LYGIA is a shader library of reusable functions that will let you prototype, port or ship a project in just few minutes. It's very granular, flexible and efficient. Support multiple shading languages and can easily be added to any project, enviroment or framework of your choice.
Here are a couple of integrations examples:
In your shader #include
the functions you need:
#ifdef GL_ES
precision mediump float;
#endif
uniform vec2 u_resolution;
uniform float u_time;
#include "lygia/space/ratio.glsl"
#include "lygia/math/decimate.glsl"
#include "lygia/draw/circle.glsl"
void main(void) {
vec3 color = vec3(0.0);
vec2 st = gl_FragCoord.xy/u_resolution.xy;
st = ratio(st, u_resolution);
color = vec3(st.x,st.y,abs(sin(u_time)));
color = decimate(color, 20.);
color += circle(st, .5, .1);
gl_FragColor = vec4(color, 1.0);
}
Then you need to resovle this dependencies, the fastest way would be to drag&drop your shader file here:
The other options is using a local version that then you can bundle into your project, or use the server to resolve the dependencies online.
If you are working locally in an environment that can resolve #include
dependencies, just clone LYGIA into your project relative to the shader you are loading:
git clone https://github.com/patriciogonzalezvivo/lygia.git
or as a submodule:
git submodule add https://github.com/patriciogonzalezvivo/lygia.git
or you may clone LYGIA without the git history and reduce the project size (9MB+) with the following command:
npx degit https://github.com/patriciogonzalezvivo/lygia.git lygia
If you are working on a cloud platform you probably want to resolve the dependencies without needing to install anything. Just add a link to https://lygia.xyz/resolve.js
(JS) or https://lygia.xyz/resolve.esm.js
(ES6 module):
<!-- as a JavaScript source -->
<script src="https://lygia.xyz/resolve.js"></script>
<!-- Or as a ES6 module -->
<script type="module">
import resolveLygia from "https://lygia.xyz/resolve.esm.js"
</script>
To then resolve the dependencies by passing a string
or strings[]
to resolveLygia()
or resolveLygiaAsync()
:
// 1. FIRST
// Sync resolver, one include at a time
vertSource = resolveLygia(vertSource);
fragSource = resolveLygia(fragSource);
// OR.
// ASync resolver, all includes in parallel calls
vertSource = resolveLygiaAsync(vertSource);
fragSource = resolveLygiaAsync(fragSource);
// 2. SECOND
// Use the resolved source code
shdr = createShader(vertSource, fragSource);
This this function can also resolve dependencies to previous versions of LYGIA by using this pattern lygia/vX.X.X/...
on you dependency paths. For example:
#include "lygia/v1.0.0/math/decimation.glsl"
#include "lygia/v1.1.0/math/decimation.glsl"
Learn more about LYGIA and how to use it from these examples:
- 2D examples for Processing (GLSL)
- 2D/3D examples for P5.js (GLSL)
- 2D examples for Three.js + React (GLSL) by Eduard Fossas
- 2D examples for Three.js (GLSL)
- 3D examples for Three.js (GLSL) by Guido Schmidt
- 2D examples for OpenFrameworks (GLSL)
- 2D/3D examples for Unity3D (HLSL)
- 2D examples for Touch Designer (GLSL) (dynamic resolver) by Leith Ben Abdessalem
- 2D examples for Touch Designer (GLSL) (static resolver) by Victor Saz
- 2D examples on Observable Notebook (GLSL) by Radames Ajna
- Figma's noise&texture plugin by Rogie King. You will need to go to the "Custom" tab on the plugin to edit shaders and load LYGIA modules
- 3D example on Irmf by Glenn Lewis
- 2D/3D examples on GlslViewer (GLSL)
- 2D examples on Ossia by Jean-Michaël Celerier
- Ogl integration by John Ku
- 2D templates for Ogl(TS) and Three.js(JS/TS) by Daeinc
For more information, guidance, or feedback about using LYGIA, join #Lygia channel on shader.zone discord.
The functions are divided into different categories:
math/
: general math functions and constants:PI
,SqrtLength()
, etc.space/
: general spatial operations:scale()
,rotate()
, etc.color/
: general color operations:luma()
,saturation()
, blend modes, palettes, color space conversion, and tonemaps.animation/
: animation operations: easinggenerative/
: generative functions:random()
,noise()
, etc.sdf/
: signed distance field functions.draw/
: drawing functions likedigits()
,stroke()
,fill
, etc/.sample/
: sample operationsfilter/
: typical filter operations: different kind of blurs, mean and median filters.distort/
: distort sampling operationslighting/
: different lighting models and functions for foward/deferred/raymarching renderinggeometry/
: operation related to geometries: intersections and AABB accelerating structures.morphological/
: morphological filters: dilation, erosion, alpha and poisson fill.
There are some functions whose behavior can be changed using the #defines
keyword before including it. For example, gaussian blurs are usually are done in two passes. By default, these are performed on their 1D version, but if you are interested in using a 2D kernel, all in the same pass, you will need to add the GAUSSIANBLUR_2D
keyword this way:
#define GAUSSIANBLUR_2D
#include "filter/gaussianBlur.glsl"
void main(void) {
...
vec2 pixel = 1./u_resolution;
color = gaussianBlur(u_tex0, uv, pixel, 9);
...
}
- It relies on
#include "path/to/file.*lsl"
which is defined by Khronos GLSL standard and requires a typical C-like pre-compiler MACRO which is easy to implement with just basic string operations to resolve dependencies.
Here you can find some implementations on different languages:
-
C#:
. GLSLIncludes a small utility to add the include feature to glsl by z0rg.
-
C++:
. VERA's routines for resolving GLSL dependencies.
-
Python:
-
JavaScript:
. vanilla JS (online resolver) This small file brings
resolveLygia()
which takes astring
orstring[]
and parses it, solving all the#include
dependencies into a singlestring
you can load on your shaders. It also has aresolveLygiaAsync()
version that resolves all the dependencies in parallel. Both support dependencies to previous versions of LYGIA by using this patternlygia/vX.X.X/...
on you dependency paths.. npm module (online resolver) by Eduardo Fossas. This is bring the same
resolveLygia()
andresolveLygiaAsync()
function but as a npm module.. vite glsl plugin (local bundle) by Ustym Ukhman. Imports
.glsl
local dependencies, or load inline shaders through vite.. esbuild glsl plugin (local bundle) by Ricardo Matias. Imports local
.glsl
dependencies through esbuild.. webpack glsl plugin (local bundle) by Ryan Grieve that imports local
.glsl
dependencies through webpack.
- It's very granular. One function per file. The file and the function share the same name, namely:
myFunc.glsl
containsmyFunct()
. There are some files that just include a collection of files inside a folder with the same name. For example:
color/blend.glsl
// which includes
color/blend/*.glsl
- It's multi language. Right now most of is GLSL (
*.glsl
) and HLSL (*.hlsl
), but we are slowly extending to WGSL (*.wgsl
), CUDA (*.cuh
) and Metal (*.msl
).
math/mirror.glsl
math/mirror.hlsl
math/mirror.wgsl
math/mirror.msl
math/mirror.cuh
- Self documented. Each file contains a structured comment (in YAML) at the top of the file. This one contains the name of the original author, description, use, and
#define
options
/*
contributors: <FULL NAME>
description: [DESCRIPTION + URL]
use: <vec2> myFunc(<vec2> st, <float> x [, <float> y])
options:
- MYFUNC_TYPE
- MYFUNC_SAMPLER_FNC()
*/
- Prevents name collisions by using the following pattern where
FNC_
is followed with the function name:
#ifndef FNC_MYFUNC
#define FNC_MYFUNC
float myFunc(float in) {
return in;
}
#endif
- Templating capabilities through
#defines
. Probably the most frequent use is templating the sampling function for reusability. The#define
options start with the name of the function, in this exampleMYFUNC_
. They are added asoptions:
in the header.
#ifndef MYFUNC_TYPE
#define MYFUNC_TYPE vec4
#endif
#ifndef MYFUNC_SAMPLER_FNC
#define MYFUNC_SAMPLER_FNC(TEX, UV) texture2D(TEX, UV)
#endif
#ifndef FNC_MYFUNC
#define FNC_MYFUNC
MYFUNC_TYPE myFunc(SAMPLER_TYPE tex, vec2 st) {
return MYFUNC_SAMPLER_FNC(tex, st);
}
#endif
- Function Overloading. Arguments are arranged in such a way that optional elements are at the end. When possible sort them according their memory size (except textures that remain at the top). Ex.:
SAMPLER_TYPE, mat4, mat3, mat2, vec4, vec3, vec2, float, ivec4, ivec3, ivec2, int, bool
/*
...
use: myFunc(<vec2> st, <vec2|float> x[, <float> y])
*/
#ifndef FNC_MYFUNC
#define FNC_MYFUNC
vec2 myFunc(vec2 st, vec2 x) {
return st * x;
}
vec2 myFunc(vec2 st, float x) {
return st * x;
}
vec2 myFunc(vec2 st, float x, float y) {
return st * vec2(x, y);
}
#endif
LYGIA has a long way to go. Your support will be appreciated and rewarded! All contributors are automatically added to the commercial license. This support can take multiple forms:
- fixing bugs!
- expanding the cross-compatibility between languages GLSL/HLSL/MSL/WGSL/CUDA
- contributing new functions
- adding new examples and integrations for new environments like: GoDot, ISF, MaxMSP, etc.
- through sponsorships
LYGIA belongs to those that support it. For that it uses a dual-licensed under the Prosperity License and the Patron License for sponsors and contributors.
Sponsors and contributors are automatically added to the Patron License and they can ignore any non-commercial rule of the Prosperity License software.
It's also possible to get a permanent commercial license hooked to a single and specific version of LYGIA.
If you have doubts please reaching out to patriciogonzalezvivo at gmail dot com
Created and mantained by Patricio Gonzalez Vivo( Mastodon | Twitter | Instagram | GitHub ) and every direct or indirect contributors to the GitHub. This library has been built over years, and in many cases on top of the work of brilliant and generous people like: Inigo Quiles, Morgan McGuire, Alan Wolfe, Hugh Kennedy, Matt DesLauriers, and many others.
Sign up for the news letter below, join the LYGIA's channel on Discord or follow the Github repository