A Fast, Open Source JavaScript, Canvas & Audio Implementation for iOS
Ejecta is a fast, open source JavaScript, Canvas & Audio implementation for iOS (iPhone, iPod Touch, iPad) and tvOS (Apple TV). Think of it as a Browser that can only display a Canvas element.
More info & Documentation: http://impactjs.com/ejecta
Ejecta is published under the MIT Open Source License.
App
within this Xcode projectApp
folderindex.js
For an example application, copy ./index.js
into the App
folder.
The JSC version that comes with iOS 10 provides a new API to read and write Typed Arrays in native code. The workaround from previous versions is not needed anymore
Apple will discontinue its own iAd Network on June 30. The iAd-Banner API has been removed from Ejecta.
Since 08741b4 Ejecta uses the JSC lib provided by iOS and tvOS instead of bundling a custom fork of it. This mainly means two things: The resulting binary will be much smaller and reading/writing of Typed Arrays is much slower.
This only affects WebGL and the get/setImageData()
functions for Canvas2D. Some tests indicate that the performance is still good enough for most WebGL games. On 64bit systems it’s highly optimized to take about 7ms/Megabyte for reading and about 20ms/Megabyte for writing. It’s much slower on 32bit systems, though.
More info about this change can be found in my blog. Please comment on this Webkit bug if you want to have fast Typed Array support again.
Allowed interface orientations should now be set using the “Device Orientation” checkboxes in the Project’s General settings. Ejecta now rotates to all allowed orientations automatically. If the window size changes due to a rotation (i.e. when rotating from landscape to portrait or vice versa), the window’s resize
event is fired.
window.addEventListener('resize', function() {
// Resize your screen canvas here if needed.
console.log('new window size:', window.innerWidth, window.innerHeight);
});
The canvas.MSAAEnabled
and canvas.MSAASamples
properties have been removed. Instead, you can now specify antialias settings in a separate options object when calling getContext()
, similar to how it works in a browser. Antialias now works on 2D and WebGL contexts.
Note that for 2D contexts antialias will have no effect when drawing images, other than slowing down performance. It only makes sense to enable antialias if you draw shapes and paths.
var gl = canvas.getContext('webgl', {antialias: true, antialiasSamples: 4});
// Or for 2d contexts
var ctx = canvas.getContext('2d', {antialias: true, antialiasSamples: 4});
The Canvas’ backing store is now exactly the same size as the canvas.width
and canvas.height
. Ejecta does not automatically double the internal resolution on retina devices anymore. The ctx.backingStorePixelRatio
and canvas.retinaResolutionEnabled
properties as well as the HD
variants for the ctx.getImageData
, ctx.putImageData
and ctx.createImageData
functions have been removed.
You can of course still render in retina resolution, by setting the width
and height
to the retina resolution while forcing the style
to scale the canvas to the logical display resolution. This is in line with current browsers.
canvas.width = window.innerWidth * window.devicePixelRatio;
canvas.height = window.innerHeight * window.devicePixelRatio;
canvas.style.width = window.innerWidth + 'px';
canvas.style.height = window.innerHeight + 'px';
// For 2D contexts you may want to zoom in afterwards
ctx.scale( window.devicePixelRatio, window.devicePixelRatio );
Ejecta supports WebGL out of the box, alongside with Canvas2D. You can create WebGL textures from Canvas2D instances and also draw WebGL Canvases into 2D Contexts as images. Note that you can’t change the “mode” (2D or WebGL) of a Context after it has been created.
Ejecta always creates the screen Canvas element for you. You have to hand this Canvas element over to Three.js instead of letting it create its own.
renderer = new THREE.WebGLRenderer( {canvas: document.getElementById('canvas')} );
An example App folder with the Three.js Walt CubeMap demo can be found here: