful, an alternative design is preferred etc) they
will be removed.
We should clearly communicate this status to users, and make sure that
users don't use ghost nodes in their projects without a very clear
understanding of what they're getting themselves into.
## Solution
To make life easy for users (and Bevy), `GhostNode` and all associated
helpers remain public and are always available.
However, actually constructing these requires enabling a feature flag
that's clearly marked as experimental. To do so, I've added a
meaningless private field.
When the feature flag is enabled, our constructs (`new` and `default`)
can be used. I've added a `new` constructor, which should be preferred
over `Default::default` as that can be readily deprecated, allowing us
to prompt users to swap over to the much nicer `GhostNode` syntax once
this is a unit struct again.
Full credit: this was mostly @cart's design: I'm just implementing it!
## Testing
I've run the ghost_nodes example and it fails to compile without the
feature flag. With the feature flag, it works fine :)
---------
Co-authored-by: Zachary Harrold <zac@harrold.com.au>
Fixes#15834
## Migration Guide
The APIs of `Time`, `Timer` and `Stopwatch` have been cleaned up for
consistency with each other and the standard library's `Duration` type.
The following methods have been renamed:
- `Stowatch::paused` -> `Stopwatch::is_paused`
- `Time::elapsed_seconds` -> `Time::elasped_secs` (including `_f64` and
`_wrapped` variants)
# Objective
- UI materials reserve too much capacity in a vec: for every node in the
transparent phase, it reserves enough memory to store all the nodes
- Update #10437
## Solution
- Only reserve extra memory if there's not enough
- Only reserve the needed memory, not more
# Objective
In `queue_shadows`, the `UiBoxShadows` option is unwrapped incorrectly
which results in the number of shadow samples being set to
`u32::default()` instead of `UiBoxShadows::default()` if the camera
entity doesn't have the component.
## Solution
Just use `unwrap_or_default` directly without `map`.
# Objective
Remove `bevy-ui`'s non-functional "bevy_text" feature.
Fixes#15900
## Solution
Remove all the "bevy_text" cfg gates.
I tried to fix it at first but couldn't figure it out. I'll happily
withdraw this in favour of another PR that gets the feature gate
working.
# Objective
`TextFont` and `TextColor` is not registered in the app type registry
and serializing a scene with a a `Text2d` doesn't save the color and
font of the text entity.
## Solution
register `TextFont` and `TextColor` in the type registry
# Objective
Limited implementation of the CSS property `overflow-clip-margin`
https://developer.mozilla.org/en-US/docs/Web/CSS/overflow-clip-margin
Allows you to control the visible area for clipped content when using
overfllow-clip, -hidden, or -scroll and expand it with a margin.
Based on #15442Fixes#15468
## Solution
Adds a new field to Style: `overflow_clip_margin: OverflowClipMargin`.
The field is ignored unless overflow-clip, -hidden or -scroll is set on
at least one axis.
`OverflowClipMargin` has these associated constructor functions:
```
pub const fn content_box() -> Self;
pub const fn padding_box() -> Self;
pub const fn border_box() -> Self;
```
You can also use the method `with_margin` to increases the size of the
visible area:
```
commands
.spawn(NodeBundle {
style: Style {
width: Val::Px(100.),
height: Val::Px(100.),
padding: UiRect::all(Val::Px(20.)),
border: UiRect::all(Val::Px(5.)),
overflow: Overflow::clip(),
overflow_clip_margin: OverflowClipMargin::border_box().with_margin(25.),
..Default::default()
},
border_color: Color::BLACK.into(),
background_color: GRAY.into(),
..Default::default()
})
```
`with_margin` expects a length in logical pixels, negative values are
clamped to zero.
## Notes
* To keep this PR as simple as possible I omitted responsive margin
values support. This could be added in a follow up if we want it.
* CSS also supports a `margin-box` option but we don't have access to
the margin values in `Node` so it's probably not feasible to implement
atm.
## Testing
```cargo run --example overflow_clip_margin```
<img width="396" alt="overflow-clip-margin" src="https://github.com/user-attachments/assets/07b51cd6-a565-4451-87a0-fa079429b04b">
## Migration Guide
Style has a new field `OverflowClipMargin`. It allows users to set the visible area for clipped content when using overflow-clip, -hidden, or -scroll and expand it with a margin.
There are three associated constructor functions `content_box`, `padding_box` and `border_box`:
* `content_box`: elements painted outside of the content box area (the innermost part of the node excluding the padding and border) of the node are clipped. This is the new default behaviour.
* `padding_box`: elements painted outside outside of the padding area of the node are clipped.
* `border_box`: elements painted outside of the bounds of the node are clipped. This matches the behaviour from Bevy 0.14.
There is also a `with_margin` method that increases the size of the visible area by the given number in logical pixels, negative margin values are clamped to zero.
`OverflowClipMargin` is ignored unless overflow-clip, -hidden or -scroll is also set on at least one axis of the UI node.
---------
Co-authored-by: UkoeHB <37489173+UkoeHB@users.noreply.github.com>
# Objective
- This is a followup to #15812.
## Solution
I just deleted the `COUNT` const and replaced it. I didn't realize for
loops are not const yet, so improving the other const variables is not
obvious.
Note: `slice::len` has been const since Rust 1.39, so we're not relying
on a brand new feature or anything.
## Testing
- It builds!
# Objective
On HEAD, `bevy_color` does not compile on its own with `--all-features`
enabled. This PR fixes that.
## Solution
- Added the `curve` feature on `bevy_math` to `bevy_color`.
- Added the `serialize` feature on `bevy_math` to
`bevy_color/serialize`.
## Testing
- Compiled with `cargo b -p bevy_color --all-features` on HEAD and on
this PR: it fails to compile on HEAD but compiles with this PR.
# Objective
- `C: ExtractComponent` inserts `C::Out` instead of `C`, so we need to
remove `C::Out`. cc #15904.
## Solution
- `C` -> `C::Out`
## Testing
- CAS has `<ContrastAdaptiveSharpening as ExtractComponent>::Out =
(DenoiseCas, CasUniform)`. Setting its strength to zero correctly
removes the effect after this change.
# Objective
Add an example for the new drag move and drag resize introduced by PR
#15674 and fix#15734.
## Solution
I created an example that allows the user to exercise drag move and drag
resize separately. The user can also choose what direction the resize
works in.
![Screenshot 2024-10-10 at 4 06
43 AM](https://github.com/user-attachments/assets/1da558ab-a80f-49af-8b7d-bb635b0f038f)
### Name
The example is called `window_drag_move`. Happy to have that
bikeshedded.
### Contentious Refactor?
This PR removed the `ResizeDirection` enumeration in favor of using
`CompassOctant` which had the same variants. Perhaps this is
contentious.
### Unsafe?
In PR #15674 I mentioned that `start_drag_move()` and
`start_drag_resize()`'s requirement to only be called in the presence of
a left-click looks like a compiler-unenforceable contract that can cause
intermittent panics when not observed, so perhaps the functions should
be marked them unsafe. **I have not made that change** here since I
didn't see a clear consensus on that.
## Testing
I exercised this on x86 macOS. However, winit for macOS does not support
drag resize. It reports a good error when `start_drag_resize()` is
called. I'd like to see it tested on Windows and Linux.
---
## Showcase
Example window_drag_move shows how to drag or resize a window without
decoration.
---------
Co-authored-by: Alice Cecile <alice.i.cecile@gmail.com>
# Objective
Make `StableInterpolate` "just work" on tuples whose parts are each
`StableInterpolate` types. These types arise notably through
`Curve::zip` (or just through explicit mapping of a similar form). It
would otherwise be kind of frustrating to stumble upon such a thing and
then realize that, e.g., automatic resampling just doesn't work, even
though there is a very "obvious" way to do it.
## Solution
Infer `StableInterpolate` on tuples of up to size 11. I can make that
number bigger, if desired. Unfortunately, I don't think that our
standard "fake variadics" tools actually work for this; the anonymous
field accessors of tuples are `:tt` for purposes of macro expansion,
which means that you can't simplify away the identifiers by doing
something clever like using recursion (which would work if they were
`:expr`). Maybe someone who knows some incredibly dark magic could chime
in with a better solution.
The expanded impls look like this:
```rust
impl<
T0: StableInterpolate,
T1: StableInterpolate,
T2: StableInterpolate,
T3: StableInterpolate,
T4: StableInterpolate,
> StableInterpolate for (T0, T1, T2, T3, T4)
{
fn interpolate_stable(&self, other: &Self, t: f32) -> Self {
(
<T0 as StableInterpolate>::interpolate_stable(&self.0, &other.0, t),
<T1 as StableInterpolate>::interpolate_stable(&self.1, &other.1, t),
<T2 as StableInterpolate>::interpolate_stable(&self.2, &other.2, t),
<T3 as StableInterpolate>::interpolate_stable(&self.3, &other.3, t),
<T4 as StableInterpolate>::interpolate_stable(&self.4, &other.4, t),
)
}
}
```
## Testing
Expanded macros; it compiles.
## Future
Make a version of the fake variadics workflow that supports this kind of
thing.
# 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.
# Objective
Fixes#15730.
## Solution
As part of #15586, we made a constant to store all the supported image
formats. However since the `ImageFormat` does actually include Hdr and
OpenExr, it also included the `"hdr"` and `"exr"` file extensions. These
are supported by separate loaders though: `HdrTextureLoader` and
`ExrTextureLoader`. This led to a warning about duplicate asset loaders.
Therefore, instead of having the constant for `ImageFormat`, I made the
constant just for `ImageLoader`. This lets us correctly remove `"hdr"`
and `"exr"` from the image formats supported by `ImageLoader`, returning
us to having a single asset loader for every image format.
Note: we could have just removed `hdr` and `exr` from
`ImageFormat::SUPPORTED_FILE_EXTENSIONS`, but this would be very
confusing. Then the list of `ImageFormat`s would not match the list of
supported formats!
## Testing
- I ran the `sprite` example and got no warning! I also replaced the
sprite in that example with an HDR file and everything worked as
expected.
See #15924 for more details
close#15924
from the issue, this code panic:
```rust
use bevy::time::Stopwatch;
use std::time::Duration;
fn main() {
let second = Duration::from_secs(1);
let mut stopwatch = Stopwatch::new();
// lot of time has passed... or a timer with Duration::MAX that was artificially set has "finished":
// timer.set_elapsed(timer.remaining());
stopwatch.set_elapsed(Duration::MAX);
// panic
stopwatch.tick(second);
let mut stopwatch = Stopwatch::new();
stopwatch.set_elapsed(Duration::MAX - second);
// this doesnt panic as its still one off the max
stopwatch.tick(second);
// this panic
stopwatch.tick(second);
}
```
with this PR changes, the code now doesn't panic.
have a good day !
This is 3 of 5 iterative PR's that affect bevy_ui/layout
- [x] Blocked by https://github.com/bevyengine/bevy/pull/12801
- [x] Blocked by https://github.com/bevyengine/bevy/pull/12802
---
# Objective
- Add tests to `UiSurface`
- Add missing asserts in `_assert_send_sync_ui_surface_impl_safe`
- Add missing Debug field print for `camera_entity_to_taffy`
## Solution
- Adds tests to `UiSurface`
- Adds missing asserts in `_assert_send_sync_ui_surface_impl_safe`
- Adds missing impl Debug field print for `camera_entity_to_taffy`
---------
Co-authored-by: Alice Cecile <alice.i.cecile@gmail.com>
# Objective
- Fixes#15897
## Solution
- Despawn light view entities when they go unused or when the
corresponding view is not alive.
## Testing
- `scene_viewer` example no longer prints "The preprocessing index
buffer wasn't present" warning
- modified an example to try toggling shadows for all kinds of light:
https://gist.github.com/akimakinai/ddb0357191f5052b654370699d2314cf
# Objective
Ensure that components that are conditionally extracted do not linger in
the render world when not extracted from the main world.
## Solution
If the `ExtractComponent` returns `None`, we'll remove the render world
component. I think this is the most sensible behavior here. In the
future if there really is a use case for keeping the previous render
component around, we could add a `Option<Self::Out>` parameter for the
previous render component to the method, or something similar. I think
that this follows the principle of least surprise here relative to what
`None` would suggest and the way that render nodes are typically
written. The alternative would be to add an `enabled` field to pretty
much every camera settings component, or duplicate the extraction
condition as #15856 does.
## Testing
`transmission` no longer crashes.
## Migration Guide
Components that implement `ExtractComponent` and return `None` will
cause the extracted component to be removed from the render world.
# Objective
Currently, is is very painful to wait for an asset to load from the
context of an `async` task. While bevy's `AssetServer` is asynchronous
at its core, the public API is mainly focused on being used from
synchronous contexts such as bevy systems. Currently, the best way of
waiting for an asset handle to finish loading is to have a system that
runs every frame, and either listens for `AssetEvents` or manually polls
the asset server. While this is an acceptable interface for bevy
systems, it is extremely awkward to do this in a way that integrates
well with the `async` task system. At my work we had to create our own
(inefficient) abstraction that encapsulated the boilerplate of checking
an asset's load status and waking up a task when it's done.
## Solution
Add the method `AssetServer::wait_for_asset`, which returns a future
that suspends until the asset associated with a given `Handle` either
finishes loading or fails to load.
## Testing
- CI
## Notes
This is an adoption of #14431, the above description is directly from
that original PR.
---------
Co-authored-by: Joseph <21144246+JoJoJet@users.noreply.github.com>
Co-authored-by: andriyDev <andriydzikh@gmail.com>
# Objective
Improve the average user's ability to understand what the heck is going
on with the Curve API.
## Solution
I wrote some docs. I doubt these are perfect; I'm probably far too close
to this for that to be the case. :)
# 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.
# Objective
This is a follow-up to #15650. While the core `Image` stuff moved from
`bevy_render` to `bevy_image`, the `ImageLoader` and the
`CompressedImageSaver` remained in `bevy_render`.
## Solution
I moved `ImageLoader` and `CompressedImageSaver` to `bevy_image` and
re-exported everything out from `bevy_render`. The second step isn't
strictly necessary, but `bevy_render` is already doing this for all the
other `bevy_image` types, so I kept it the same for consistency.
Unfortunately I had to give `ImageLoader` a constructor so I can keep
the `RenderDevice` stuff in `bevy_render`.
## Testing
It compiles!
## Migration Guide
- `ImageLoader` can no longer be initialized directly through
`init_asset_loader`. Now you must use
`app.register_asset_loader(ImageLoader::new(supported_compressed_formats))`
(check out the implementation of `bevy_render::ImagePlugin`). This only
affects you if you are initializing the loader manually and does not
affect users of `bevy_render::ImagePlugin`.
## Followup work
- We should be able to move most of the `ImagePlugin` to `bevy_image`.
This would likely require an `ImagePlugin` and a `RenderImagePlugin` or
something though.
# Objective
- Closes#14774
## Solution
Added:
```rust
impl<'w, E, B: Bundle> Trigger<'w, E, B> {
pub fn components(&self) -> &[ComponentId];
}
```
I went with storing it in the trigger as a `SmallVec<[Component; 1]>`
because a singular target component will be the most common case, and it
remains the same size as `Vec<ComponentId>`.
## Testing
Added a test.
# 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>
# 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.
# Objective
- Android doesn't receive lifecycle event `Suspended` before suspension
## Solution
- Fix update triggering just after state change on android
## Testing
- Tested on the android emulator
# 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>
# Objective
#15320 is a particularly painful breaking change, and the new
`RenderEntity` in particular is very noisy, with a lot of `let entity =
entity.id()` spam.
## Solution
Implement `WorldQuery`, `QueryData` and `ReadOnlyQueryData` for
`RenderEntity` and `WorldEntity`.
These work the same as the `Entity` impls from a user-facing
perspective: they simply return an owned (copied) `Entity` identifier.
This dramatically reduces noise and eases migration.
Under the hood, these impls defer to the implementations for `&T` for
everything other than the "call .id() for the user" bit, as they involve
read-only access to component data. Doing it this way (as opposed to
implementing a custom fetch, as tried in the first commit) dramatically
reduces the maintenance risk of complex unsafe code outside of
`bevy_ecs`.
To make this easier (and encourage users to do this themselves!), I've
made `ReadFetch` and `WriteFetch` slightly more public: they're no
longer `doc(hidden)`. This is a good change, since trying to vendor the
logic is much worse than just deferring to the existing tested impls.
## Testing
I've run a handful of rendering examples (breakout, alien_cake_addict,
auto_exposure, fog_volumes, box_shadow) and nothing broke.
## Follow-up
We should lint for the uses of `&RenderEntity` and `&MainEntity` in
queries: this is just less nice for no reason.
---------
Co-authored-by: Trashtalk217 <trashtalk217@gmail.com>
# 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`.
# Objective
`insert_or_spawn_batch` exists, but a version for just inserting doesn't
- Closes#2693
- Closes#8384
- Adopts/supersedes #8600
## Solution
Add `insert_batch`, along with the most common `insert` variations:
- `World::insert_batch`
- `World::insert_batch_if_new`
- `World::try_insert_batch`
- `World::try_insert_batch_if_new`
- `Commands::insert_batch`
- `Commands::insert_batch_if_new`
- `Commands::try_insert_batch`
- `Commands::try_insert_batch_if_new`
## Testing
Added tests, and added a benchmark for `insert_batch`.
Performance is slightly better than `insert_or_spawn_batch` when only
inserting:
![Code_HPnUN0QeWe](https://github.com/user-attachments/assets/53091e4f-6518-43f4-a63f-ae57d5470c66)
<details>
<summary>old benchmark</summary>
This was before reworking it to remove the `UnsafeWorldCell`:
![Code_QhXJb8sjlJ](https://github.com/user-attachments/assets/1061e2a7-a521-48e1-a799-1b6b8d1c0b93)
</details>
---
## Showcase
Usage is the same as `insert_or_spawn_batch`:
```
use bevy_ecs::{entity::Entity, world::World, component::Component};
#[derive(Component)]
struct A(&'static str);
#[derive(Component, PartialEq, Debug)]
struct B(f32);
let mut world = World::new();
let entity_a = world.spawn_empty().id();
let entity_b = world.spawn_empty().id();
world.insert_batch([
(entity_a, (A("a"), B(0.0))),
(entity_b, (A("b"), B(1.0))),
]);
assert_eq!(world.get::<B>(entity_a), Some(&B(0.0)));
```
# 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());
```
# Objective
Fixes#15515
## Solution
I went for the simplest solution because "format" in
`shader_format_spirv` didn't sound directly related.
## Testing
The command `cargo b -p bevy --no-default-features -F
spirv_shader_passthrough,x11` failed before, but works now.
# Objective
With the warning removed in
https://github.com/bevyengine/bevy/pull/15736, the rules for the UI tree
changes.
We no longer need to traverse non `Node`/`GhostNode` entities.
## Solution
- Added a filter `Or<(With<Node>, With<GhostNode>)>` to the child
traversal query so we don't unnecessarily traverse nodes that are not
part of the UI tree (like text nodes).
- Also moved the warning for NoUI->UI entities so it is actually
triggered (see comments)
## Testing
- Ran unit tests (still passing)
- Ran the ghost_nodes and ui examples, still works and looks fine 👍
- Tested the warning by spawning a Node under an empty entity.
---
---------
Co-authored-by: UkoeHB <37489173+UkoeHB@users.noreply.github.com>
# 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>
# 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`.
# Objective
The previous `PhantomData` instances were written somewhat lazily, so
they were just things like `PhantomData<T>` for curves with an output
type of `T`. This looks innocuous, but it unnecessarily constrains
`Send/Sync` inference based on `T`. See
[here](https://doc.rust-lang.org/nomicon/phantom-data.html#table-of-phantomdata-patterns).
## Solution
Switch to `PhantomData` of the form `PhantomData<fn() -> T>` for most of
these adaptors. Since they only have a functional relationship to `T`
(i.e. it shows up in the return type of trait methods), this is more
accurate.
## Testing
Tested by compiling Bevy.
Co-authored-by: François Mockers <mockersf@gmail.com>
# Objective
MacOS has some nice options for controlling the window and titlebar to
make the content appear much more "immersively" in the window. This PR
exposes options for controlling this.
## Solution
Adds new fields to `Window` to control these, with doc comments to
explain what they do and that they're MacOS only.
## Testing
Tested on a MacOS machine (not my own, I don't have one). That's where
the below screenshots were taken.
---
## Showcase
On MacOS, you now have more options for configuring the window titlebar.
You can, for example, make the title bar transparent and only show the
window controls. This provides a more "immersive" experience for your
rendered content.
Before, only this was possible:
<img width="1392" alt="image"
src="https://github.com/user-attachments/assets/abf03da2-d247-4202-a7e7-731c45d80d54">
Now, you can create windows like this:
<img width="1392" alt="image2"
src="https://github.com/user-attachments/assets/3239d0e3-4708-4798-8755-188541e14f93">
This uses the following `bevy_window::Window` settings:
```rs
fullsize_content_view: true,
titlebar_transparent: true,
titlebar_show_title: false,
```
## Migration Guide
`bevy_window::Window` now has extra fields for configuring MacOS window
settings:
```rs
pub movable_by_window_background: bool,
pub fullsize_content_view: bool,
pub has_shadow: bool,
pub titlebar_shown: bool,
pub titlebar_transparent: bool,
pub titlebar_show_title: bool,
pub titlebar_show_buttons: bool,
```
Using `Window::default` keeps the same behaviour as before.
# Objective
Animation docs could use some clarification regarding:
- how exactly curves are evaluated
- how additive blend nodes actually work
## Solution
Add some documentation that explains how curve domains are used and how
additive blend nodes treat their children.
## Commentary
The way additive blend nodes work right now is a little bit weird, since
their first child's weight is ignored. Arguably this makes sense, since
additive animations are authored differently from ordinary animations,
but it also feels a bit strange. We could make the first node's weight
actually be applied, and the present behavior would be recovered when
the weight is set to 1.
The main disadvantage of how things are set up now is that combining a
bunch of additive animations without a base pose is pretty awkward (e.g.
to add them onto a base pose later in the graph). If we changed it, the
main downside would be that reusing the same animation on different
parts of the graph is harder; on the other hand, the weights can be
locally reassigned by using blend nodes with no other children, which
rectifies this shortfall.
# 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>
# Objective
Oftentimes, users will store an entity on a component or resource. To
make this component/resource `Default`-able, they might initialize it
with `Entity::PLACEHOLDER`. This is sometimes done to avoid the need for
an `Option<Entity>`, especially if it complicates other logic.
For example, it's used in this `Selection` resource to denote "no
selection":
```rust
#[derive(Resource, Debug)]
struct Selection(Entity);
impl Default for Selection {
fn default() -> Self {
Self(Entity::PLACEHOLDER)
}
}
```
The problem is that if we try to `Debug` the current `Selection`, we get
back: `4294967295v1#8589934591`. It's not immediately obvious whether or
not the entity is an actual entity or the placeholder.
Now while it doesn't take long to realize that this is in fact just the
value of `Entity::PLACEHOLDER`, it would be a lot clearer if this was
made explicit, especially for these particular use cases.
## Solution
This PR makes the `Debug` and `Display` impls for `Entity` return
`PLACEHOLDER` for the `Entity::PLACEHOLDER` constant.
~~Feel free to bikeshed the actual value returned here. I think
`PLACEHOLDER` on its own could work too.~~ Swapped to `PLACEHOLDER` from
`Entity::PLACEHOLDER`.
## Testing
You can test locally by running:
```
cargo test --package bevy_ecs
```
---
## Migration Guide
The `Debug` and `Display` impls for `Entity` now return `PLACEHOLDER`
for the `Entity::PLACEHOLDER` constant. If you had any code relying on
these values, you may need to account for this change.
# Objective
- Immediate mode gizmos don't have a main world entity but the phase
items require `MainEntity` since #15756
## Solution
- Add a dummy `MainEntity` component.
## Testing
Both the `3d_gizmos` and `2d_gizmos` examples show gizmos again
# Objective
The other `Curve -> AnimationCurve` wrappers allow public access to the
inner curve, so this one should as well.
## Solution
Made the field public. Instances will still need to be constructed using
the (more ergonomic) `from_curve` method, which infers the phantom type
for the user.
# Objective
- We don't have to `collect` and `sort` invisible sprites in
`sprite_picking` system.
## Solution
- Filter by `ViewVisibility::get()` earlier
## Testing
- `sprite_picking` example still works.
# 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.
# 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.
# Objective
If a `Resource` implements `FromWorld` or `Default`, it's nicer to be
able to write:
```rust
let foo = world.get_resource_or_init::<Foo>();
```
Rather than:
```rust
let foo = world.get_resource_or_insert_with(Foo::default);
```
The latter is also not possible if a type implements `FromWorld` only,
and not `Default`.
## Solution
Added:
```rust
impl World {
pub fn get_resource_or_init<R: Resource + FromWorld>(&mut self) -> Mut<'_, R>;
}
```
Turns out all current in-engine uses of `get_resource_or_insert_with`
are exactly the above, so they've also been replaced.
## Testing
- Added a doc-test.
- Also added a doc-test for `World::get_resource_or_insert_with`.
In order to create texture atlases from other systems (custom game
solutions) that are compatible with the ones generated by the bevy
builders, it would be nice to have the interface be fully public. This
field is pub(crate). Unless there's a good reason, can we promote this
to pub?
Alternatives:
- Don't do it.
**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>
# Objective
- Another step towards #15716
- Remove trait implementations that are dependent on `Handle<T>` being a
`Component`
## Solution
- Remove unused `ExtractComponent` trait implementation for `Handle<T>`
- Remove unused `ExtractInstance` trait implementation for `AssetId`
- Although the `ExtractInstance` trait wasn't used, the `AssetId`s were
being stored inside of `ExtractedInstances` which has an
`ExtractInstance` trait bound on its contents.
I've upgraded the `RenderMaterialInstances` type alias to be its own
resource, identical to `ExtractedInstances<AssetId<M>>` to get around
that with minimal breakage.
## Testing
Tested `many_cubes`, rendering did not explode
# Objective
A bunch of code is used only if you care about the `Curve` trait. Put it
behind a feature so it can be ignored if wanted.
## Solution
Added a default feature `curve` to `bevy_math` which feature-gates the
`curve` module and internal integrations.
## Testing
Tested compiling with the feature enabled and disabled.
# 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.
# 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.