starfox
v0.0.1
Published
HTML 5 Gamepad input, streamed to node via websockets
Downloads
5
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STARFOX
HTML 5 Gamepad controller input (works on latest Chrome), magically beamed to your node.js application over a web socket.
API
Server
See the demo directory, specifically demo/app.js
for a simple example. Requiring the starfox
module returns a singleton object, which is an EventEmitter.
var starfox = require('starfox');
// Pass an HTTP server in to the module
starfox.mount(httpServerYouCreate, {
url: '', // the prefix URL for the JS file sent to the client, default none
port: 8080 // port for web socket server, default 8080
});
// Each connection represents a single client, who might have multiple
// gamepads attached.
starfox.on('connection', function(player) {
// Whenever the state of the gamepad changes (e.g. once when the button
// is pressed, and again when it is let go), this event is fired
player.on('input', function(gamepadState) {
console.log(gamepadState);
});
// Whenever a gamepad is connected or disconnected, this event fires
player.on('gamepadsChanged', function(gamepads) {
console.log(gamepads);
});
});
Client
The browser API for Starfox is generated on the server using browserify. It can be included as a script tag, or your client-side application can require it and use it with browserify. A simple demo usage is in demo/demo.html
, but here's a bit more color on the API:
<script src="/starfox.js"></script>
<script>
var sf = new Starfox(); // parameter is the websocket URL to use,
// default is ws://+document.domain+8080
// Emits a ready event when socket connects
sf.on('ready', function() {
console.log('It\'s about time you showed up, Fox. You\'re the only hope for our world!');
});
// Optional: listen for controller events on the client too:
sf.on('input', function(gamepadState) {
console.log(gamepadState);
});
sf.on('gamepadsChanged', function(gamepads) {
console.log(gamepads);
});
</script>
LICENSE
MIT