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vite-plugin-ssam-timelapse

v0.1.2

Published

Export a Canvas image at each file save. Use it with Ssam or any HTML Canvas

Downloads

17

Readme

vite-plugin-ssam-timelapse

This plugin is created to be used with Ssam to create a visual documentation of your sketch over time. It may also be used with other libraries if you can get a Canvas object reference.

Install

npm i -D vite-plugin-ssam-timelapse

How it works

When the plugin detects a change in the sketch source code, it will export a PNG image with sequential numbering into timelapse directory. If the directory doesn't exist, it will make one for you. You can later convert the resulting image sequence into a video to create a visual documentation of your sketch. When you close the Vite server and later come back to the same sketch, it will continue incrementing image filenames from where you left off.

✋ If you use Git, you may want to include timelapse directory in .gitignore.

How to set up

In Vite config:

import { ssamTimelapse } from "vite-plugin-ssam-timelapse";

export default defineConfig({
  plugins: [ssamTimelapse()],
  // ...
});

With Ssam

In your Ssam sketch source code:

import { ssam } from "ssam";

const sketch = ({ wrap, canvas }) => {
  if (import.meta.hot) {
    import.meta.hot.on("ssam:timelapse-changed", () => {
      import.meta.hot?.send("ssam:timelapse-newframe", {
        image: canvas.toDataURL(),
      });
    });
  }

  wrap.render = () => {
    // your drawing code
  };
};

const settings = {
  dimensions: [800, 800],
};

ssam(sketch, settings);

With Vanilla JS

You can use the plugin with Vanilla JS or other Canvas libraries as long as you can get a reference to the Canvas object.

const canvas = document.createElement("canvas");
canvas.width = canvas.height = 600;
document.body.appendChild(canvas);
const ctx = canvas.getContext("2d")!;

// make changes to drawing code and save
ctx.fillStyle = `gray`;
ctx.fillRect(0, 0, 600, 600);
ctx.beginPath();
ctx.arc(300, 300, 300, 0, Math.PI * 2);
ctx.fillStyle = `white`;
ctx.fill();

// at each save, canvas image will be exported
if (import.meta.hot) {
  import.meta.hot.on("ssam:timelapse-changed", () => {
    import.meta.hot?.send("ssam:timelapse-newframe", {
      image: canvas.toDataURL(),
    });
  });
}

Default Options

ssamTimelapse({
  // detect changes in the src directory
  watchDir: "./src",
  // will create the directory if it does not exist
  outDir: "./timelapse",
  // overwrite existing files
  overwrite: false,
  // ignore dotfiles. empty files are ignored by default.
  // you can use regex, string or string[]
  ignored: /(^|[\/\\])\../
  // how quickly plugin responds to file change (in milliseconds). see Chokidar documentation
  stabilityThreshold: 1500,
  // how many zeros to pad to filename
  padLength: 5,
  // console logging in browser
  log: true,
});

Convert to MP4

Use a video editing program to convert the image sequence into a video file. If you have ffmpeg installed, it is as simple as running the following command:

ffmpeg -framerate 5 -pattern_type glob -i '*.png' -c:v libx264 -preset slow -crf 20 -pix_fmt yuv420p -y output.mp4

Note that ffmpeg expects the filenames to be sequential. From my testing on Mac, '*.png' will continue to work even if some images are missing, but if you get an error, you will need to rename them before running the ffmpeg command.

License

MIT