Version: 8.3.0 - 2 Dec 2020
Scrawl-canvas website: scrawl-v8.rikweb.org.uk.
Do you want to contribute? I've been developing this project for too long by myself, and would really welcome contributions from - even collaboration with - people who can bring a different perspective and a fresh set of eyes to the work.
Scrawl-canvas is a JavaScript library for working with the HTML5 <canvas> element. The library:
- Automatically discovers existing <canvas> elements in a web page.
- Can add new <canvas> elements to the web page.
- Defines a set of factory functions for creating a wide range of graphic artefacts and effects, which can be drawn on a canvas.
- Includes an adaptable - yet easy to use - protocol for positioning, displaying and animating artefacts and effects across the canvas.
- Adds functionality to make <canvas> elements responsive, adapting their size according to their surrounding environment.
- Makes the canvas both accessible, and interactive - including the ability to easily track user interactions with different parts of the canvas.
There are a number of other Javascript libraries available, each with their strengths and weaknesses. Some have been designed to make the production of charts and other data visualisations easier. Some focus on game development, others on making videos interactive. Libraries which attempt to emulate Flash/Actionscript animations have been developed, as have libraries whose aim is to combine 2D, 3D and even SVG graphics into a usable whole. Speed is a key goal for some of the best libraries, while ease-of-use is an objective for many others.
Working with the native Canvas API is hard work - particularly when the desired result is more complex than a couple of coloured boxes in a static display.
But the benefits of using canvases for graphical displays and animations are also great: canvases are part of the DOM (unlike Flash); they are natively wired for events and user interactions; they use immediate mode redering (which makes them very quick); and the canvas-related APIs are designed to be used with Javascript.
Yet these advantages are also significant barriers:
- Working directly with the canvas-related APIs leads to writing significant amounts of JS boilerplate code.
- <canvas> elements can be resized and styled using CSS, but changing the CSS size does not affect the element's drawing dimensions - leading to sub-optimal graphic displays.
- Events work on the canvas, not on the artefacts within the canvas - we cannot use artefacts as links or hot-spots (click/tap events), we cannot give them the equivalent of a CSS hover state (focus/blur events), we cannot drag-and-drop them around the display (move events).
- Tracking a user's interaction with the various parts of a canvas display is particularly difficult.
- We cannot save and share artefacts and effects; each canvas display is tightly coupled to the code that defines the display.
- Of most concern, canvases are entirely graphical - visual - by nature; they come with significant accessibility issues. Given the ever-stricter requirements for websites to be accessible to all users, this makes using a canvas to present important information a dangerous proposition.
Yes, Scrawl-canvas aims to be fast, and developer-friendly. It also aims to be broadly focussed, suitable for building infographics, games, interactive videos - whatever we can imagine for a 2D graphical presentation.
But the main purpose of Scrawl-canvas is to make the <canvas> element, and the parts that make up its displays and animations, responsive, interactive, linkable, trackable. And accessible!
There are three main ways to include Scrawl-canvas in your project:
- Download the zipped file from GitHub
- Unzip the file to a folder in your project.
- Import the library into the script code where you will be using it.
Alternatively, a zip package of the v8.3.0 files can be downloaded from this link: scrawl.rikweb.org.uk/downloads/scrawl-canvas_8-3-0.zip - this package only includes the minified file.
<!-- Hello world -->
<!DOCTYPE html>
<html>
<head>
<title>Scrawl-canvas Hello World</title>
</head>
<body>
<canvas id="mycanvas"></canvas>
<!-- The library is entirely modular and needs to be imported into a module script -->
<script type="module">
import scrawl from './relative-or-absolute/path/to/scrawl-canvas/min/scrawl.js';
// Get a handle to the canvas element
let canvas = scrawl.library.canvas.mycanvas;
// Setup the scene to be displayed in the canvas
scrawl.makePhrase({
name: 'hello',
text: 'Hello, World!',
width: '100%',
startX: 20,
startY: 20,
font: 'bold 40px Garamond, serif',
});
// Render the canvas scene once
canvas.render()
.catch(err => {});
</script>
</body>
</html>
This will pull the requested npm package directly into your web page:
<script type="module">
import scrawl from 'https://unpkg.com/[email protected]';
[...]
</script>
This approach is still experimental: Scrawl-canvas has been designed for use in the browser, not server-side. Add the library to a React/Vue/Svelte/etc project at your own risk - your mileage may vary!
- Add the library to your project using NPM or Yarn
- Import the library into the script code where you will be using it.
// either
$> npm install scrawl-canvas
// or
$> yarn add scrawl-canvas
// then in your script file
import scrawl from 'scrawl-canvas';
// Scrawl-canvas has no dependencies
// - it can be used as-is, with no further installation steps required
After downloading the library and unzipping it into a directory or folder, cd into that folder on the command line, run yarn install
or npm install
(for the toolchain - the library itself has no external dependencies) and start a local server. For instance if you have http-server
installed:
$> cd ./path/to/Scrawl-canvas
$> yarn install
$> http-server
Starting up http-server, serving ./
Available on:
http://127.0.0.1:8080
http://192.168.0.4:8080
Hit CTRL-C to stop the server
Navigate to http://localhost:8080 to access the documentation and demo tests.
The code base does not include any unit testing frameworks. Instead, we rely on a set of Demo tests which allow us to perform integration testing and user interface testing.
Why this approach? Because most of the Scrawl-canvas functionality revolves around various forms of animation, which requires visual inspection of the Demo tests to check that the canvas display - and thus, by inference, the underlying code - performs as expected.
Most Demos include some form of user interaction, which allows us to test specific aspects of the code base.
The source code has been extensively commented. We generate documentation from that code using Docco. Documentation is regenerated each time the library is rebuilt.
We minify the source code using rollup and its terser plugin.
Running the following command on the command line will recreate the minified file, and regenerate the documentation:
$> yarn build
Developed by Rik Roots: [email protected]