tiled = "0.13.0"
A crate for reading TMX (map) and TSX (tileset) files from the Tiled Map Editor into Rust. It provides a huge set of features as well as a strong wrapper over internal features such as GIDs.
Documentation is available on docs.rs.
Code contributions are welcome as are bug reports, documentation, suggestions and criticism.
The minimum supported TMX version is 0.13.
use tiled::Loader;
fn main() {
let mut loader = Loader::new();
let map = loader.load_tmx_map("assets/tiled_base64_external.tmx").unwrap();
println!("{:?}", map);
println!("{:?}", map.tilesets()[0].get_tile(0).unwrap().probability);
let tileset = loader.load_tsx_tileset("assets/tilesheet.tsx").unwrap();
assert_eq!(*map.tilesets()[0], tileset);
}
How do I embed a map into my executable? / How do I read a file from anywhere else that isn't the filesystem's OS?
The crate does all of its reading through the read_from
function of the ResourceReader
that you create the loader with. By default, this reader is set to FilesystemResourceReader
and all files are read through the OS's filesystem. You can however change this.
Here's an example mostly taken from Loader::with_reader
's documentation:
use tiled::{DefaultResourceCache, Loader};
let mut loader = Loader::with_reader(
// Specify the reader to use. We can use anything that implements `ResourceReader`, e.g. FilesystemResourceReader.
// Any function that has the same signature as `ResourceReader::read_from` also implements it.
// Here we define a reader that embeds the map at "assets/tiled_xml.csv" into the executable, and allow
// accessing it only through "/my-map.tmx"
// ALL maps, tilesets and templates will be read through this function, even if you don't explicitly load them
// (They can be dependencies of one you did want to load in the first place).
// Doing this embedding is useful for places where the OS filesystem is not available (e.g. WASM applications).
|path: &std::path::Path| -> std::io::Result<_> {
if path == std::path::Path::new("/my-map.tmx") {
Ok(std::io::Cursor::new(include_bytes!("../assets/tiled_csv.tmx")))
} else {
Err(std::io::ErrorKind::NotFound.into())
}
}
);
If the closure approach confuses you or you need more flexibility, you can always implement ResourceReader
on your own structure.
The crate supports WASM, but since it does not currently support asynchronous loading, there are some gotchas.
- First, to make it work on any WASM target, enable the wasm feature, like so:
[dependencies]
# ...
tiled = { version = ".....", features = ["wasm"] }
- Second, since you cannot use the filesystem as normally on the web, you cannot use
FilesystemResourceReader
. As such, you'll need to implement your ownResourceReader
. This is a pretty simple task, as you just need to return anything that isRead
able when given a path, e.g.:
use std::io::Cursor;
struct MyReader;
impl tiled::ResourceReader for MyReader {
type Resource = Cursor<&'static [u8]>;
type Error = std::io::Error;
// really dumb example implementation that just keeps resources in memory
fn read_from(&mut self, path: &std::path::Path) -> std::result::Result<Self::Resource, Self::Error> {
if path == std::path::Path::new("my_map.tmx") {
Ok(Cursor::new(include_bytes!("../assets/tiled_xml.tmx")))
} else {
Err(std::io::Error::new(std::io::ErrorKind::NotFound, "file not found"))
}
}
}
You can also use a function with the same signature as tiled::ResourceReader::read_from
; check the
ResourceReader
docs for more information.
assets/tilesheet.png by Buch
Licenced under MIT