The vzome-viewer custom HTML element is an interactive 3D viewer for vZome designs. The viewer can be placed on any web page, because it implements the web component standard.

If you are using vZome GitHub sharing, you can ignore much of this page, since vZome generates web pages and supporting assets, all pre-configured to work together. That said, if you want to adjust your generated pages to display multi-scene designs, read that section below.

This document is a work-in-progress. Please email us if you have questions, or join the Discord server.

Basic Usage

If you are authoring your own web page as HTML, adding the vzome-viewer element is very simple. You can add several viewers to a page, but you must load the Javascript module in a script tag somewhere on the page:

<script type="module" src="https://www.vzome.com/modules/vzome-viewer.js"></script>

Typically, script tags appear inside the head element, but it is not strictly necessary. Loading the Javascript module like this is what defines the vzome-viewer custom element, making it available to use on the page. Only one such script tag is necessary, no matter how many vzome-viewer elements you have on the page.

The simplest form of the vzome-viewer element has just a src attribute whose value is a URL that points to a vZome design:

<vzome-viewer src="https://vorth.github.io/vzome-sharing/2022/06/19/06-37-55-welcomeDodec/welcomeDodec.vZome" ></vzome-viewer>

In this example, the URL is absolute, containing a scheme (“https”) and a domain name (“vorth.github.io”). The URL can also be relative, just a path relative to the website or to the current HTML file. Either way, the URL must correctly resolve to a vZome file.

<vzome-viewer src="/a/b/c/d.vZome" ></vzome-viewer>
<vzome-viewer src="../f/g/h.vZome" ></vzome-viewer>

While there is no prescribed limit to how many viewers you can put on a single page, each one does consume resources including a 3D canvas and a WebGL context, and browsers may limit the number of contexts allowed on a single page. Even if they don’t explicitly limit them, the performance will degrade if you have too many. I recommend placing no more than ten vzome-viewer elements on a single web page.

Preview JSON

Parsing and interpreting a vZome file can be complex, since the whole command history must be replayed in order. In order to provide better performance, the viewer looks for a 3D preview file next to the vZome file, containing just geometry and no command history, for quick loading. If the preview file is not found, the viewer will load the vZome file, interpret it, and render the result; the preview file is completely optional.

The URL of the preview file must be the same URL as the vZome file, but with the “.vZome” extension replaced with “.shapes.json”.

You can export such a file from the vZome desktop app. Under the “File” menu, find the “Export 3D Rendering…” submenu, and select the “vZome Shapes JSON (polygons)” item.

If you are sharing vZome designs using GitHub sharing, the preview JSON will be generated and uploaded automatically, each time you share a design.

Fallback HTML

Usage in Blogs or E-Commerce Systems

Hosting Your Designs

Displaying Multi-Scene Designs

If you have captured scenes in your vZome design, you can make those scenes available to the user. This can be done with an attribute selecting a particular scene, with an internal drop-down menu, with integrated “next” and “previous” buttons elsewhere on your web page, or programmatically through Javascript.

The different methods have different strengths. Is random access appropriate in your use-case, or does the order of scenes matter? You should design your scenes and title them (or not) depending on which method you will use.

Displaying a Specific Scene

Sometimes you want to show the user only one, specific scene, and not give them any ability to select other scenes. For that case, use the scene attribute. Its value can be a scene title (which must be unique among your scenes), or scene index in the form “#0”, “#1”, and so on. Scenes are indexed starting at zero, and an untitled scene is addressed based on its position among all scenes, NOT among all untitled scenes. A titled scene can still be accessed using its index.

<vzome-viewer scene="#7"
       src="https://vorth.github.io/vzome-sharing/2022/06/19/06-37-55-welcomeDodec/welcomeDodec.vZome" >
</vzome-viewer>

If you use the scene attribute, the show-scenes attribute (see below) will be ignored.

Internal Scenes Menu

If you add the show-scenes attribute to your vzome-viewer, the viewer will display an internal drop-down menu that allows the user to switch scenes. There are two meaningful values for the attribute, “all” or “named”. The “all” value means that the drop-down menu will show all scenes, including the default scene (the main design) and untitled scenes, which will display in the menu as “#1”, “#2”, and so on. The “named” value means that only scenes explicitly given titles will appear in the menu; the default scene is not included. Any other value for the show-scenes attribute means the attribute will be ignored.

Here is source HTML for the vzome-viewer element shown below, with the show-scenes attribute:

<vzome-viewer style="width: 87%; height: 60vh; margin: 5%" show-scenes="named"
       src="https://vorth.github.io/vzome-sharing/2022/06/19/06-37-55-welcomeDodec/welcomeDodec.vZome" >
  <img src="https://vorth.github.io/vzome-sharing/2022/06/19/06-37-55-welcomeDodec/watermarked.png" />
</vzome-viewer>
example of the vZome Viewer web component

Indexed Scenes

A particularly simple way to display multiple scenes is to let the user visit them in order using “next” and “previous” buttons. This is convenient for displaying the steps to construct a physical Zometool model. You must put the vzome-viewer into indexed mode by adding indexed="true". In this mode, the reactive, scene, and show-scenes attributes are ignored.

The scene can be controlled using Javascript, using the nextScene() and previousScene() methods available on the vzome-viewer element. However, you can also control the viewer without any Javascript code, by including buttons with special is attributes, as shown here:

<button is="vzome-viewer-previous" viewer="myViewer">prev</button>
<button is="vzome-viewer-next"     viewer="myViewer">next</button>
<vzome-viewer id="myViewer"
       src="https://vorth.github.io/vzome-sharing/2022/06/19/06-37-55-welcomeDodec/welcomeDodec.vZome" >
</vzome-viewer>

The value of the viewer attribute should match the id on your vzome-viewer element. The viewer attribute is optional when you only have one vzome-viewer element on your page.

The buttons can be placed in your HTML, labeled, and styled however you like.

Javascript Scene Control

Controlling the Web Component Version

As described above, the vzome-viewer.js module is downloaded each time your web page loads, except for the usual browser caching mechanisms. Whenever it is downloaded again, there may be a new revision with updated features and bug fixes. This is generally a good thing, but it does introduce risk. If you are concerned about that risk, you can refer to a specific revision of the module, and therefore be certain that it won’t change except when you want it to:

<script type="module" src="https://www.vzome.com/modules/r224/vzome-viewer.js"></script>

When you are ready to capture the revision number (“224” here) to record in your script tag, you can find it displayed in the browser’s debug console whenever the module is loaded:

vzome-viewer revision 224

Remember to use the “r” prefix before the revision number in your script tag!