0.1.1 • Published 4 years ago

render-d3-video v0.1.1

Weekly downloads
1
License
MIT
Repository
-
Last release
4 years ago

Render D3 Video

a CLI tool to generate videos from a locally running server using d3.js to control time. Adapted from Adam Pearce. Real world examples: Women's Issues Within Political Party Platforms and The NBA Has a Defensive Three Seconds Problem.

Why use this instead of screen recording?

  • No jank. This hacks the internal clock so you get a crisp frame-by-frame rendering so there is no jank (which can often happen with screen recording, especially with more complex animations and dom calculations).
  • Hi-resolution. It uses a headless browser so you can render any dimensions, like 1920x1080, even if you're screen is smaller.

Dependencies

Installation

npm install -g render-d3-video

Usage

JavaScript

First, you need to setup your JS to override the internal clock. You will also need to run a local server.

// override perfomance.now so render-d3-video can control time
if (document.URL.includes('render-d3-video')) {
 window.currentTime = 0;
 performance.now = () => window.currentTime;
}

// create a global function for render-d3-video to kickoff OR manually below
window.renderD3Video = function renderD3Video({ width, height }) {
 return new Promise(resolve => {
 d3.select('main')
  .style('width', `${width}px`)
  .style('height', `${height}px`);

  resolve();
 })
};

function init() {
  // determine if we need to manually invoke rendering
  d3.timeout(() => {
   if (window.currentTime === undefined) {
    window.renderD3Video({ width: 960, height: 540 });
   }
  }, 100);
}

init();

See full example.

CLI

Create a directory, and run the command within it. Note: All files will be written from the directory the command is executed from.

usage: render-d3-video [OPTIONS]

OPTIONS are:
 -V, --version                       output the version number
 -f, --frames <required>             number of frames to render
 -w, --width <required>              width of video
 -h, --height <required>             height of video
 -p, --port [optional]               port number, default is 4000
 -o, --output [optional]             output name, default is "output"
 -d, --deviceScaleFactor [optional]  the device pixel ratio, default is 1
 -b, --buffer [optional]             buffer between frames in ms, default is 50
 -h, --help                          output usage information

This will create a new directory called rd3v-[output], and generate a subdirectory called frames with each frame as a png, and the resulting video [output].mp4.

Tips

  • Rule of thumb: if it is going to transition, style it with D3
  • You can use CSS transforms with D3 transitions, but use pixels, not percents
0.1.1

4 years ago

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0.0.1

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