#lime
light media engine
A lightweight OpenGL framework for haxe.
A starting point for building OpenGL applications across Mac, Windows, Linux, Blackberry, HTML5(WebGL), Android, iOS and more.
#What it does
lime exposes the following
- OpenGL
- Audio
- Input
- Windowing
- Useful native features
By setting up a bootstrap for your application, lime will handle all the low level events and call into your main class (this can be overridden) for you.
#How it works
lime is a cross platform haxe library powered by lime-tools, for building upon opengl across many platforms.
lime is two parts
One part is the native code, the underlying platform templates and systems to expose the features.
The second part is the haxe wrapper, forwarding the events to your application.
For example, frameworks like OpenFL leverage lime to implement a cross platform Flash API by leaning on the native portion, without using the current lime haxe classes at all.
#Things to note
- lime is low level. It does the bare minimum to give you access to the metal - without making it difficult.
- lime works by default by bootstrapping your application main class into the framework.
- lime will call functions into your class, for mouse, keys, gamepad and other system or windowing events (resizing, for example).
- lime exposes an API to talk to the windowing, audio and other API's across platforms.
- native parts of lime were forked from nme (native media engine) and merged into openfl-native - but now (and lastly) been merged into lime and joined forces to create an agnostic, cross platform starting point to widen the haxe landscape for all frameworks and framework developers.
Expect docs, diagrams and breakdowns of how to get started using lime soon. See the examples/ folder for the basics for now.
