{"rowid": 298, "title": "First Steps in VR", "contents": "The web is all around us. As web folk, it is our responsibility to consider the impact our work can have. Part of this includes thinking about the future; the web changes lives and if we are building the web then we are the ones making decisions that affect people in every corner of the world. I find myself often torn between wanting to make the right decisions, and just wanting to have fun. To fiddle and play. We all know how important it is to sometimes just try ideas, whether they will amount to much or not. \nI think of these two mindsets as production and prototyping, though of course there are lots of overlap and phases in between. I mention this because virtual reality is currently seen as a toy for rich people, and in some ways at the moment it is. But with WebVR we are able to create interesting experiences with a relatively low entry point. I want us to have open minds, play around with things, and then see how we can use the tools we have at our disposal to make things that will help people.\nEvery year we see articles saying it will be the \u201cyear of virtual reality\u201d, that was especially prevalent this year. 2016 has been a year of progress, VR isn\u2019t quite mainstream but with efforts like Playstation VR and Google Cardboard, we are definitely seeing much more of it. This year also saw the consumer editions of the Oculus Rift and HTC Vive. So it does seem to be a good time for an overview of how to get involved with creating virtual reality on the web.\nWebVR is an API for connecting to devices and retrieving continuous data such as the position and orientation. Unlike the Web Audio API and some other APIs, WebVR does not feel like a framework. You use it however you want, taking the data and using it as you wish. To make it easier, there are plenty of resources such as Three.js, A-Frame and ReactVR that help to make the heavy lifting a bit easier.\nGetting Started with A-Frame\nI like taking the opportunity to learn new things whenever I can. So while planning this article I thought that instead of trying to teach WebGL or even Three.js in a way that is approachable for all, I would create my first project using A-Frame and write about that. This is not a tutorial as such, I just want to show how to go about getting involved with VR. The beauty of A-Frame is that it is very similar to web components, you can just write HTML to build worlds that will automatically work on all the different types of devices. It uses WebGL and WebVR but in such a way that it quite drastically reduces the learning curve. That\u2019s not to say you can\u2019t build complex things, you have complete access to write JavaScript and shaders.\nI\u2019m lazy. Whenever I learn a new language or framework I have found that the best way, personally, for me to learn is to have a project and to copy the starting code from someone else. A project lets you have a good idea of what you want to produce and it means you can ignore a lot of the irrelevant documentation, focussing purely on what you need. That reduces the stress of figuring things out. Copying code also makes it easier, because you know your boilerplate code is working. There\u2019s nothing worse than getting stuck before anything actually works the first time. So I tinker. I take code and I modify it, I play around. It\u2019s fun.\nFor this project I wanted to keep things as simple as possible, so I can easily explain it without the classic \u201cdraw a circle then draw an owl\u201d. I wrote a list of requirements, with some stretch goals that you can give a try yourself if you fancy:\n\nMust work on Google Cardboard at a minimum, because of price\nTherefore, it must not rely on having a controller\nAuto-moving around a maze would be a good example\nMove in direction you look\nStretch goal: Scoring, time until you hit a wall or get stuck in maze\nStretch goal: Levels, so the map doesn\u2019t need to be random\nStretch goal: Snow!\n\nI decided to base this project on an example, Platforms, by Don McCurdy who wrote the really useful aframe-extras. Platforms has random 3D blocks that you can jump onto, going up into the sky. So I took his code and reduced it so that the blocks are randomly spread on the ground. \n\n\n
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