Bogue is an all-purpose GUI (Graphical user interface) library for
ocaml, with animations, written from scratch in
ocaml
, based on SDL2.
- Can be used to add interactivity to any program.
- Can work within an already existing event loop, for instance to add GUI elements to a game.
- Uses GPU acceleration (thanks to the SDL2 renderer library), which makes it quite fast.
- Can deal with several windows.
- Bogue is themable, and does not try to look like your desktop. Instead, it will look the same on every platform.
- Graphics output is scalable (without need to recompile), and hence easily adapts to Hi-DPI displays.
- Predefined animations (slide-in, fade-in, fade-out, rotate).
- Built-in audio mixer.
- Works with mouse, touchscreen, and even TAB focusing
Programming with bogue is easy if you're used to GUIs with widgets, layouts, callbacks, and of course it has a functional flavor. It uses Threads when non-blocking reactions are needed.
open Bogue
let () =
Widget.label "Hello world"
|> Layout.resident
|> Bogue.of_layout
|> Bogue.run
Widgets are the building bricks, responsible for graphic elements that respond to events (mouse, touchscreen, keyboard, etc.).
For a more "functional" use, they can be "connected" instead of reacting with callbacks (see examples).
- boxes with decorations (round corner, border, shadow, gradient background, image pattern)
- check box
- push button (with labels or images)
- rich text display (bold, italics, underline), any TTF font can be used.
- image (all usual formats, including SVG)
- slider (horizontal, vertical, or circular)
- text input with select and copy-paste
- SDL area for free drawing with the whole SDL Renderer API
widgets can be combined in various ways into layouts. For instance, a check box followed by a text label is a common layout.
Several predefined layouts are available:
- sliders (horizontal, vertical, circular). Can be used as progress bars
- scrollable lists (that can easily handle a large number of elements, like one million)
- multi-column tables with sortable columns
- multiple tabs with slide-in animation
- modal popups
- various menus (menu bar, drop down menus with submenus)
- drop-down select lists
- radio lists
- automatic tooltips can be attached to any element
Layouts can be animated (slide-in, transparency, rotation). All layouts can be automatically resized when the user resizes the window. Timeouts are available to execute arbitrary actions after a delay.
demo, tab1 | demo, tab2 |
---|---|
See here for the source code of this demo.
It's the easiest way unless you want to try out the development version.
opam install bogue
That's it. But, if you want to stay in sync with the latest developement, you can directly "pin" the github repository:
opam pin add https://github.com/sanette/bogue.git
(Then update/upgrade opam). And this can easily be undone with
opam unpin https://github.com/sanette/bogue.git
Bogue needs the SDL2 library. In general you already have it
installed, or, if everything goes smoothly, it will be installed
automatically with opam install tsdl
. However, tsdl
is not able
to automatically pick up the right version corresponding to your SDL2
version. You might have to tell opam
the version you need: for
instance for Bogue 20240928 on Ubuntu 20.04 you should opam install tsdl.1.0.0
, because the more recent tsdl.1.1.0
requires
SDL >= 2.0.18
which you probably don't have on your system.
See https://github.com/dbuenzli/tsdl/blob/master/CHANGES.md
You need a working ocaml
installation with opam
, see the ocaml doc. Then, make sure
you have dune
, tsdl
, tsdl-image
and tsdl-ttf
:
opam install dune tsdl tsdl-image tsdl-ttf
Download the
git archive,
unzip it, cd into the bogue-master
dir, and then:
dune build
opam install .
https://ci.ocamllabs.io/github/sanette/bogue
It's good to first have a look at Bogue's general principles.
You can also directly try the tutorials.
The public API can be found here.
You should first try a minimal example.
The examples
directory contains more sophisticated examples. If you
installed the bogue
package with opam
(as described above), these
examples are available via the boguex
program. For instance, run
examples 34 and 41 by:
boguex 34 41
Type boguex -h
to have the list of all examples.
See here.