LEXOGRINE HUD
Powered by « Lexogrine HUD Manager »
Fullfledged example of the React HUD made for HUD Manager. It has:
- Custom actions
- Keybinds
- Player cam feed
- Custom Radar
Makes radar smaller by 20px;
Makes radar bigger by 20px;
Toggles camera feed
Field | Description |
---|---|
Trivia title | Text |
Trivia content | Text |
Field | Description |
---|---|
Left/right box's title | Text |
Left/right box's title | Text |
Left/right box's image logo | Image file |
To download it just click here: DOWNLOAD HUD
Fork this repo, clone it, and then run npm install
and npm start
. HUD should start on the 3500 port. For this to work have HUD Manager opened so it will pass CS2 data to the HUD.
In /public
directory edit hud.json so it fits you - fill HUD's name, author, version, specify the radar and killfeed functionalities. At the end replace the thumb.png with your icon :)
To build version to distribute and move around, in the root directory run npm run pack
. It will create the zip file for distribution. Now you can just drag and drop this file into the HUD Managers upload area.
To create Signed HUD to prevent at least from modyfing compiled Javascript files run npm run sign
. It's the same as npm run pack
command but with additional step of signing .js and .css files and hud.json.
The HUD is seperated into two parts - the API part, that connects to the HUD Manager API and communicate with it: src/App.tsx
file and src/api
directory. Usually, you don't want to play with it, so the whole runs without a problem.
The second part is the render part - src/HUD
, src/fonts
and src/assets
are the directories you want to modify. In the src/HUD
each element of the HUD is seperated into its own folder. Styles are kept in the src/HUD/styles
. Names are quite self-explanatory, and to modify style of the element you should just find the styling by the file and class name.
To get the incoming data from the HUD Manager, let's take a look at the src/HUD/SideBoxes/SideBox.tsx
component:
const Sidebox = ({side, hide} : { side: 'left' | 'right', hide: boolean}) => {
const [ image, setImage ] = useState<string | null>(null);
const data = useConfig('display_settings');
useOnConfigChange('display_settings', data => {
if(data && `${side}_image` in data){
const imageUrl = `${apiUrl}api/huds/${hudIdentity.name || 'dev'}/display_settings/${side}_image?isDev=${hudIdentity.isDev}&cache=${(new Date()).getTime()}`;
setImage(imageUrl);
}
}, []);
if(!data || !data[`${side}_title`]) return null;
return (
<div className={`sidebox ${side} ${hide ? 'hide':''}`}>
<div className="title_container">
<div className="title">{data[`${side}_title`]}</div>
<div className="subtitle">{data[`${side}_subtitle`]}</div>
</div>
<div className="image_container">
{image ? <img src={image} id={`image_left`} alt={'Left'}/>:null}
</div>
</div>
);
}
You can just read data from the HUDs settings by using useConfig
hook. Everything is now strictly typed. If you make a change to panel or keybinds JSON files, Vite server will automatically generate types for you, so useConfig should always be up to date.
If you want to listen for a change in settings, you can use useOnConfigChange
. In this case we are using this to force refresh src
attribute of the img element.
If you want to listen for action input, you can just use useAction
hook, like here in Trivia.tsx:
useAction('triviaState', (state) => {
setShow(state === "show");
});
For the action input we need to import the actions
object and create listener with the parameter on it.
Keybinds API works in very similiar to panel.json
action API. This time the example will be from RadarMaps.tsx
:
useAction('radarBigger', () => {
setRadarSize(p => p+10);
}, []);
useAction('radarSmaller', () => {
setRadarSize(p => p-10);
}, []);
Because our csgogsi
has the ability to process input from HLAE's MIRV, listening for kills is very easy. We can see than in src/HUD/Killfeed/Killfeed.tsx
:
componentDidMount() {
GSI.on("kill", kill => {
this.addKill(kill);
});
}
The Killfeed component basically just keeps kills in the state during the round, and after the round it cleans the state. Kills have CSS animation, that makes them gently show, and after a few seconds disappear, the experience is very smooth. You can fiddle with the styling in the killfeed.css
This killfeed detects who killed whom, if there was an assist (flash assist as well), used weapon, headshot and wallbang.
Radar is custom React-based component, made by Hubert Walczak, and is easily editable from css.