PeasyCam provides a dead-simple mouse-driven camera for Processing. It is created and maintained by Jonathan Feinberg. It is free for all uses, per the Apache 2.0 license.
You can download a version of Peasycam compatible with Processing 1.5.1 here:
http://static.mrfeinberg.com/peasycam/peasycam_15100.zip
You can install the latest Peasycam from within Processing via the menus Sketch > Import Library… > Add Library…
PeasyCam camera; void setup() { // PeasyCam constructor: // PeasyCam(PApplet parent, // double lookAtX, double lookAtY, double lookAtZ, // double distance); camera = new PeasyCam(this, 0, 0, 0, 50); }
That’s it. Now a mouse left-drag will rotate the camera around the subject, a right drag will zoom in and out, and a middle-drag will pan. A double-click restores the camera to its original position.
The PeasyCam is positioned on a sphere whose radius is the given distance from the look-at point. Rotations are around axes that pass through the looked-at point.
PeasyCam(PApplet parent, double lookAtX, double lookAtY, double lookAtZ, double distance); PeasyCam(PApplet parent, double distance); // look at 0,0,0
camera.setActive(boolean active); // false to make this camera stop responding to mouse // By default, the camera is in "free rotation" mode, but you can // constrain it to any axis, around the look-at point: camera.setYawRotationMode(); // like spinning a globe camera.setPitchRotationMode(); // like a somersault camera.setRollRotationMode(); // like a radio knob camera.setSuppressRollRotationMode(); // Permit pitch/yaw only. // Then you can set it back to its default mode: camera.setFreeRotationMode(); // reassign particular drag gestures, or set them to null camera.setLeftDragHandler(PeasyDragHandler handler); camera.setCenterDragHandler(PeasyDragHandler handler); camera.setRightDragHandler(PeasyDragHandler handler); PeasyDragHandler getPanDragHandler(); PeasyDragHandler getRotateDragHandler(); PeasyDragHandler getZoomDragHandler(); // mouse wheel zooms by default; set null, or make your own camera.setWheelHandler(PeasyWheelHandler handler); PeasyWheelHandler getZoomWheelHandler(); // change sensitivity of built-in mouse wheel zoom camera.setWheelScale(double scale); // 1.0 by default double getWheelScale(); // make your own! public interface PeasyDragHandler { public void handleDrag(final double dx, final double dy); } public interface PeasyWheelHandler { public void handleWheel(final int delta); } camera.lookAt(double x, double y, double z); camera.rotateX(double angle); // rotate around the x-axis passing through the subject camera.rotateY(double angle); // rotate around the y-axis passing through the subject camera.rotateZ(double angle); // rotate around the z-axis passing through the subject camera.setDistance(double d); // distance from looked-at point camera.pan(double dx, double dy); // move the looked-at point relative to current orientation camera.reset(); camera.reset(long animationTimeInMillis); // reset camera to its starting settings CameraState state = camera.getState(); // get a serializable settings object for current state camera.setState(CameraState state); camera.setState(CameraState state, long animationTimeInMillis); // set the camera to the given saved state // Utility methods to permit the use of a Heads-Up Display // Thanks, A.W. Martin camera.beginHUD(); // now draw things that you want relative to the camera's position and orientation camera.endHUD(); // always!
PeasyCam is impervious to gimbal lock, and has no known “singularities” or discontinuities in its behavior. It relies on the excellent Apache Commons Math geometry package for its rotations.
Thanks: Gennaro Senatore, Michael Kaufmann, Oori Shalev, Jeffrey Gentes, A.W. Martin, Yiannis Chatzikonstantinou, and Donald Ephraim Curtis for bug reports and feature suggestions.