107 lines
		
	
	
		
			3.6 KiB
		
	
	
	
		
			Markdown
		
	
	
	
	
	
			
		
		
	
	
			107 lines
		
	
	
		
			3.6 KiB
		
	
	
	
		
			Markdown
		
	
	
	
	
	
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| 
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| # Lottie player
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| Allows to use Lottie animations in LVGL. Taken from this [base repository](https://github.com/ValentiWorkLearning/lv_rlottie)
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| 
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| LVGL provides the interface to [Samsung/rlottie](https://github.com/Samsung/rlottie) library's C API. That is the actual Lottie player is not part of LVGL, it needs to be built separately.
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| 
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| ## Build Rlottie
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| To build Samsung's Rlottie C++14-compatible compiler and optionally CMake 3.14 or higher is required.
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| 
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| To build on desktop you can follow the instructions from Rlottie's [README](https://github.com/Samsung/rlottie/blob/master/README.md). In the most basic case it looks like this:
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| ```
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| mkdir rlottie_workdir
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| cd rlottie_workdir
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| git clone https://github.com/Samsung/rlottie.git
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| mkdir build
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| cd build
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| cmake ../rlottie
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| make -j
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| sudo make install
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| ```
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| 
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| And finally add the `-lrlottie` flag to your linker.
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| 
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| On embedded systems you need to take care of integrating Rlottie to the given build system.
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| 
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| 
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| ## Usage
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| 
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| You can use animation from files or raw data (text). In either case first you need to enable `LV_USE_RLOTTIE` in `lv_conf.h`.
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| 
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| 
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| The `width` and `height` of the object be set in the *create* function and the animation will be scaled accordingly.
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| 
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| ### Use Rlottie from file
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| 
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| To create a Lottie animation from file use:
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| ```c
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|   lv_obj_t * lottie = lv_rlottie_create_from_file(parent, width, height, "path/to/lottie.json");
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| ```
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| 
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| Note that, Rlottie uses the standard STDIO C file API, so you can use the path "normally" and no LVGL specific driver letter is required.
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| 
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| 
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| ### Use Rlottie from raw string data
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| 
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| `lv_example_rlottie_approve.c` contains an example animation in raw format. Instead storing the JSON string a hex array is stored for the following reasons:
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| - avoid escaping `"` in the JSON file
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| - some compilers don't support very long strings
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| 
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| `lvgl/scripts/filetohex.py` can be used to convert a Lottie file a hex array. E.g.:
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| ```
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| ./filetohex.py path/to/lottie.json > out.txt
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| ```
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| 
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| To create an animation from raw data:
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| 
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| ```c
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| extern const uint8_t lottie_data[];
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| lv_obj_t* lottie = lv_rlottie_create_from_raw(parent, width, height, (const char *)lottie_data);
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| ```
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| 
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| ## Getting animations
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| 
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| Lottie is standard and popular format so you can find many animation files on the web.
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| For example: https://lottiefiles.com/
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| 
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| You can also create your own animations with Adobe After Effects or similar software.
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| 
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| ## Controlling animations
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| 
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| LVGL provides two functions to control the animation mode: `lv_rlottie_set_play_mode` and `lv_rlottie_set_current_frame`.
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| You'll combine your intentions when calling the first method, like in these examples:
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| ```c
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| lv_obj_t * lottie = lv_rlottie_create_from_file(scr, 128, 128, "test.json");
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| lv_obj_center(lottie);
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| // Pause to a specific frame
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| lv_rlottie_set_current_frame(lottie, 50);
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| lv_rlottie_set_play_mode(lottie, LV_RLOTTIE_CTRL_PAUSE); // The specified frame will be displayed and then the animation will pause
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| 
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| // Play backward and loop
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| lv_rlottie_set_play_mode(lottie, LV_RLOTTIE_CTRL_PLAY | LV_RLOTTIE_CTRL_BACKWARD | LV_RLOTTIE_CTRL_LOOP);
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| 
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| // Play forward once (no looping)
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| lv_rlottie_set_play_mode(lottie, LV_RLOTTIE_CTRL_PLAY | LV_RLOTTIE_CTRL_FORWARD);
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| ```
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| 
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| The default animation mode is **play forward with loop**.
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| 
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| If you don't enable looping, a `LV_EVENT_READY` is sent when the animation can not make more progress without looping.
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| 
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| To get the number of frames in an animation or the current frame index, you can cast the `lv_obj_t` instance to a `lv_rlottie_t` instance and inspect the `current_frame` and `total_frames` members.
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| 
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| ## Example
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| ```eval_rst
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| 
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| .. include:: ../../examples/libs/rlottie/index.rst
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| 
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| ```
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| 
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| ## API
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| 
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| ```eval_rst
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| 
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| .. doxygenfile:: lv_rlottie.h
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|   :project: lvgl
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