The Orbital Widget Toolkit is a cross-platform (G)UI toolkit for building scalable user interfaces with the programming language Rust. It's based on the Entity Component System Pattern and provides a functional Reactive-like API.
The main goals of OrbTk are speed, ease of use, and cross-platform compatibility.
- Modern lightweight API
- Cross platform
- Modular crates
- Based on Entity Component System library DCES
- Flexible event system
- Integrated widget library
- Custom widgets
- Theming
- Integrated debugging tools
- Redox OS (native)
- Linux (native | cargo-node)
- macOS (native | cargo-node)
- Windows (native | cargo-node)
- openBSD (not tested, but should work)
- Web (cargo-node)
- Android (native planned | cargo-node)
- iOS (native planned | cargo-node planned)
- Ubuntu Touch (native planned | cargo-node planned)
- Conformable use of async
- More default widgets
- More examples
- Book
- Animations
- Split application in modules
- Theme update
- 3D context
- More integrated debugging tools
To include OrbTk in your project, add this dependency
line to your Cargo.toml
file:
orbtk = "0.3.1-alpha1"
To use the latest development version of OrbTk, add this dependency
line to your Cargo.toml
file:
orbtk = { git = "https://github.com/redox-os/orbtk.git", branch = "develop" }
You can also check out the OrbTk template project to start a new project: https://github.com/redox-os/orbtk-template.
use orbtk::prelude::*;
fn main() {
Application::new()
.window(|ctx| {
Window::create()
.title("OrbTk - minimal example")
.position((100.0, 100.0))
.size(420.0, 730.0)
.child(TextBlock::create().text("OrbTk").build(ctx))
.build(ctx)
})
.run();
}
Widgets are the building blocks of user interfaces in OrbTk. They are things like Buttons, TextBoxes, ListViews, Views (Screens) and Grid(Layout)s. Each widget implements the Widget trait and is generated by the widget! macro. A widget consists of a name like Button
and a list of its properties like text: String16
, background: Brush
or count: u32
. After the build
method of a widget is called it's added to the Entity Component System where it exists as an Entity
(index) with Components
. The struct of a widget serves as a builder using the builder pattern.
Basic usage of the widget! macro:
widget!(
MyWidget {
background: Brush,
count: u32,
text: String16,
...
}
);
Each widget has to implement the Template trait. The template defines the default values of a widget's properties as well as its structure. A
Button e.g. consists of a Container
widget, a StackPanel
widget and a TextBlock
widget.
Basic usage of the Template trait:
impl Template for MyWidget {
fn template(self, id: Entity, ctx: &mut BuildContext) -> Self {
self.name("MyWidget")
.background("#000000")
.count(0)
.text("Initial text")
.child(
Container::create()
// Container references the same background as MyWidget
.background(id)
.child(
TextBlock::create()
// TextBlock references the same text as MyWidget
.text(id)
.build(ctx)
)
.build(ctx)
)
}
}
The state of a widget is used to update its inner state. Each state has to implement the State trait. The inner state of a widget is represented by the current values of its properties.
Basic usage of the state trait:
#[derive(Default, AsAny)]
struct MyState {
...
}
impl State for MyState {
fn update(&mut self, _: &mut Registry, ctx: &mut Context<'_>) {
// update the widget
...
}
}
widget!(
// Add MyState as state of MyWidget
MyWidget<MyState> {
...
}
);
The Context parameter of the update method provides access to the state's widget (entity) and its properties (components). It also provides functions to access the children of the widget, and to manipulate the widget tree.
You can find examples in the examples/
directory.
You can start the widgets example by executing the following command:
cargo run --example widgets --release
OrbTk has integrated debug
tools. If you want to show the bounds of all widgets (even invisible ones) and want to see a debug print of the whole widget tree, you can run the examples with --features debug
, like this:
cargo run --example widgets --release --features debug
To run the examples as a browser, electron or cordova app you have to install cargo-node:
cargo install -f cargo-node
Before you can use cargo-node you have to install npm
version 6.9.0, which is included with Node.js
version 10.16.3. You can download it from https://nodejs.org/dist/v10.16.3/.
Rust's cargo
is also required. The rest of cargo-node's dependencies are installed automatically.
You can run the "widgets" example by executing one of the following commands:
- Run as browser app:
cargo node run --target browser --example widgets
- Run as electron app:
cargo node run --target electron --example widgets
- Run as cordova app on android:
cargo node run --target android --example widgets
You can build and view the latest documentation by executing the following command:
cargo doc --no-deps --open
- api: base api elements of OrbTk e.g. widget and application parts
- css-engine: parse and read values from a css file
- proc-macros: procedural helper macros
- render: cross platform 2D/3D render library
- shell: cross platform window and event handling
- theme: OrbTks default theme (light and dark)
- tree: tree structure based on DCES
- utils: helper structs and traits
- widgets: base widget library
- Space Editor: 2D Tile Map Editor compatible with OrbGame
- doit: Task app
- OrbCalculator: Calculator based on OrbTk
- Kanter: Node based texture editor
If you want to help improve OrbTk you submit your feedback in the issue tracker, or make a pull request to fix an issue https://github.com/redox-os/orbtk/issues. You can also discuss OrbTk with us on the Redox chat https://redox-os.org/community/ (join the OrbTk channel).
Licensed under MIT license (LICENSE).