spine-ts
The spine-ts runtime provides functionality to load and manipulate Spine skeletal animation data using TypeScript and JavaScript. spine-ts is split up into multiple modules:
- Core:
core/, the core classes to load and process Spine models - WebGL:
webgl/, a self-contained WebGL backend, build on the core classes - Canvas:
canvas/, a self-contained Canvas backend, build on the core classes - THREE.JS:
threejs/, a self-contained THREE.JS backend, build on the core classes - Widget:
widget/, a self-contained widget to easily display Spine animations on your website, build on core classes & WebGL backend.
While the source code for the core library and backends is written in TypeScript, all code is compiled to easily consumable JavaScript.
Licensing
This Spine Runtime may only be used for personal or internal use, typically to evaluate Spine before purchasing. If you would like to incorporate a Spine Runtime into your applications, distribute software containing a Spine Runtime, or modify a Spine Runtime, then you will need a valid Spine license. Please see the Spine Runtimes Software License for detailed information.
The Spine Runtimes are developed with the intent to be used with data exported from Spine. By purchasing Spine, Section 2 of the Spine Software License grants the right to create and distribute derivative works of the Spine Runtimes.
Spine version
spine-ts works with data exported from Spine 3.6.xx.
spine-ts WebGL & Widget backends supports all Spine features.
spine-ts Canvas does not support color tinting, mesh attachments and clipping. Only the alpha channel from tint colors is applied. Experimental support for mesh attachments can be enabled by setting spine.canvas.SkeletonRenderer.useTriangleRendering to true. Note that this method is slow and may lead to artifacts on some browsers.
spine-ts THREE.JS does not support two color tinting & blend modes. The THREE.JS backend provides SkeletonMesh.zOffset to avoid z-fighting. Adjust to your near/far plane settings.
spine-ts does not yet support loading the binary format.
Usage
- Download the Spine Runtimes source using git or by downloading it as a zip via the download button above.
- To use only the core library without rendering support, include the
build/spine-core.jsfile in your project. - To use the WebGL backend, include the
spine-webgl.jsfile in your project. - To use the Canvas backend, include the
spine-canvas.jsfile in your project. - To use the Widget, include
spine-widget.jsfile in your project. - To use the THREE.JS backend, include the
spine-threejs.jsfile in your project. THREE.JS must be loaded first.
All *.js files are self-contained and include both the core and respective backend classes.
If you write your app with TypeScript, additionally copy the corresponding build/spine-*.d.ts file to your project.
Note: If you are using the compiled .js files with ES6 or other module systems, you have to add
export { spine };
At the bottom of the .js file you are using. You can then import the module as usual, e.g.:
import { spine } from './spine-webgl.js';
Examples
To run the examples, the image, atlas, and JSON files must be served by a webserver, they can't be loaded from your local disk. Spawn a light-weight web server in the root of spine-ts, then navigate to the index.html file for the example you want to view. E.g.:
cd spine-ts
python -m SimpleHTTPServer
Then open http://localhost:8000/webgl/example, http://localhost:8000/canvas/example, https://localhost:8000/threejs/example or http://localhost:8000/widget/example in your browser.
WebGL Demos
The spine-ts WebGL demos load their image, atlas, and JSON files from our webserver and so can be run directly, without needing a webserver. The demos can be viewed all on one page or in individual, standalone pages which are easy for you to explore and edit. See the standalone demos source code and view the pages here:
- Spine vs sprite sheets
- Image changes
- Transitions
- Meshes
- Skins
- Hoverboard
- Vine
- Clipping
- Stretchyman
- Tank
- Transform constraints
Please note that Chrome and possibly other browsers do not use the original CORS headers when loading cached resources. After the initial page load for a demo, you may need to forcefully refresh (hold shift and click refresh) or clear your browser cache.
Development Setup
The spine-ts runtime and the various backends are implemented in TypeScript for greater maintainability and better tooling support. To setup a development environment, follow these steps.
- Install NPM and make sure it's available on the command line
- On the command line, Install the TypeScript compiler via
npm install -g typescript - Install Visual Studio Code
- On the command line, change into the
spine-tsdirectory - Start the TypeScript compiler in watcher mode for the backend you want to work on:
- Core:
tsc -w -p tsconfig.core.json, buildscore/src, outputsbuild/spine-core.js|d.ts|js.map - WebGL:
tsc -w -p tsconfig.webgl.json, buildscore/srcandwebgl/src, outputsbuild/spine-webgl.js|d.ts|js.map - Canvas:
tsc -w -p tsconfig.canvas.json, buildscore/srcandcanvas/src, outputsbuild/spine-canvas.js|d.ts|js.map - THREE.JS:
tsc -w -p tsconfig.threejs.json, buildscore/srcandthreejs/src, outputsbuild/spine-threejs.js|d.ts|js.map - Widget:
tsc -w -p tsconfig.widget.json, buildscore/srcandwidget/src, outputsbuild/spine-widget.js|d.ts|js.map
- Open the
spine-tsfolder in Visual Studio Code. VS Code will use thetsconfig.jsonfile all source files from core and all backends for your development pleasure. The actual JavaScript output is still created by the command line TypeScript compiler process from the previous step.
Each backend contains an example/ folder with an index.html file that demonstrates the respective backend. For development, we
suggest to run a HTTP server in the root of spine-ts, e.g.
cd spine-ts
python -m SimpleHTTPServer
Then navigate to http://localhost:8000/webgl/example, http://localhost:8000/canvas/example, http://localhost:8000/threejs/example or http://localhost:8000/widget/example
Spine-ts WebGL backend
By default, the spine-ts WebGL backend supports two-color tinting. This has a neglible effect on performance, as more per vertex data has to be submitted to the GPU, and the fragment shader has to do a few more arithmetic operations.
You can disable two-color tinting like this:
// If you use SceneRenderer, disable two-color tinting via the last constructor argument
var sceneRenderer = new spine.SceneRenderer(canvas, gl, false);
// If you use SkeletonRenderer and PolygonBatcher directly,
// disable two-color tinting in the respective constructor
// and use the shader returned by Shader.newColoredTextured()
// instead of Shader.newTwoColoredTextured()
var batcher = new spine.PolygonBatcher(gl, false);
var skeletonRenderer = new spine.SkeletonRenderer(gl, false);
var shader = Shader.newColoredTextured();
Using the Widget
To easily display Spine animations on your website, you can use the spine-ts Widget backend.
- Export your Spine animation with a texture atlas and put the resulting
.json,.atlasand.pngfiles on your server. - Copy the
build/spine-widget.jsfile to your server and include it on your website<script src="spine-widget.js"></script>, adjusting the src to match the location of the file on your server. - Add HTML elements, e.g. a
<div>, with the classspine-widgetto your website, specifying its configuration such as the location of the files, the animation to display, etc.
You can configure a HTML element either directly via HTML, or using JavaScript. At a minimum, you need to specify the location of the
.json and .atlas file as well as the name of the animation to play back.
HTML configuration
To specify the configuration of a Spine Widget via HTML, you can use these HTML element attributes:
data-json: required, path to the.jsonfile, absolute or relative, e.g. "assets/animation.json"data-atlas: required, path to the.atlasfile, absolute or relative, e.g. "assets/animation.atlas"data-animation: required, the name of the animation to play backdata-images-path: optional, the location of images on the server to load atlas pages from. If omitted, atlas.pngpage files are loaded relative to the.atlasfile.data-skin: optional, the name of the skin to use. Defaults todefaultif omitted.data-loop: optional, whether to loop the animation or not. Defaults totrueif omitted.data-scale: optional, the scaling factor to apply when loading the.jsonfile. Defaults to1if omitted. Irrelevant ifdata-fit-to-canvasistrue.data-x: optional, the x-coordinate to display the animation at. The origin is in the bottom left corner. Defaults to0if omitted. Irrelevant ifdata-fit-to-canvasistrue.data-y: optional, the y-coordinate to display the animation at. The origin is in the bottom left corner with the y-axis pointing upwards. Defaults to0if omitted. Irrelevant ifdata-fit-to-canvasistrue.data-fit-to-canvas: optional, whether to fit the animation to the canvas size or not. Defaults totrueif omitted, in which casedata-scale,data-xanddata-yare irrelevant. This setting calculates the setup pose bounding box using the specified skin to center and scale the animation on the canvas.data-background-color: optional, the background color to use. Defaults to#000000if omitted.data-premultiplied-alpha: optional, whether the atlas pages use premultiplied alpha or not. Defaults tofalseif omitted.data-debug: optional, whether to show debug information such as bones, attachments, etc. Defaults tofalseif omitted.
You can specify these as attribuets on the HTML element like this:
<div class="spine-widget" data-json="assets/animation.json" data-atlas="assets/animation.atlas" data-animation="walk"></div>
All HTML elements with class spine-widget will be automatically loaded when the website is finished loading by the browser. To add
widgets dynamically, use the JavaScript configuration described below.
JavaScript configuration
You can dynamically add Spine Widgets to your web page by using the JavaScript API.
Create a HTML element on your website, either statically or via JavaScript:
<div id="my-widget"></div>
Then create a new spine.SpineWidget, providing a SpineWidgetConfiguration object, e.g.:
new spine.SpineWidget("my-widget", {
json: "assets/spineboy.json",
atlas: "assets/spineboy.atlas",
animation: "run",
backgroundColor: "#000000",
success: function (widget) {
var animIndex = 0;
widget.canvas.onclick = function () {
animIndex++;
let animations = widget.skeleton.data.animations;
if (animIndex >= animations.length) animIndex = 0;
widget.setAnimation(animations[animIndex].name);
}
}
});
The configuration object has the following fields:
json: required, path to the.jsonfile, absolute or relative, e.g. "assets/animation.json"jsonContent: optional, string or JSON object holding the content of a skeleton.jsonfile. Overridesjsonif given.atlas: required, path to the.atlasfile, absolute or relative, e.g. "assets/animation.atlas"atlasContent: optional, string holding the content of an .atlas file. Overridesatlasif given.animation: required, the name of the animation to play backimagesPath: optional, the location of images on the server to load atlas pages from. If omitted, atlas.pngpage files are loaded relative to the.atlasfile.atlasPages: optional, the list of atlas page images, e.g.atlasPages: ["assets/page1.png", "assets/page2.png"]when using code, ordata-atlas-pages="assets/page1.png,assets/page2.png"on case of HTML instantiation. Use this if you have a multi-page atlas. If ommited, only one atlas page image is loaded based on the atlas file name, replacing.atlaswith.png.atlasPagesContent: optional, the list of atlas page images as data URIs. If given,atlasPagesmust also be given.skin: optional, the name of the skin to use. Defaults todefaultif omitted.loop: optional, whether to loop the animation or not. Defaults totrueif omitted.scale: optional, the scaling factor to apply when loading the.jsonfile. Defaults to1if omitted. Irrelevant ifdata-fit-to-canavsistrue.x: optional, the x-coordinate to display the animation at. The origin is in the bottom left corner. Defaults to0if omitted. Irrelevant ifdata-fit-to-canvasistrue.y: optional, the y-coordinate to display the animation at. The origin is in the bottom left corner with the y-axis pointing upwards. Defaults to0if omitted. Irrelevant ifdata-fit-to-canvasistrue.fitToCanvas: optional, whether to fit the animation to the canvas size or not. Defaults totrueif omitted, in which casedata-scale,data-xanddata-yare irrelevant. This setting calculates the setup pose bounding box using the specified skin to center and scale the animation on the canvas.alpha: optional, whether to allow the canvas to be transparent. Defaults totrue. Set the alpha channel in ``backgroundColorto 0 as well, e.g.#00000000`.backgroundColor: optional, the background color to use. Defaults to#000000if omitted.premultipliedAlpha: optional, whether the atlas pages use premultiplied alpha or not. Defaults tofalseif omitted.debug: optional, whether to show debug information such as bones, attachments, etc. Defaults tofalseif omitted.success: optional, a callback taking aSpineWidgetcalled when the animation has been loaded successfullyerror: optional, a callback taking aSpineWidgetand an error string called when the animation couldn't be loaded
You can also create a HTML element with class spine-widget and data- attributes as described above and call spine.widget.SpineWidget.loadWidget(element) to load
an element via JavaScript on demand.
The resulting SpineWidget has various fields that let you modify the animation programmatically. Most notably, the skeleton and state fields
let you modify all aspects of your animation as you wish. See the example.
You can also modify what debug information is shown by accessing SpineWidget.debugRenderer and set the various drawXXX fields to true or false.