three.js ======== #### JavaScript 3D library #### The aim of the project is to create a lightweight 3D library with a very low level of complexity — in other words, for dummies. The library provides <canvas>, <svg>, CSS3D and WebGL renderers. [Examples](http://threejs.org/examples/) — [Documentation](http://threejs.org/docs/) — [Migrating](https://github.com/mrdoob/three.js/wiki/Migration) — [Help](http://stackoverflow.com/questions/tagged/three.js) ### Usage ### Download the [minified library](http://threejs.org/build/three.min.js) and include it in your html. Alternatively see [how to build the library yourself](https://github.com/mrdoob/three.js/wiki/build.py,-or-how-to-generate-a-compressed-Three.js-file). ```html ``` This code creates a scene, a camera, and a geometric cube, and it adds the cube to the scene. It then creates a `WebGL` renderer for the scene and camera, and it adds that viewport to the document.body element. Finally it animates the cube within the scene for the camera. ```javascript var scene, camera, renderer; var geometry, material, mesh; init(); animate(); function init() { scene = new THREE.Scene(); camera = new THREE.PerspectiveCamera( 75, window.innerWidth / window.innerHeight, 1, 10000 ); camera.position.z = 1000; geometry = new THREE.BoxGeometry( 200, 200, 200 ); material = new THREE.MeshBasicMaterial( { color: 0xff0000, wireframe: true } ); mesh = new THREE.Mesh( geometry, material ); scene.add( mesh ); renderer = new THREE.WebGLRenderer(); renderer.setSize( window.innerWidth, window.innerHeight ); document.body.appendChild( renderer.domElement ); } function animate() { requestAnimationFrame( animate ); mesh.rotation.x += 0.01; mesh.rotation.y += 0.02; renderer.render( scene, camera ); } ``` If everything went well you should see [this](http://jsfiddle.net/hfj7gm6t/). ### Change log ### [releases](https://github.com/mrdoob/three.js/releases)