PhysX
Silk.NET
PhysX | Silk.NET | |
---|---|---|
18 | 35 | |
2,296 | 3,704 | |
2.0% | 3.0% | |
4.7 | 5.2 | |
25 days ago | 1 day ago | |
C++ | C# | |
BSD 3-clause "New" or "Revised" License | MIT License |
Stars - the number of stars that a project has on GitHub. Growth - month over month growth in stars.
Activity is a relative number indicating how actively a project is being developed. Recent commits have higher weight than older ones.
For example, an activity of 9.0 indicates that a project is amongst the top 10% of the most actively developed projects that we are tracking.
PhysX
-
Blaze: A High Performance C++ Math library
For typical game physics engines... not that much. Math libraries like Eigen or Blaze use lots of template metaprogramming techniques under the hood that can help when you're doing large batched matrix multiplications (since it can remove temporary allocations at compile-time and can also fuse operations efficiently, as well as applying various SIMD optimizations), but it doesn't really help when you need lots of small operations (with mat3 / mat4 / vec3 / quat / etc.). Typical game physics engines tend to use iterative algorithms for their solvers (Gauss-Seidel, PBD, etc...) instead of batched "matrix"-oriented ones, so you'll get less benefits out of Eigen / Blaze compared to what you typically see in deep learning / scientific computing workloads.
The codebases I've seen in many game physics engines seem to all roll their own math libraries for these stuff, or even just use SIMD (SSE / AVX) intrinsics directly. Examples: PhysX (https://github.com/NVIDIA-Omniverse/PhysX), Box2D (https://github.com/erincatto/box2d), Bullet (https://github.com/bulletphysics/bullet3)...
-
Rust Game Physics Engines: PhysX, Rapier, XPBD & Others
NVIDIA PhysX GitHub repo: NVIDIA-Omniverse/PhysX
-
Recommended Physics Engine?
I donβt know of any books but here is the official documentation which includes an API reference. You can also find a lot of sample code snippets and examples on their GitHub.
-
C# Game engine - suggestions
On the other hand, PhysX is available under the MIT License and is both heavily used in games and also well documented with tons of sample code.
-
AMD Finally Opens Up Its Radeon Raytracing Analyzer "RRA" Source Code
The CPU implementation of PhysX is too, no reason you couldn't port that to run on AMD GPUs: https://github.com/NVIDIA-Omniverse/PhysX
-
Nvidia PhysX 5.0 is now open source
The LICENSE.md file on the repo doesn't mention BSD-3-Clause at all, it's just a copywrite notice that reads more like CC-BY than a software license. That's why I said it was weird.
Very! I just picked a random file: https://github.com/NVIDIA-Omniverse/PhysX/blob/release/104.0/physx/source/physx/src/NpArticulationJointReducedCoordinate.cpp
- GitHub - NVIDIA-Omniverse/PhysX: NVIDIA PhysX SDK - 5.0
Silk.NET
-
Is there a real time graphics llibrary in c#
A couple other options than what has been suggested so far: - TerraFX.Interop.Windows. Raw, blittable, 1:1 bindings for all Win32, D2D/D3D11/D3D12 APIs (there's also a version with Vulkan bindings). As close to doing #include as you can get in C#. This is my personal favorite, I use it in my own ComputeSharp library, and transitively we use it in the Microsoft Store too π - Silk.NET another version of high-performance bindings, more opinionated than TerraFX and with some additional helpers to make it a bit easier to use.
-
Math Game Project
Here is an example of using "releases" in GitHub: https://github.com/dotnet/Silk.NET/releases. Most repositories use releases and releases seem like they wpuld be appropriate for your repository too.
-
Is there a way to display 3D models on a page?
I've been looking at this. Is this similar to the UrhoSharp project you talk about? https://github.com/dotnet/Silk.NET
- [WinUI] High level 2D rendering library
-
SDL2 + OpenGL in C#?
Have you looked at Silk.NET before?
-
Using .NET with low level rendering code?
Take a look at https://github.com/dotnet/Silk.NET . You should be able to use your existing rendering context with it. So you could use something like imgui (They have bindings for that) to render your UI. Or if you just start writing your rendering code, you could consider writing the whole rendering engine with it. I used it in the past for a game engine and performance is no problem for most of the usecases.
- Anybody using System.Numerics for 3D graphic applications?
- Cross-platform audio playback
- C# Game engine - suggestions
-
Why is every graphics API C# wrapper I find deprecated?
If you want something more ".NET like", check out Silk.NET instead. It's also community maintained and in the .NET Foundation, but does name remappings, friendly API overloads, and other things that make it feel more ".NET like": https://github.com/dotnet/Silk.NET
What are some alternatives?
RayTracingDenoiser - NVIDIA Ray Tracing Denoiser
OpenTK - The Open Toolkit library is a fast, low-level C# wrapper for OpenGL, OpenAL & OpenCL. It also includes windowing, mouse, keyboard and joystick input and a robust and fast math library, giving you everything you need to write your own renderer or game engine. OpenTK can be used standalone or inside a GUI on Windows, Linux, Mac.
physx-rs - π³ Rust binding for NVIDIA PhysX π¦
Veldrid - A low-level, portable graphics library for .NET.
PhysX - NVIDIA PhysX SDK
Vortice.Windows - .NET bindings for Direct3D12, Direct3D11, WIC, Direct2D1, XInput, XAudio, X3DAudio, DXC, Direct3D9 and DirectInput.
JoltPhysics - A multi core friendly rigid body physics and collision detection library, written in C++, suitable for games and VR applications.
SharpDX
AI4Animation - Bringing Characters to Life with Computer Brains in Unity
Interactive Data Display for WPF - Interactive Data Display for WPF is a set of controls for adding interactive visualization of dynamic data to your application. It allows to create line graphs, bubble charts, heat maps and other complex 2D plots which are very common in scientific software. Interactive Data Display for WPF integrates well with Bing Maps control to show data on a geographic map in latitude/longitude coordinates. The controls can also be operated programmatically.
box2d-lite - A small 2D physics engine
Win2D - Win2D is an easy-to-use Windows Runtime API for immediate mode 2D graphics rendering with GPU acceleration. It is available to C#, C++ and VB developers writing apps for the Windows Universal Platform (UWP). It utilizes the power of Direct2D, and integrates seamlessly with XAML and CoreWindow.