A rapid cross-platform GUI framework for Go based on Dear ImGui and the great Go binding imgui-go.
Any contribution (features, widgets, tutorials, documents, etc...) is appreciated!
(This library is available under a free and permissive license, but needs financial support to sustain its continued improvements. In addition to maintenance and stability there are many desirable features yet to be added. If you are using giu, please consider reaching out.)
Businesses: support continued development and maintenance via invoiced technical support, maintenance, sponsoring contracts:
E-mail: [email protected]
Individuals: support continued development and maintenance here.
For documentation refer to our wiki, examples, GoDoc, or just take a look at comments in code.
giu is built upon GLFW v3.3, so ideally giu could support all platforms that GLFW v3.3 supports.
- Windows (Windows 10 x64 and Windows 11 x64)
- macOS (macOS v10.15 and macOS Big Sur)
- Linux (thanks remeh for testing it)
- Raspberry Pi 3B (thanks sndvaps for testing it)
Compared to other Dear ImGui golang bindings, giu has the following features:
- Small executable file size (<3MB after UPX compression for the example/helloworld demo).
- Live-updating during the resizing of the OS window (implemented on GLFW 3.3 and OpenGL 3.2).
- Support for displaying various languages without any font setting. Giu will rebuild font atlas incrementally according to texts in UI between frames.
- Redraws only when user event occurs. Costs only 0.5% CPU usage with 60FPS.
- Declarative UI (see examples for more details).
- DPI awareness (auto scaling font and UI to adapt to high DPI monitors).
- Drop in usage; no need to implement render and platform.
- OS clipboard support.
package main
import (
"fmt"
g "github.com/AllenDang/giu"
)
func onClickMe() {
fmt.Println("Hello world!")
}
func onImSoCute() {
fmt.Println("Im sooooooo cute!!")
}
func loop() {
g.SingleWindow().Layout(
g.Label("Hello world from giu"),
g.Row(
g.Button("Click Me").OnClick(onClickMe),
g.Button("I'm so cute").OnClick(onImSoCute),
),
)
}
func main() {
wnd := g.NewMasterWindow("Hello world", 400, 200, g.MasterWindowFlagsNotResizable)
wnd.Run(loop)
}
Here is the result:
Immediate mode GUI system means the UI control doesn't retain its state and value. For example, calling giu.InputText(&str)
will display a input text box on screen, and the user entered value will be stored in &str
. Input text box doesn't know anything about it.
And the loop
method in the Hello world example is in charge of drawing all widgets based on the parameters passed into them. This method will be invoked 30 times per second to reflect interactive states (like clicked, hovered, value-changed, etc.). It will be the place you define the UI structure.
By default, any widget placed inside a container's Layout
will be placed vertically.
To create a row of widgets (i.e. place widgets one by one horizontally), use the Row()
method. For example giu.Row(Label(...), Button(...))
will create a Label next to a Button.
To create a column of widgets (i.e. place widgets one by one vertically) inside a row, use the Column()
method.
Any widget that has a Size()
method, can set its size explicitly. Note that you can pass a negative value to Size()
, which will fill the remaining width/height value. For example, InputText(...).Size(giu.Auto)
will create an input text box with the longest width that its container has left.
A MasterWindow
means the platform native window implemented by the OS. All subwindows and widgets will be placed inside it.
A Window
is a container with a title bar, and can be collapsed. SingleWindow
is a special kind of window that will occupy all the available space of MasterWindow
.
A Child
is like a panel in other GUI frameworks - it can have a background color and border.
Check examples/widgets
for all kinds of widgets.
The backend of giu depends on OpenGL 3.3, make sure your environment supports it (as far as I know, some Virtual Machines like VirtualBox doesn't support it).
xcode-select --install
go get github.com/AllenDang/giu
- Install mingw download here. Thanks @alchem1ster!
- Add the binaries folder of mingw to the path (usually is \mingw64\bin).
- go get github.com/AllenDang/giu
Or, install TDM-GCC.
First you need to install the required dependencies:
sudo apt install libx11-dev libxcursor-dev libxrandr-dev libxinerama-dev libxi-dev libglx-dev libgl1-mesa-dev libxxf86vm-dev
on Red Hat based distributions:
sudo dnf install libX11-devel libXcursor-devel libXrandr-devel libXinerama-devel libXi-devel libGL-devel libXxf86vm-devel
you may also need to install C/C++ compiler (like g++) if it isn't already installed. Follow go compiler prompts.
Then, a simple go build
will work.
Cross-compiling is a bit more complicated. Let's say that you want to build for arm64. This is what you would need to do:
sudo dpkg --add-architecture arm64
sudo apt update
sudo apt install gcc-aarch64-linux-gnu g++-aarch64-linux-gnu \
libx11-dev:arm64 libxcursor-dev:arm64 libxrandr-dev:arm64 libxinerama-dev:arm64 libxi-dev:arm64 libglx-dev:arm64 libgl1-mesa-dev:arm64 libxxf86vm-dev:arm64
GOOS=linux GOARCH=arm64 CGO_ENABLED=1 CC=aarch64-linux-gnu-gcc CXX=aarch64-linux-gnu-g++ HOST=aarch64-linux-gnu go build -v
go build -ldflags "-s -w" .
go build -ldflags "-s -w -H=windowsgui -extldflags=-static" .
- Install mingw-64.
on Mac:
brew install mingw-w64
on Linux:
sudo dnf install mingw64-gcc mingw64-gcc-c++ mingw64-winpthreads-static
- Prepare and embed the application icon into the executable and build.
cat > YourExeName.rc << EOL
id ICON "./res/app_win.ico"
GLFW_ICON ICON "./res/app_win.ico"
EOL
x86_64-w64-mingw32-windres YourExeName.rc -O coff -o YourExeName.syso
GOOS=windows GOARCH=amd64 CGO_ENABLED=1 CC=x86_64-w64-mingw32-gcc CXX=x86_64-w64-mingw32-g++ HOST=x86_64-w64-mingw32 go build -ldflags "-s -w -H=windowsgui -extldflags=-static" -p 4 -v -o YourExeName.exe
rm YourExeName.syso
rm YourExeName.rc
Check Wiki
All kinds of pull requests (document, demo, screenshots, code, etc.) are more than welcome!