CCG Builder is a tool for using data from a spreadsheet or database to automatically generate a series of graphics. For example, to produce the graphic assets needed to print a spreadsheet of cards from a collectible card game without having to manually build each individual card.
CCG Builder uses EaselJS which in turn requires the Cairo graphics library to be installed on your system.
Follow the instructions for installing Cairo on your system, then run npm install ccgbuilder
CCG Builder can either be used as a module or via command line.
There are two input objects required to build images. A database or list of items that will be compiled (for example, data for each card in a game) and a layout which describes how to turn that data into a finalized image. You will probably also have graphic assets (such as a standard card border, a unique piece of artwork for each card, icons, etc).
An example that uses nearly every feature can be found in the examples/all directory.
Example documents can be found on Google Spreadsheets: https://docs.google.com/spreadsheets/d/1D4d-Fc-almcuSlrkN1ADMFvLvkQrOUwNbv7sFhlQZmA/
Usage: node ccgbuilder.js [options]
Options:
-e, --errorMode On error: halt processing, ignore and continue, or delete
files matching output names
[choices: "halt", "ignore", "delete"] [default: "halt"]
-q, --quiet hide non-error log messages [default: false]
-p, --prefix Prefix for layout and item filenames [default: ""]
-l, --layout Layout csv filename [default: "layout.csv"]
-i, --item, --db item db csv filename [default: "items.csv"]
-h, --help Show help [boolean]
Here's an example which loads a file in the current directory called "layout.csv" as the instruction and "items.csv" as the database.
var ccgbuilder = require('ccgbuilder');
ccgbuilder.merge('layout.csv', 'items.csv');
The database document must contain a header row with no blank or duplicate headers, and one column called 'filename' that contains the filename to use for that item for the final generated image.
You can put whatever data you want in the document, just ensure that it is consistent, valid csv, and error-free.
Alternatively, instead of a csv filename you can pass in a JSON object of your own. Make sure that it contains nothing but an array of objects with keys equal to headers. For example:
[{filename:"red.png", cardtext:"this one is red", textcolor:"#FF0000"},
{filename:"blue.png", cardtext:"this one is blue", textcolor:"#0000FF"}]
Ensure that the document is consistent, valid csv, error-free and contains exactly the headers listed below in layout properties/headers.
Alternatively, you can pass in a JSON object of your own. Make sure that it contains nothing but an array of objects with keys equal to the layout headers/keys listed below. The following is an incomplete example just to show the format, but is missing several keys/headers:
[{type:"canvas", width:"1000", height:"1000"},
{type:"image", val:"test.png", x:0, y:0}]
Here is an example Google Spreadsheet that can be used as a starting point for your own data.
Any cell can be a) an empty field, b) a reserved term [center, left, right, top, bottom, width, height], c) a column header from the item document, d) a numeric value, or e) a string value, checked for and used in that order. None of the reserved terms should be used as column headers in your database document.
The following headers must be present in the layout document.
Must be one of the types listed below in 'Types'
The value to be used for this field. If an image, this must resolve to a filename. If text/textbox, this is the content that will be used.
Blank defaults to 0. The x/y values relative to the canvas.
Image: Blank defaults to width/height of the source image Text/Textbox: Blank defaults to the measured width/height of the text
The width/height of the item. If specified for 'image' or 'text', the result will be stretched to this size. If specified for 'textbox' width will be used as the bounding box dimensions, and text will wrap to stay within. Height will be ignored. (future version may allow hiding overflow or resizing text to make it fit)
Blank defaults to 1.
Used to scale the image. Scaling is done after other basic transformations (width/height/regX/regY).
Negative values can be used to flip/mirror image (such as -1), but since it is done after other transformations, you will likely need to flip your regX/regY or x/y positioning to get it to appear where intended.
Blank defaults to 0.
The offset for this display object's registration point. For example, to make a 100x100px image rotate or position from its center, you would set regX and regY to 50.
Generally if you're using a reserved keyword like "center" or "right" for your x or y coordinates, you will want to use the same keyword here.
Additional offsets that are added to x,y
Useful for padding or tweaking x/y coordinates that are using calculated positioning (ie, 'center' or 'right').
Blank defaults to 0.
The degrees of rotation to apply to the object.
Remember to use regX and regY to set the point around which to rotate.
Blank defaults to "#000000" Only applies to text/textbox.
The color to be used for content.
Blank defaults to EaselJS default (left). Only applies to textbox.
The textAlignment to be used.
Blank defaults to EaselJS default (size below) * 1.2. Only applies to textbox.
The lineHeight to be applied to the textbox content.
Blank defaults to "normal" Only applies to text/textbox
The CSS font-style/font-variant/font-weight property. Use "italic" or "bold" or "bold italic".
Blank defaults to 20.
The font size in pixels.
Blank defaults to "Impact"
The font used. Should work with any font your system has.
Blank defaults to EaselJS default. Only applies to text/textbox.
The font baseline. Somewhat unreliable and untested. Try changing it for tiny text positioning changes, but if it acts strange you're better off just leaving it default and tweaking the x/y offsets.
Blank is considered false. Any other value is considered true.
When true, this object is optional and only appears if val is present. In other words, suppress errors/warnings for missing 'val' on this field.
Every layout document requires exactly one row with type 'canvas' and values for 'width' and 'height'. All other fields should be ignored, but leave them blank since they may be used in future versions.
This is the canvas used for the generated image.
Note that it can still be dynamic with a header lookup from the item database. If every generated image needs to specify its own dimensions, that data can be stored in the database doc with headers 'cardwidth' and 'cardheight', and then this canvas row can have a width of 'cardwidth' and height of 'cardheight'.
An image resource to be loaded. val should be either a filename (for an image common to all items, such as a card border or copyright notice) or the name of a header from the database doc.
A single line of text. val should be either a header from the database doc, or a string value. See layout properties for specifics.
Multiline text. val should be either a header from the database doc, or a string value. Width is required, height is currently ignored but should be left blank as it may be used in the future to enforce heights. See layout properties for specifics.
Any type that begins with underscore _ is completely ignored. Use it to store comments or values used with formulas in your spreadsheet. For example, if you need 50 pixels of border padding to be applied to several items, you can put _borderpadding in type and 50 in val, and then use spreadsheet formulas (vlookup, sum) to grab that value as needed.
Meta information for a spritesheet to be used in conjunction with bitmapText. val should resolve to a filename for the spritesheet image to be used. width and height are the values for an individual frame in your spritesheet. regX and regY are the values to be used for an individual frame in your spritesheet font should be the character map, a string of characters in the exact order as the frames of your spritesheet Frames will be assigned indexes based on their position in the source images (left to right, top to bottom).
Calculated values such as top/left/center cannot be used in any of these fields and must be manually specified.
For example, given the spritesheet in examples/all/img/spritesheet.png val should be 'img/spritesheet.png', width and height should be 20 since each character is 20x20 in the png, regX and regY should be 0 in order for any calculated positioning in bitmapText to work right, and font should be RGBUW which means that the letter R will be replaced by the first frame (ie, the first 20x20 block in the spritesheet), G will be replaced by the second, and so on.
Sprites of differing sizes are not supported at this time; all characters must have the exact same dimensions.
See EaselJS spriteSheet for more info.
Bitmap Text allows you to turn a text string into a sequence of images, such as having "3BU" become three icons in a row: a 3 symbol, black mana symbol, and blue mana symbol.
Font field should be the id of a spritesheet.
See EaselJS bitmapText for more info.
- Calculated regX and regY values for text are not perfect and will probably need to be used in conjunction with offsets. We can eventually fix it for text with a given height/width, but difficult to fix for flexible width/height text.