Creating a Skia “Hello World!”

This tutorial will guide you through the steps to create a Hello World Desktop application in Skia.

Who this tutorial is for:

This will be useful to you if you want to create a window that can receive events and to which you can draw with Skia.

Step 1: Check out and build Skia

Follow the instructions for: Linux, Mac OS X or Windows. The framework that we will be using does not currently support other platforms.

Once you have a working development environment, we can move on to the next step.

Step 2: Build the included HelloSkia Example

We will be using the “SkiaExamples” framework. You can find it in the experimental/SkiaExamples directory. There is an included HelloWorld example, and we will start by building it before we go ahead and create our own.

On Mac OS X

Run GYP_GENERATORS="ninja" ./gyp_skia This will generate a ninja target, and ninja -C out/Debug SkiaExamples will create SkiaExamples.app

On Linux:

Run GYP_GENERATORS="ninja" ./gyp_skia

Build the SkiaExamples target:

ninja -C out/Release SkiaExamples

The SkiaExamples binary should be in out/Release/SkiaExamples

On Windows

Run ./gyp_skia

There should be a Visual Studio project out/gyp/SkiaExamples.vcproj with which you can build the SkiaExamples binary.

Run the SkiaExamples.

You should see a window open displaying rotating text and some geometry.

Step 3: Create your own Sample

Create a file experimental/SkiaExamples/Tutorial.cpp within the Skia tree. Copy the following code:

#include "SkExample.h"
#include "SkDevice.h"

class HelloTutorial : public SkExample {
    public:
        HelloTutorial(SkExampleWindow* window)
            : SkExample(window)
        {
            fName = "Tutorial";  // This is how Skia will find your example.

            fWindow->setupBackend(SkExampleWindow::kGPU_DeviceType);
           // Another option is the CPU backend:  fWindow->setupBackend(kRaster_DeviceType);
        }

    protected:
        void draw(SkCanvas* canvas) SK_OVERRIDE {
            // Clear background
            canvas->drawColor(SK_ColorWHITE);

            SkPaint paint;
            // Draw a message with a nice black paint.
            paint.setFlags(SkPaint::kAntiAlias_Flag);
            paint.setColor(SK_ColorBLACK);
            paint.setTextSize(SkIntToScalar(20));

            static const char message[] = "Hello World!";

            // Translate and draw the text:
            canvas->save();
            canvas->translate(SkIntToScalar(50), SkIntToScalar(100));
            canvas->drawText(message, strlen(message), SkIntToScalar(0), SkIntToScalar(0), paint);
            canvas->restore();

            // If you ever want to do animation. Use the inval method to trigger a redraw.
            this->fWindow->inval(NULL);
        }
};

static SkExample* MyFactory(SkExampleWindow* window) {
    return new HelloTutorial(window);
}
static SkExample::Registry registry(MyFactory);

Step 4: Compile and run SkiaExamples with your Sample

Here is what you have to do to compile your example. There will be functionality to make this easier, but for now, this is what you have to do:

  • Open gyp/experimental.gyp and look for the SkiaExamples target.

  • In the ‘sources’ section of the SkiaExampels target, add ../experimental/SkiaExamples/Tutorial.cpp to the list of sources.

  • Repeat Step 2 to update our gyp targets and build our example.

  • Run the SkiaExamples, specifying the name of our new example:

    $> out/Release/SkiaExamples --match Tutorial
    

Step 5: How to iterate through multiple examples

If you did not specify an example with the --match flag, or if your match string matches more than one example, you can use the n key to iterate through all of the examples registered.