NB: This is gl-react v3. For gl-react v2, please see ProjectSeptemberInc/gl-react.
gre/gl-react repository is a complete rewrite of ProjectSeptemberInc/gl-react library (gl-react v2). It plans to be the gl-react v3. We keep both repository at same time because (1) this work is not yet finished and (2) this repository is now a "multi libraries" repository (it's just easier to maintain that way).
v3 alpha: development in progress
- gl-react, universal implementation
- gl-react-dom, DOM implementation
- gl-react-headless, Node.js implementation
- tests: 100% test coverage!
- gl-react-native, React Native implementation
The main remaining work of v3 is the React Native implementation:
The long term plan is to rely on Exponent's WebGL implementation to implement the WebGL layer. The implementation is still very young and experimental (only implement a subset of WebGL), but as soon as this implementation guarantees a good conformance, the library should just work! I encourage everyone to contribute to make Exponent WebGL implementation robust, independently from the library you use at the end (Three.js / Pixi.js / regl / gl-react / whatever!).
Here is the parts we would like to focus on solving in that implementation:
- Support for framebuffers. This is fundamental for gl-react.
- interoperability with React Native Image
sourceprop (basically should support same format as a input forgl.texImage2D) - The WebGL implementation should be a standalone implementation that we can depend as a library (shouldn't requires you to use Exponent if you just use React Native).
- interoperability with more "pixel sources" (Video, Camera, ...)
Other remaining topics:
- Flow type support: we are waiting the next flow version that should bring WebGL type support: https://github.com/facebook/flow/pull/2764 .
gl-react
gl-react is a React library to write and compose WebGL shaders. Implement complex effects by composing React components.
This universal library must be coupled with one of the concrete implementations:
gl-react-domfor React DOM (web using WebGL).- unfinished
gl-react-nativefor React Native (iOS/Android via OpenGL). gl-react-headlessfor Node.js (used for testing for now)
Links
Gist
import React from "react";
import { Shaders, Node, GLSL } from "gl-react";
const shaders = Shaders.create({
helloBlue: {
frag: GLSL`
precision highp float;
varying vec2 uv;
uniform float blue;
void main() {
gl_FragColor = vec4(uv.x, uv.y, blue, 1.0);
}`
}
});
class HelloBlue extends React.Component {
render() {
const { blue } = this.props;
return <Node
shader={shaders.helloBlue}
uniforms={{ blue }}
/>;
}
}
import the correct implementation,
import {Surface} from "gl-react-dom"; // for React DOM
import {Surface} from "gl-react-native"; // for React Native
import {Surface} from "gl-react-headless"; // for Node.js!
and this code...
<Surface width={300} height={300}>
<HelloBlue blue={0.5} />
</Surface>
...renders:
Features
- React, VDOM and immutable paradigm: OpenGL is a low level imperative and mutable API. This library takes the best of it and exposes it in an immutable, descriptive way with React.
- React lifecycle allows partial GL re-rendering. Only a React Component update will trigger a redraw. Each Node holds a framebuffer state that get redrawn when component updates, then scheduling a Surface reflow.
- Developer experience
- React DevTools works like on DOM and allows you to inspect and debug your stack of effects.
- Uniform bindings: bindings from JavaScript objects to OpenGL GLSL language types (bool, int, float, vec2, vec3, vec4, mat2, mat3, mat4, sampler2D...)
- An extensible texture loader that allows to support any content that goes in the shader as a sampler2D texture.
- support for images
- support for videos (currently
gl-react-dom) - support for canvas (
gl-react-dom)
- flowtype support.
- headless tests with Jest. We have reached 99.9% test coverage!
- Modular, Composable, Sharable. Write shaders once into components that you re-use everywhere! At the end, users don't need to write shaders.
Atom nice GLSL highlighting
If you are using Atom Editor, you can have JS inlined GLSL syntax highlighted.
To configure this:
- add
language-babelpackage. - Configure
language-babelto addGLSL:source.glslin settings "JavaScript Tagged Template Literal Grammar Extensions". - (Bonus) Add this CSS to your Atom > Stylesheet:
/* language-babel blocks */
atom-text-editor::shadow .line .ttl-grammar {
/* NB: designed for dark theme. can be customized */
background-color: rgba(0,0,0,0.3);
}
atom-text-editor::shadow .line .ttl-grammar:first-child:last-child {
display: block; /* force background to take full width only if ttl-grammar is alone in the line. */
}

