Guify is a runtime JS library that gives you a simple way to build a GUI for your JS projects. It pairs very well with three.js and p5.js. Consider it an opinionated take on dat.GUI.
Here are the big features:
- Bind any UI component to any variable. Guify supports arbitrary text inputs, colors, ranges, file inputs, booleans, and more.
- Guify is easy to graft onto any page and integrate with your existing JS code. Just point your components at the variables you already have:
var someVariable = 0; guify.Register([{ { type: 'range', object: this, property: 'someProperty', label: 'Some Property', min: 0, max: 20, step: 1 }, }])
- Give it that "web app" look with an optional header bar and easy toast notifications.
- Style it however you'd like. You can use one of three built-in themes, or build your own to get exactly the look you want.
Below are some common ways to integrate Guify with your setup.
To integrate on an existing page, you can use the transpiled version in /lib
, either by including it with your files or using a CDN:
<script src="https://unpkg.com/guify@0.15.1/lib/guify.min.js"></script>
This adds a guify
function at the global level, which you can use to construct the GUI. For example:
<script src="https://unpkg.com/guify@0.15.1/lib/guify.min.js"></script>
<script>
var gui = new guify({ ... })
gui.register([ ... ])
</script>
See the Usage guide below for more details. example.html also demonstrates this pattern.
First, install with NPM: npm install --save guify
Then you can import using either require
or import
depending on your preference:
// ES6
import guify from 'guify'
// Require
let guify = require('guify');
Then you can make a quick GUI this way:
var gui = new guify({ ... });
gui.Register([ ... ]);
See the Usage guide below for more details.
Check out the unofficial React port.
Once you have Guify available to construct in your project, make a guify
instance:
var gui = new guify({
title: "Some Title",
});
The various controls in Guify are called "components". You can feed component definitions to Guify as follows:
gui.Register([
{ // A slider representing a value between 0 and 20
type: 'range', label: 'Range',
min: 0, max: 20, step: 1,
onChange: (value) => {
console.log(value);
}
},
{
type: 'button', label: 'Button',
action: () => {
console.log('Button clicked!');
}
},
{
type: 'checkbox', label: 'Checkbox',
onChange: (value) => {
console.log(value);
}
}
]);
You can also bind components representing a value to your JS variables instead of using an onChange()
handler. For example:
var someNumber = 10;
gui.Register([
{ // A slider representing `someNumber`, constrained between 0 and 20.
type: 'range', label: 'Range',
min: 0, max: 20, step: 1,
object: this, property: 'someNumber'
},
There are many points of customization here. See the docs at /docs/api.md. A much more robust example can also be found at example.html.
If you want to build this package, you can run npm install
and then npm run build:prod
, which will create /lib/guify.min.js
.
NPM commands:
build:prod
: Creates/lib/guify.min.js
, the default script used by this package.build:dev
: Creates/lib/guify.js
.develop
: Runsbuild:dev
and serves the/example
directory as a static web page.
See changelog.md.
MIT license. See license.md for specifics.
This package is largely based on control-panel. For setting this up, I used webpack-library-starter.