/odin-godot

Godot toolkit for the Odin programming language

Primary LanguageOdinApache License 2.0Apache-2.0

Godot Toolkit for Odin

Warning

This toolkit is a Work In Progress!

If you are using parts of it, beware of sudden major changes to the API, structure, and features.

This currently targets Godot v4.2. This may work with v4.1, but it will not work with v4.0. For a version which works with v4.0 use the dev-4.0-2024-02 release.

Base GDExtension Bindings

The bindings to the C Interface are in ./gdextension/lib.odin. They're based on godot-cpp/gdextension/gdextension_interface.h.

Generating Complete Bindings

Clone & generate bindings

git clone --recursive-submodules -j8 https://github.com/dresswithpockets/odin-godot
cd odin-godot
make bindings

Bindings for all enums, classes, utility functions, singletons, and native structs will be generated in core, editor, and variant.

Note

make bindings expects odin on path, all submodules updated, and odin-godot (this repo) is the working directory.

Alternatively, you may build and run bindgen yourself:

# temple is the templating engine used by bindgen, temple_cli is temple's preprocessor.
odin build temple/cli/ -o:speed -out:bin/temple_cli.exe

# temple_cli will recursively search all odin files in the specified directory for
# usages of `compiled` and `compiled_inline`, then it will generate Odin code with
# the built templates in templates.odin, in the specified directory. in this case,
# its searching in the bindgen directory, and outputs to bindgen/templates.odin, with
# the `bindgen` package name.
./bin/temple_cli.exe bindgen bindgen bindgen

# bindgen is the tool which uses the temple templates to generate the entire
# GDExtension binding
odin build bindgen/ -o:speed -out:bin/bindgen.exe

# bindgen requires a path to a json file which describes the GDExtension API.
# One is available in godot-cpp.
./bin/bindgen.exe godot-cpp/gdextension/extension_api.json

Creating a GDExtension

See the example godot project for a working usage of these bindings.

Otherwise, create and export an entrypoint for your extension:

package example

// assuming odin-godot was cloned into your defacto shared collection
import gd "shared:odin-godot/gdextension"

@(export)
example_init :: proc "c" (
    interface: ^gd.Interface,
    library: gd.ExtensionClassLibraryPtr,
    initialization: ^gd.Initialization,
) -> bool {
    // do usual initialization
    return true
}

Build as a shared library

odin build . -build-mode:shared

Then, follow the instructions for using the extension module.

Godin

Godin is a preprocessor which generates most of the boilerplate for Extension Classes, Methods, Enums, Properties, Signals, Groups, and Subgroups.

For example, the following Odin code will produce all of the boilerplate for an extension class "Player" that extends "Node2D".

package test

//+class Player extends Node2D
Player :: struct {
    health: i64,
}

To build Godin:

# while in the odin-godot directory
./build_godin.sh

Run godin help for usage details, including documentation about the Godin preprocessor syntax.