Tiled Map Editor map parser made to work in node.js or browserify.
var tmx = require('tmx-parser');
// if you have a string (pathToFile is for resolving tilesets if necessary)
tmx.parse(xmlString, pathToFile, function(err, map) {
if (err) throw err;
console.log(map);
});
// if you have a file
tmx.parseFile(filename, function(err, map) {
if (err) throw err;
console.log(map);
});
The second example in that list uses tmx.readFile(filename, callback)
and then calls tmx.parse(...)
on the results.
So if you're in browserland, you can replace the readFile
function
with your own asset loading function.
A parsed map looks something like this:
{ version: '1.0',
orientation: 'orthogonal',
width: 200,
height: 100,
tileWidth: 16,
tileHeight: 16,
backgroundColor: undefined,
layers:
[ { map: [Object],
type: 'tile',
name: 'Tiles',
opacity: 1,
visible: true,
properties: {},
tiles: [Object],
horizontalFlips: [Object],
verticalFlips: [Object],
diagonalFlips: [Object] },
{ map: [Object],
type: 'tile',
name: 'Ladders',
opacity: 1,
visible: true,
properties: {},
tiles: [Object],
horizontalFlips: [Object],
verticalFlips: [Object],
diagonalFlips: [Object] },
{ type: 'object',
name: 'Objects',
color: undefined,
opacity: 1,
visible: true,
properties: {},
objects: [Object] },
{ type: 'object',
name: 'PlayerLayer',
color: undefined,
opacity: 1,
visible: true,
properties: {},
objects: [] } ],
properties:
{ bg_art: 'background.png',
bg_music: 'music/silly.mp3',
fg_art: 'hill.png' },
tileSets:
[ { firstGid: 1,
source: 'tiles.tsx',
name: 'default',
tileWidth: 16,
tileHeight: 16,
spacing: null,
margin: null,
tileOffset: [Object],
properties: {},
image: [Object],
tiles: [Object],
terrainTypes: [] } ] }
The objects
array looks like this:
{ type: 'object',
name: 'Objects',
color: undefined,
opacity: 1,
visible: true,
properties: {},
objects:
[ { name: undefined,
type: 'Decoration',
x: 0,
y: 640,
width: 224,
height: 240,
rotation: 0,
properties: [Object],
gid: null,
visible: true,
ellipse: false,
polygon: null,
polyline: null },
{ name: 'movement text',
type: 'Text',
x: 240,
y: 640,
width: 336,
height: 80,
rotation: 0,
properties: [Object],
gid: null,
visible: true,
ellipse: false,
polygon: null,
polyline: null },
{ name: 'victory',
type: 'Victory',
x: 2976,
y: 880,
width: 224,
height: 96,
rotation: 0,
properties: {},
gid: null,
visible: true,
ellipse: false,
polygon: null,
polyline: null } ] }
TileLayer objects have a tileAt(x, y)
method.
Otherwise you can access layer.tiles
in row-major order.
See the bottom of index.js for more information.