Package Exports
- @pixi/react
Readme
Pixi React
Simply the best way to write PixiJS applications in React
Write PixiJS applications using React declarative style 👌
Pixi React is an open-source, production-ready library to render high performant PixiJS applications in React.
Features
- React v17 and v18 support
- PixiJS v8 support
Getting Started
Quick Start
If you want to start a new React project from scratch then we recommend Create React App, but Pixi React should work with any React application (Remix, Next.js, etc). To add to an existing React application, just install the dependencies:
Install Pixi React Dependencies
npm install pixi.js@^8.2.1 @pixi/react@betaPixie React Usage
import {
Application,
extend,
} from '@pixi/react'
import {
Container,
Graphics,
} from 'pixi.js'
import { useCallback } from 'react'
extend({
Container,
Graphics,
})
const MyComponent = () => {
const drawCallback = useCallback(graphics => {
graphics.clear()
graphics.setFillStyle({ color: 'red' })
graphics.rect(0, 0, 100, 100)
graphics.fill()
}, [])
return (
<Application>
<container x={100} y={100}>
<graphics draw={drawCallback} />
</container>
</Application>
)
}Docs
extend
One of the most important concepts to understand with Pixi React v8 is extend. Normally, Pixi React would have to import all pf Pixi.js to be able to provide the full library as JSX components. Instead, we use an internal catalogue of components populated by the extend API. This allows you to define exactly which parts of Pixi.js you want to import, keeping your bundle sizes small.
To allow Pixi React to use a Pixi.js component, pass it to the extend API:
import { Container } from 'pixi.js'
import { extend } from '@pixi/react'
extend({ Container })
const MyComponent = () => (
<container />
)[!CAUTION] Attempting to use components that haven't been passed to the
extendAPI will result in errors.
Components
<Application>
The <Application> component is used to wrap your Pixi React app. The <Application> component can take all props that can be set on PIXI.Application.
Example Usage
import { Application } from '@pixi/react'
const MyComponent = () => {
return (
<Application
autoStart
sharedTicker />
)
}attachToDevtools
Setting attachToDevtools to true will automatically attach the application to the Official Pixi.js Devtools.
defaultTextStyle
defaultTextStyle is a convenience property. Whatever is passed will automatically be assigned to Pixi.js'sTextStyle.defaultTextStyle.
[!NOTE] This property is not retroactive. It will only apply to text components created after
defaultTextStyleis set. Any text components created before settingdefaultTextStylewill retain the base styles they had beforedefaultTextStylewas changed.
resizeTo
The <Application> component supports the resizeTo property, with some additional functionality: it can accept any HTML element or it can take a React ref directly.
import { Application } from '@pixi/react'
import { useRef } from 'react'
const MyComponent = () => {
const parentRef = useRef(null)
return (
<div ref={parentRef}>
<Application resizeTo={parentRef} />
</div>
)
}Pixi Components
All other Pixi React components should be included in your IDE's intellisense/autocomplete once you've installed/imported @pixi/react. If it's exported from Pixi.js, it's supported as a component in Pixi React. The only difference is that Pixi React components will always start with lowercase characters. Here's a selection of commonly used components:
<container />
<graphics />
<sprite />
<animatedSprite />
<text />
<htmlText /><graphics>
The graphics component has a special draw property. draw takes a callback which receives the Graphics context, allowing drawing to happen on every tick.
const MyComponent = () => {
return (
<graphics draw={graphics => {
graphics.clear()
graphics.setFillStyle({ color: 'red' })
graphics.rect(0, 0, 100, 100)
graphics.fill()
}} />
)
}[!IMPORTANT] You may run into some components that conflict with others. For example, the
<text>component conflicts with the<text>component that's built-in to React for use in SVGs. To address this issue, all components are available with thepixiprefix. For example, you can replace the<text>component with the<pixiText>component. It will have the same functionality with none of the collisions.
Custom Components
Pixi React supports custom components via the extend API. For example, you can create a <viewport> component using the pixi-viewport library:
import { extend } from '@pixi/react'
import { Viewport } from 'pixi-viewport'
extend({ Viewport })
const MyComponent = () => {
<viewport>
<container />
</viewport>
}For Typescript Users
If you're using Typescript, this new <viewport> component will throw type errors. Pixi React exports a PixiReactNode type that can be used to solve this. You'll need to pass the Viewport into PixiReactNode and inject it into JSX:
import type { PixiReactNode } from '@pixi/react'
import type { Viewport } from 'pixi-viewport'
declare global {
namespace JSX {
interface IntrinsicElements {
viewport: PixiReactNode<typeof Viewport>;
}
}
}Hooks
useApp
DEPRECATED. Use useApplication hook instead.
useApplication
useApplication allows access to the parent PIXI.Application created by the <Application> component. This hook will not work outside of an <Application> component. Additionally, the parent application is passed via React Context. This means useApplication will only work appropriately in child components, and in the same component that creates the <Application>.
For example, the following example useApplication will not be able to access the parent application:
import {
Application,
useApplication,
} from '@pixi/react'
const ParentComponent = () => {
// This will cause an invariant violation.
const { app } = useApplication()
return (
<Application />
)
}Here's a working example where useApplication will be able to access the parent application:
import {
Application,
useApplication,
} from '@pixi/react'
const ChildComponent = () => {
const { app } = useApplication()
console.log(app)
return (
<container />
)
}
const ParentComponent = () => (
<Application>
<ChildComponent />
</Application>
)useAsset
DEPRECATED. Use useAssets of useSuspenseAssets instead.
useAssets
The useAssets hook wraps the functionality of Pixi's Asset loader and Cache into a convenient React hook. The hook can accept an array of items which are either an UnresolvedAsset or a url.
import { useAssets } from '@pixi/react'
const MyComponent = () => {
const {
assets: [
bunnyTexture1,
bunnyTexture2,
],
isSuccess,
} = useAssets([
'https://pixijs.com/assets/bunny.png',
{
alias: 'bunny',
src: 'https://pixijs.com/assets/bunny.png',
}
])
return (
<container>
{isSuccess && (
<sprite texture={bunnyTexture}>
<sprite texture={bunnyTexture2}>
)}
</container>
)
}Tracking Progress
useAssets can optionally accept a ProgressCallback as a second argument. This callback will be called by the asset loader as the asset is loaded.
const bunnyTexture = useAssets('https://pixijs.com/assets/bunny.png', progress => {
console.log(`We have achieved ${progress * 100}% bunny.`)
})useSuspenseAssets
useSuspenseAssets is similar to the useAssets hook, except that it supports React Suspense. useSuspenseAssets accepts the same parameters as useAssets, but it only returns an array of the loaded assets. This is because given a suspense boundary it's possible to prevent components from rendering until they've finished loading their assets.
import { Application, useSuspenseAssets, } from '@pixi/react' import { Suspense } from 'react' const BunnySprite = () => { const [bunnyTexture] = useSuspenseAssets(['https://pixijs.com/assets/bunny.png']) return ( <sprite texture={bunnyTexture} /> ) } const LoadingText = () => ( <pixiText text={'Loading...'} /> ) const MyApp = () => ( <Application> <Suspense fallback={<LoadingText />}> <BunnySprite /> </Suspense> </Application> )
useExtend
useExtend allows the extend API to be used as a React hook. Additionally, the useExtend hook is memoised, while the extend function is not.
import { Container } from 'pixi.js'
import { useExtend } from '@pixi/react'
const MyComponent = () => {
useExtend({ Container })
return (
<container />
)
}useTick
useTick allows a callback to be attached to the Ticker on the parent application.
import { useTick } from '@pixi/react'
const MyComponent = () => {
useTick(() => console.log('This will be logged on every tick'))
}useTick optionally takes an options object. This allows control of all ticker.add options, as well as adding the isEnabled option. Setting isEnabled to false will cause the callback to be disabled until the argument is changed to true again.
import { useState } from 'react'
import { useTick } from '@pixi/react'
const MyComponent = () => {
const [isEnabled, setIsEnabled] = useState(false)
useTick(() => console.log('This will be logged on every tick as long as `isEnabled` is `true`'), )
return (
<sprite onClick={setIsEnabled(previousState => !previousState)}>
)
}[!CAUTION] The callback passed to
useTickis not memoised. This can cause issues where your callback is being removed and added back to the ticker on every frame if you're mutating state in a component whereuseTickis using a non-memoised function. For example, this issue would affect the component below because we are mutating the state, causing the component to re-render constantly:import { useState } from 'react' import { useTick } from '@pixi/react' const MyComponent = () => { const [count, setCount] = useState(0) useTick(() => setCount(previousCount => previousCount + 1)) return null }This issue can be solved by memoising the callback passed to
useTick:import { useCallback, useState, } from 'react' import { useTick } from '@pixi/react' const MyComponent = () => { const [count, setCount] = useState(0) const updateCount = useCallback(() => setCount(previousCount => previousCount + 1), []) useTick(updateCount) }