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Dripping spray

Example picture of the spray in action

Monorepo for simulating a real spray can that creates drips when used on the same spot for a bit.

Usage examples

There are multiple ways to use the spray. You can ...

  1. use the dripping-spray module and receive shape data for you to draw it how you like or
  2. use a dripping-spray-* drawer module.

If you want to draw on a canvas-DOM element, use the dripping-spray-canvas module. It will help you set up the spray and canvas. Same for dripping-spray-pixijs which uses PixiJS to draw on a canvas instead of a pure implementation.

If you want to draw on something different (for example write out SVGs or similar), you can create your own Drawer with the underlying dripping-spray module and let it generate abstract shapes for you that you can draw.

Using a provided createSpray() method

The dripping-spray-* modules usually provide a createSpray() method to simplify drawing, using the animation frame, etc. Please have a look in their documentation if such a short-cut exists. You can also see the guide below how to use a shapeDrawer and have more control about when and how to animate the spray.

Using the generic Spray

First of all, you need to decide what the spray should look like. There are a few customization options that you can provide. Below you can see the default options, which will be set if you don't provide an object or leave out fields inside of it:

const Spray = require('./spray.js');
const options = {}; // You can customize the spray by providing [options](#customizing-spray-options)
const spray = new Spray(options);

For the spray to know where to draw to, you need to select a drawer. With a drawer, the spray is able to draw on whatever surface the drawer provides.

In our example case, we use the CanvasDrawer from dripping-spray-canvas to draw shapes on a canvas DOM element.

const CanvasDrawer = require('./canvas_drawer.js');
const shapeDrawer = new CanvasDrawer(document.getElementById('myCanvas'));

To be able to optimize our requestAnimationFrame calls, you need to call the draw method of the spray inside of it and tell it whether it needs to draw at a specific coordinate or should draw just because there might still be drips left. The draw method will tell us, whether the spray has some drips left to render.

A typical requestAnimationFrame could look like this:

let spraying = true; // sprays at a specific coordinate (see render() method)
let currentCoords = { x : 0, y : 0 }; // the coordinates where to draw, if spraying

function render() {
  let stillDrawing = false;
  if (spraying) {
    stillDrawing = spray.draw(shapeDrawer, currentCoords);
  } else {
    stillDrawing = spray.draw(shapeDrawer); // it still might have to draw for another frame if there are running drips
  }

  if (stillDrawing) {
    requestAnimationFrame(render);
  }
}

Customizing spray options

You can customize most of how the spray works by changing the options parameter and provide them to the spray as mentioned in the usage examples. Here are the default values which will be set if you do not provide a field in your options object.

{
  color : {            // the color of the spray
    r : 0,             // red
    g : 0,             // green
    b : 255            // blue
  },

  size : 5,            // the size of the center circle that will always be filled

  splatterAmount : 10, // the amount of circles it draws in each step (usually during `requestAnimationFrame`)

  splatterRadius : 20, // the radius of the spray

  dripper : true,      // whether the spray drips (`true`) or not (`false`)

  dripThreshold : 50,  // when the spray should start to drip - it accumulates the amount of spray inside of the size
                       // and starts to drip when it reaches the threshold. Think of `dripThreshould / size` is the
                       // amount of `requestAnimationFrame`-calls the spray would need to start dripping.

  dripSpeed : 3        // how fast the drips should flow as soon as they started
}

Full example

const CanvasDrawer = require('dripping-spray-canvas');
const Spray = require('dripping-spray');
const spray = new Spray();
const shapeDrawer = new CanvasDrawer(document.getElementById('myCanvas'));

let myX, myY, spraying; // Saves state for coordinates and if spraying

document.addEventListener('mousedown', startSpraying);
document.addEventListener('mousemove', updateCoords);
document.addEventListener('mouseup', stopSpraying);

function startSpraying() {
  spraying = true;
  render();
}

function updateCoords(e) {
  myX = e.pageX;
  myY = e.pageY;
}

function stopSpraying() {
  spraying = false;
}

function render() {
  let stillDrawing = false;
  if (spraying) {
    stillDrawing = spray.draw(shapeDrawer, { x : myX, y: myY });
  } else {
    stillDrawing = spray.draw(shapeDrawer); // for drips only
  }

  if (stillDrawing) {
    requestAnimationFrame(render);
  }
}

requestAnimationFrame(render);

Contributing / building

The main commands to use:

  1. npx lerna clean - removes all node_modules and unlinks whatever is linked
  2. npx lerna bootstrap - installs all node_modules and links the packages
  3. npx lerna run build - builds all packages
  4. npx lerna run test - tests all packages
  5. npx lerna exec "npm outdated" - runs npm outdated in all packages to find outdated packages for possible updates
  6. npx lerna exec "npx updtr" - updates all packages