Render an ASCII globe in your terminal. Make it interactive or just let it spin in the background.
Changelog
v0.2.0:
- added multiple CLI arguments for setting up the scene (
refresh-rate
,globe-rotation
,cam-rotation
,cam-zoom
,location
,focus-speed
,night
,template
,texture
,texture-night
) - added experimental listing mode that supports reading coordinates from
standard input and going through all of them, animating camera target changes
(see
--pipe
) - enabled ability to display night side of the globe using an additional texture
- changed default Earth texture (now includes New Zealand)
- added vim-style navigation for the interactive mode
- improved internal library representation of
Texture
- improved documentation
v0.1.2
- added clearing screen on exit
- fixed panic when using rust version <1.45
v0.1.1
- fixed mouse capture staying on after exit
v0.1.0
- initial release
Install
To build globe-cli
you will need to have
Rust programming language installed on your machine.
Use cargo install
:
cargo install globe-cli
Or git clone
and cargo run --release
directly from the repository.
AUR
globe
can be installed from available AUR packages using an AUR helper. For example,
yay -S globe-cli
If you prefer, you can clone the AUR packages and then compile them with makepkg. For example,
git clone https://aur.archlinux.org/globe-cli.git
cd globe-cli
makepkg -si
Docker
You can also use Docker to try out globe
, no Rust needed. After cloning the repo, just build and run an image from the Dockerfile
contained at the root of the project:
docker build -t globe .
docker run -it --rm globe -s
Run
To get a full listing of available features and options, show the --help
information with:
globe -h
Display a globe in screensaver mode using the -s
option.
globe -s
It's kind of boring. Let's add some camera rotation to make it look more alive:
globe -sc2
Now let's also enable the night side and rotate the globe on its axis:
globe -snc2 -g10
If you want to adjust things at runtime check out the interactive mode. Here you can pan the globe around using either the mouse or keyboard arrows:
globe -i
Use +
and -
to control the globe rotation speed, ,
and .
to control
the camera rotation speed, PgUp
and PgDown
to control the camera zoom,
n
to toggle displaying globe's night side.
Settings we used on the screensaver mode also work:
globe -inc2 -g10
Last but not least there is the listing mode. It allows you to pass location coordinates to the program and see them shown one by one on the globe. Currently, it only supports a very basic input format. Here's an example:
echo "0,0.5;0.1,0.5;0.3,0.5;0.5,0.5;0.7,0.5" | globe -p
If you're feeling creative, you can also load custom textures, like so:
globe -in --texture ./path-to-texture --texture-night ./path-to-night-texture
Use the library
To use globe
within your Rust project, add it to your dependencies:
[dependencies]
globe = "0.2.0"
First create a Globe
:
let mut globe = GlobeConfig::new()
.use_template(GlobeTemplate::Earth)
.with_camera(CameraConfig::default())
.build();
Next make a new Canvas
and render the Globe
onto it:
let mut canvas = Canvas::new(250, 250, None);
globe.render_on(&mut canvas);
You can now print out the canvas to the terminal:
let (size_x, size_y) = canvas.get_size();
// default character size is 4 by 8
for i in 0..size_y / 8 {
for j in 0..size_x / 4 {
print!("{}", canvas.matrix[i][j]);
}
println!();
}
See globe-cli
code for examples of runtime changes to the Globe
and it's
Camera
.
Credits
Rendering math based on C++ code by DinoZ1729.