hecs | gtk-rs | |
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12 | 45 | |
894 | 510 | |
- | - | |
7.2 | 8.6 | |
about 1 month ago | about 2 months ago | |
Rust | Rust | |
Apache License 2.0 | 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.
hecs
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Does it still make sense to roll your own ECS?
For Rust, I really like Bevy's, but it gets too much in the way. I'd probably use macroquad instead with something like hecs (I tried macroquad with Bevy ECS and didn't go well).
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Why ECS pattern is popular in Rust?
The question arises from seeing a plethora of projects using ECS: hecs , Bevy , specs, legion
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Learning How To Rewind Time - Save & Load
My current design has struct Core that is basically "everything you need to save in a savefile", it has a hecs ECS (which needs a bit of boilerplate the hecs docs show you how to write to serialize it), and a bunch of simpler gamestate stuff like the discovered map positions, the current player etc. Everything is tree-like and serializes into a text file. Entity handles from hecs serve as "pseudo-pointers" that can represent cycle-like structures without running into endless cycles.
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After working on our Godot + Rust game fulltime for one year it is now up on Steam
Out of the other Rust engines we've tried I think Macroquad was the most interesting option, and even though I've only made a few small projects in it worked extremely well and was what I'd expect from a game framework. While working in Bevy I felt like it was "writing fun Rust", but it wasn't really making a game. Macroquad on the other hand got immediately out of the way, and using it together with hecs was a painless experience where the whole time I felt like I was working on "the game" rather than "building systems that are invisible to the player".
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BITGUN Demo is now live on Steam - a game made in Rust and Godot by a two person fulltime indie dev team over the past 9 months
The last crate worth mentioning is probably hecs for ECS, which we don't really use as heavily as some ECS fans would assume, but it made working around some problems between GDScript and Rust easier by storing things in ECS, passing around handles and querying ECS instead. Initially we did this with a global object and lots of state (which we still use for some things), but as the number of "things" grew it became easier to put it into ECS.
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A 2D Pixel Physics Simulator with Cellular Automata written in Rust
I use the awesome Vulkano for rendering and computation, and Rapier for simple physics. Contour is used for the initial shapes, but rapier forms the physics colliders from it. Hecs is used as well. And you might recognize Egui as gui :). I gotta say, I'm starting to be pretty happy with the rust ecosystem overall.
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What is the plain Vec architecture in the hecs documentation?
In the hecs documentation there is a section, Why Not ECS?. In it, the author states, "If your game will have few types of entities, consider a simpler architecture such as storing each type of entity in a separate plain Vec."
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Showcasing my game: The Process. Built with Rust and Godot!
Usually, what I do is creating large, robust components in Rust. In my game, most of the logic lives inside the Factory node, which inside holds a full ECS (currently using https://github.com/Ralith/hecs) as well as other associated resources. This node takes care of holding the state and simulating all the machines in the factory and their interactions.
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Tiles as entities for common states and effects? (ECS related)
Generally, spatially-indexable data gets special treatment in games. (See Why not ECS for example, from the hecs ECS library.)
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I'm trying to follow the RLTK tutorial and feel like it is too much at a time, please help me solve some questions
That impl basically says that Leftwalker is a System (or implements a System interface, to use a different parlance). Why exactly do Systems need lifetime is something better asked of the authors of the ECS library the tutorial uses. (personally I use hecs https://github.com/Ralith/hecs instead because I find it easier to use, no lifetime in sight :p)
gtk-rs
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Counter App with GTK4 and Rust
gtk-rs
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Rust GUI Development?
GTK: I have little - no experience with GTK, and from what i have read it is cross-platform similar to wxWidgets, however is an emulated UI system similar to Qt. As i have no experience with it i am not sure how well supported this library is as far as it's Rust - bindings are concerned gtk-rs
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gtk-rs: can't get window ID with command inside connect_show or connect_realize
In a gtk-rs application, I'm running a xdotool command to get the id of the application's window. I'm running the command in a connect_show closure (after the window has been shown):
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My (challenging) experience building a window switcher for Ubuntu
To build the UI, I used gtk-rs. My experience with this library was quite pleasant; it was easy to use and there were a lot of examples. However, it isn't as widely used as, say, React, so it was difficult to find answer on Stack Overflow (I come from a JavaScript/Typescript background).
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x11rs can't access window created with gtk-rs
I'm using x11rb to interact with a window created with gtk-rs. window_id is the ID of the window created with gtk-rs. window_id_2 is the ID of the window created with x11rb (for testing purposes).
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What GUI libs are out there and good to use?
I haven't used it yet, but gtk-rs looks pretty good too. I've used GTK in general, just not the Rust bindings so far. The tutorials seem nice and GTK is a good UI toolkit overall.
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gtk-rs: triggering code after the window has been shown
I'm using gtk-rs. I want to trigger some code after the window has been shown (has displayed on the screen):
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Adding ListBoxRow to ListBox from inside a closure
I'm using gtk-rs to add ListBoxRow items to a ListBox. The items are successfully added if I do it outside of input.connect_changed, a closure. But nothing is added if I do it from inside input.connect_changed:
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Who "owns" Rust ?
For GTK, there's https://gtk-rs.org/
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gtk-ks: Join the Effort to create GTK Bindings for Kotlin!
Out there there are already some open source projects trying to do this, but most of them are abandoned or in a very alpha stage. The most promising project so far seems to me git-kt. This project is trying to do something similar to what gtk-rs does for Rust, which is using GObject Introspection (GIR) files to generate Kotlin native bindings automatically.
What are some alternatives?
shipyard - Entity Component System focused on usability and flexibility.
iced - A cross-platform GUI library for Rust, inspired by Elm
gdnative - Rust bindings for Godot 3
tauri - Build smaller, faster, and more secure desktop applications with a web frontend.
ecs - LeoECS is a fast Entity Component System (ECS) Framework powered by C# with optional integration to Unity
egui - egui: an easy-to-use immediate mode GUI in Rust that runs on both web and native
ecs - Elastic Common Schema
fltk-rs - Rust bindings for the FLTK GUI library.
dungeon-bevy - Rust programming -> random generated Dungeon with Bevy engine
gtk4-rs - Rust bindings of GTK 4
sandspiel - Creative cellular automata browser game
Slint - Slint is a toolkit to efficiently develop fluid graphical user interfaces for any display: embedded devices and desktop applications. We support multiple programming languages, such as Rust, C++ or JavaScript. [Moved to: https://github.com/slint-ui/slint]