//! Illustrates how "reflection" works in Bevy. //! //! Reflection provides a way to dynamically interact with Rust types, such as accessing fields //! by their string name. Reflection is a core part of Bevy and enables a number of interesting //! features (like scenes). use bevy::{ prelude::*, reflect::{ serde::{ReflectSerializer, UntypedReflectDeserializer}, DynamicStruct, }, }; use serde::de::DeserializeSeed; fn main() { App::new() .add_plugins(DefaultPlugins) .register_type::() .register_type::() .add_systems(Startup, setup) .run(); } /// Deriving `Reflect` implements the relevant reflection traits. In this case, it implements the /// `Reflect` trait and the `Struct` trait `derive(Reflect)` assumes that all fields also implement /// Reflect. #[derive(Reflect)] pub struct Foo { a: usize, nested: Bar, #[reflect(ignore)] _ignored: NonReflectedValue, } /// This `Bar` type is used in the `nested` field on the `Test` type. We must derive `Reflect` here /// too (or ignore it) #[derive(Reflect)] pub struct Bar { b: usize, } pub struct NonReflectedValue { _a: usize, } fn setup(type_registry: Res) { let mut value = Foo { a: 1, _ignored: NonReflectedValue { _a: 10 }, nested: Bar { b: 8 }, }; // You can set field values like this. The type must match exactly or this will fail. *value.get_field_mut("a").unwrap() = 2usize; assert_eq!(value.a, 2); assert_eq!(*value.get_field::("a").unwrap(), 2); // You can also get the &dyn Reflect value of a field like this let field = value.field("a").unwrap(); // you can downcast Reflect values like this: assert_eq!(*field.downcast_ref::().unwrap(), 2); // DynamicStruct also implements the `Struct` and `Reflect` traits. let mut patch = DynamicStruct::default(); patch.insert("a", 4usize); // You can "apply" Reflect implementations on top of other Reflect implementations. // This will only set fields with the same name, and it will fail if the types don't match. // You can use this to "patch" your types with new values. value.apply(&patch); assert_eq!(value.a, 4); let type_registry = type_registry.read(); // By default, all derived `Reflect` types can be Serialized using serde. No need to derive // Serialize! let serializer = ReflectSerializer::new(&value, &type_registry); let ron_string = ron::ser::to_string_pretty(&serializer, ron::ser::PrettyConfig::default()).unwrap(); info!("{}\n", ron_string); // Dynamic properties can be deserialized let reflect_deserializer = UntypedReflectDeserializer::new(&type_registry); let mut deserializer = ron::de::Deserializer::from_str(&ron_string).unwrap(); let reflect_value = reflect_deserializer.deserialize(&mut deserializer).unwrap(); // Deserializing returns a Box value. Generally, deserializing a value will return // the "dynamic" variant of a type. For example, deserializing a struct will return the // DynamicStruct type. "Value types" will be deserialized as themselves. let _deserialized_struct = reflect_value.downcast_ref::(); // Reflect has its own `partial_eq` implementation, named `reflect_partial_eq`. This behaves // like normal `partial_eq`, but it treats "dynamic" and "non-dynamic" types the same. The // `Foo` struct and deserialized `DynamicStruct` are considered equal for this reason: assert!(reflect_value.reflect_partial_eq(&value).unwrap()); // By "patching" `Foo` with the deserialized DynamicStruct, we can "Deserialize" Foo. // This means we can serialize and deserialize with a single `Reflect` derive! value.apply(&*reflect_value); }