egui/examples/custom_3d_three-d/index.html
Asger Nyman Christiansen eeeb4b7de2
Improve custom_3d_three-d example (#1923)
* Use correct FBO to output

* custom_3d_three-d web

* Update .gitignore

* Do not free the FBO

* Use three-d 0.13

* ThreeDApp

* Only construct model and camera once

* Clean-up and docs

* Web build instructions

* Remove unused dependencies

* Update Cargo.lock

* Fix build

* More fixes

* omg
2022-08-17 21:33:34 +02:00

38 lines
1.7 KiB
HTML

<html>
<head>
<meta content="text/html;charset=utf-8" http-equiv="Content-Type"/>
</head>
<body>
<canvas id="my" style="position: absolute;top:0;bottom: 0;left: 0;right: 0;margin:auto;"></canvas>
<!-- Note the usage of `type=module` here as this is an ES6 module -->
<script type="module">
// Use ES module import syntax to import functionality from the module
// that we have compiled.
//
// Note that the `default` import is an initialization function which
// will "boot" the module and make it ready to use. Currently browsers
// don't support natively imported WebAssembly as an ES module, but
// eventually the manual initialization won't be required!
import init from './pkg/custom_3d_three_d.js';
async function run() {
// First up we need to actually load the wasm file, so we use the
// default export to inform it where the wasm file is located on the
// server, and then we wait on the returned promise to wait for the
// wasm to be loaded.
// It may look like this: `await init('./pkg/without_a_bundler_bg.wasm');`,
// but there is also a handy default inside `init` function, which uses
// `import.meta` to locate the wasm file relatively to js file
//
// Note that instead of a string here you can also pass in an instance
// of `WebAssembly.Module` which allows you to compile your own module.
// Also note that the promise, when resolved, yields the wasm module's
// exports which is the same as importing the `*_bg` module in other
// modes
await init('./pkg/custom_3d_three_d_bg.wasm');
}
run();
</script>
</body>
</html>