A Bevy plugin for 3D mouse picking, making it easy to interact
with 3D geometry in Bevy using your mouse. It provides mouse intersection coordinates, a
number of built-in mouse events, highlighting, selection state, and a 3D debug cursor. This plugin
is build on top of bevy_mod_raycast
.
Expect breaking changes in master
branch - contributions are welcome!
- Pick Data: intersection surface normal and coordinates in world space
- Mesh Interaction: mouseover and mouse click, highlighting, selection state
- Debug cursor: debug pick intersections and surface normals with a 3d cursor
I intend to track the main
branch of Bevy. PRs supporting this are welcome!
bevy | bevy_mod_picking |
---|---|
0.5 | 0.4 |
0.4 | 0.3 |
0.3 | 0.2 |
To run a minimal demo of picking features, clone this repository and run:
cargo run --example 3d_scene
Note that by default this plugin only depends on bevy's render
feature to minimize both dependency count and compile time, as well as allow for WASM support. This is why the feature flag is needed to run examples, which need the winit
and wgpu
features to run.
It only takes a few lines to get mouse picking working in your Bevy application using this plugin. The following sections will walk you through what is needed to get the plugin working, and how everything fits together.
- Add the crate to your dependencies in Cargo.toml
bevy_mod_picking = "0.4"
- Import the plugin and add it to your Bevy app:
use bevy_mod_picking::*;
// Bevy app stuff here...
.add_plugin(PickingPlugin)
- Mark your camera by adding:
.insert_bundle(PickingCameraBundle::default())
- Add this bundle to any mesh to make it pickable:
.insert_bundle(PickableBundle::default())
- (Optional) If you also want highlighting and selection, add these plugins to your app :
.add_plugin(InteractablePickingPlugin)
.add_plugin(HighlightablePickingPlugin)
And that's it! To learn how to retrieve picking intersections, you can jump to the Getting Pick Data section. If you also need interaction features, e.g. mouse click & mouse hover events, highlighting, and selection state, continue reading.
To get mouseover and mouse click events, as well as built-in highlighting and selection state, you will need to add the InteractablePickingPlugin
plugin. This is intentionally left optional, in case you only need pick intersection results.
.add_plugin(InteractablePickingPlugin)
See the Pick Interactions section for more details on the features this provides.
Mesh picking intersections are reported in world coordinates. A ray is cast into the scene using the
PickSource
you provided, and checked for intersections against every mesh that has been marked as
a PickableMesh
. The results report which entities were intersected, as well as the 3D coordinates
of the corresponding intersection.
To access this data, you can query your picking camera, and use .intersect_list()
or .intersect_top()
.
Run the events
example to see mouseover and mouse click events in action:
cargo run --example events
If you're using the Selection
component for selection (this is included in the PickableBundle
), you can access the selection state by querying your selectable entities and accessing the .selected()
function.
You can change the appearance of highlight/selection/click by accessing the resource and changing the materials:
// In your system signature:
mut highlight_colors: ResMut<MeshButtonMaterials>,
You can enable a debug cursor that will place a sphere at the intersection, with a tail pointing normal to the surface. Just add the DebugPickingPlugin
to the App::build()
in your Bevy program:
.add_plugin(DebugCursorPickingPlugin)
You can also enable debug output for picking events by adding:
.add_plugin(DebugEventsPickingPlugin)
This plugin has the ability to accelerate picking with bounding spheres; this can make picking as much as 30 times faster! This speeds up the picking process by first checking to see if the picking source intersects a mesh's bounding sphere before going through every triangle in the mesh. To enable bounding spheres, you can use the builder pattern to pass a handle to your mesh into the .with_bounding_sphere()
function:
.insert_bundle(PickableBundle::default())
.insert(BoundVol::default())
This will run a system in Bevy to automatically compute the bounding sphere of the supplied mesh.You can see an example of bounding spheres used in the stress_test
example. Please be aware that the API for this feature is likely to change over coming releases.
This project is licensed under the MIT license.
Unless you explicitly state otherwise, any contribution intentionally submitted for inclusion in bevy_mod_picking by you, shall be licensed as MIT, without any additional terms or conditions.