BBCode in RichTextLabel
Introduction
Label nodes are great for displaying basic text, but they have limits. If you want to change the color of the text, or its alignment, that change affects all of the text in the Label node. You can’t have only one part of the text be one color, or only one part of the text be centered. To get around this limitation you would use a RichTextLabel.
RichTextLabel allows the display of complex text markup in a Control. It has a built-in API for generating the markup, but can also parse a BBCode.
Note that the BBCode tags can also be used, to some extent, in the XML source of the class reference.
Using BBCode
For uniformly formatted text you can write in the “Text” property, but if you want to use BBCode markup you should use the “Text” property in the “Bb Code” section instead (bbcode_text
). Writing to this property will trigger the parsing of your markup to format the text as requested. Before this happens, you need to toggle the “Enabled” checkbox in the “Bb Code” section (bbcode_enabled
).
For example, BBCode [color=blue]blue[/color]
would render the word “blue” with a blue color.
You’ll notice that after writing in the BBCode “Text” property the regular “Text” property now has the text without the BBCode. While the text property will be updated by the BBCode property, you can’t edit the text property or you’ll lose the BBCode markup. All changes to the text must be done in the BBCode parameter.
Note
For BBCode tags such as [b]
(bold), [i]
(italics) or [code]
to work, you must set up custom fonts for the RichTextLabel node first.
There are no BBCode tags to control vertical centering of text yet.
Reference
Command | Tag | Description |
bold |
| Makes {text} bold. |
italics |
| Makes {text} italics. |
underline |
| Makes {text} underline. |
strikethrough |
| Makes {text} strikethrough. |
code |
| Makes {text} use the code font (which is typically monospace). |
center |
| Makes {text} horizontally centered. |
right |
| Makes {text} horizontally right-aligned. |
fill |
| Makes {text} fill the RichTextLabel’s width. |
indent |
| Increase the indentation level of {text}. |
url |
| Show {url} as such, underline it and make it clickable. Must be handled with the “meta_clicked” signal to have an effect. See Handling [url] tag clicks. |
url (ref) |
| Makes {text} reference <url> (underlined and clickable). Must be handled with the “meta_clicked” signal to have an effect. See Handling [url] tag clicks. |
image |
| Insert image at resource {path}. |
resized image |
| Insert image at resource {path} using <width> (keeps ratio). |
resized image |
| Insert image at resource {path} using <width>×<height>. |
font |
| Use custom font at <path> for {text}. |
color |
| Change {text} color; use name or # format, such as |
table |
| Creates a table with <number> of columns. |
cell |
| Adds cells with the {text} to the table. |
Built-in color names
List of valid color names for the [color=<name>] tag:
aqua
black
blue
fuchsia
gray
green
lime
maroon
navy
purple
red
silver
teal
white
yellow
Hexadecimal color codes
For opaque RGB colors, any valid 6-digit hexadecimal code is supported, e.g. [color=#ffffff]white[/color]
. Short RGB color codes such as #6f2
(equivalent to #66ff22
) are also supported.
For transparent RGB colors, any 8-digit hexadecimal code can be used, e.g. [color=#88ffffff]translucent white[/color]
. In this case, note that the alpha channel is the first component of the color code, not the last one. Short RGBA color codes such as #86f2
(equivalent to #8866ff22
) are also supported.
Handling [url]
tag clicks
By default, [url]
tags do nothing when clicked. This is to allow flexible use of [url]
tags rather than limiting them to opening URLs in a web browser.
To handle clicked [url]
tags, connect the RichTextLabel node’s meta_clicked signal to a script function.
For example, the following method can be connected to meta_clicked
to open clicked URLs using the user’s default web browser:
# This assumes RichTextLabel's `meta_clicked` signal was connected to
# the function below using the signal connection dialog.
func _richtextlabel_on_meta_clicked(meta):
# `meta` is not guaranteed to be a String, so convert it to a String
# to avoid script errors at run-time.
OS.shell_open(str(meta))
For more advanced use cases, it’s also possible to store JSON in an [url]
tag’s option and parse it in the function that handles the meta_clicked
signal. For example: [url={"example": "value"}]JSON[/url]
Image vertical offset
You use a custom font for your image in order to align it vertically.
Create a
BitmapFont
resourceSet this bitmap font with a positive value for the
ascent
property, that’s your height offsetSet the BBCode tag this way:
[font=<font-path>][img]{image-path}[/img][/font]
Animation effects
BBCode can also be used to create different text animation effects. Five customizable effects are provided out of the box, and you can easily create your own.
Wave
Wave makes the text go up and down. Its tag format is [wave amp=50 freq=2][/wave]
. amp
controls how high and low the effect goes, and freq
controls how fast the text goes up and down.
Tornado
Tornao makes the text move around in a circle. Its tag format is [tornado radius=5 freq=2][/tornado]
. radius
is the radius of the circle that controls the offset, freq
is how fast the text moves in a circle.
Shake
Shake makes the text shake. Its tag format is [shake rate=5 level=10][/shake]
. rate
controls how fast the text shakes, level
controls how far the text is offset from the origin.
Fade
Fade creates a fade effect over the text that is not animated. Its tag format is [fade start=4 length=14][/fade]
. start
controls the starting position of the falloff relative to where the fade command is inserted, length
controls over how many characters should the fade out take place.
Rainbow
Rainbow gives the text a rainbow color that changes over time. Its tag format is [rainbow freq=0.2 sat=10 val=20][/rainbow]
. freq
is the number of full rainbow cycles per second, sat
is the saturation of the rainbow, val
is the value of the rainbow.
Custom BBCode tags and text effects
You can extend the RichTextEffect resource type to create your own custom BBCode tags. You begin by extending the RichTextEffect resource type. Add the tool
prefix to your GDScript file if you wish to have these custom effects run within the editor itself. The RichTextLabel does not need to have a script attached, nor does it need to be running in tool
mode. The new effect will be activable in the Inspector through the Custom Effects property.
There is only one function that you need to extend: _process_custom_fx(char_fx)
. Optionally, you can also provide a custom BBCode identifier simply by adding a member name bbcode
. The code will check the bbcode
property automatically or will use the name of the file to determine what the BBCode tag should be.
_process_custom_fx
This is where the logic of each effect takes place and is called once per character during the draw phase of text rendering. This passes in a CharFXTransform object, which holds a few variables to control how the associated character is rendered:
identity
specifies which custom effect is being processed. You should use that for code flow control.relative_index
tells you how far into a given custom effect block you are in as an index.absolute_index
tells you how far into the entire text you are as an index.elapsed_time
is the total amount of time the text effect has been running.visible
will tell you whether the character is visible or not and will also allow you to hide a given portion of text.offset
is an offset position relative to where the given character should render under normal circumstances.color
is the color of a given character.Finally,
env
is a Dictionary of parameters assigned to a given custom effect. You can use get() with an optional default value to retrieve each parameter, if specified by the user. For example[custom_fx spread=0.5 color=#FFFF00]test[/custom_fx]
would have a floatspread
and Colorcolor
parameters in its ` env` Dictionary. See below for more usage examples.
The last thing to note about this function is that it is necessary to return a boolean true
value to verify that the effect processed correctly. This way, if there’s a problem with rendering a given character, it will back out of rendering custom effects entirely until the user fixes whatever error cropped up in their custom effect logic.
Here are some examples of custom effects:
Ghost
tool
extends RichTextEffect
class_name RichTextGhost
# Syntax: [ghost freq=5.0 span=10.0][/ghost]
# Define the tag name.
var bbcode = "ghost"
func _process_custom_fx(char_fx):
# Get parameters, or use the provided default value if missing.
var speed = char_fx.env.get("freq", 5.0)
var span = char_fx.env.get("span", 10.0)
var alpha = sin(char_fx.elapsed_time * speed + (char_fx.absolute_index / span)) * 0.5 + 0.5
char_fx.color.a = alpha
return true
Pulse
tool
extends RichTextEffect
class_name RichTextPulse
# Syntax: [pulse color=#00FFAA height=0.0 freq=2.0][/pulse]
# Define the tag name.
var bbcode = "pulse"
func _process_custom_fx(char_fx):
# Get parameters, or use the provided default value if missing.
var color = char_fx.env.get("color", char_fx.color)
var height = char_fx.env.get("height", 0.0)
var freq = char_fx.env.get("freq", 2.0)
var sined_time = (sin(char_fx.elapsed_time * freq) + 1.0) / 2.0
var y_off = sined_time * height
color.a = 1.0
char_fx.color = char_fx.color.linear_interpolate(color, sined_time)
char_fx.offset = Vector2(0, -1) * y_off
return true
Matrix
tool
extends RichTextEffect
class_name RichTextMatrix
# Syntax: [matrix clean=2.0 dirty=1.0 span=50][/matrix]
# Define the tag name.
var bbcode = "matrix"
func _process_custom_fx(char_fx):
# Get parameters, or use the provided default value if missing.
var clear_time = char_fx.env.get("clean", 2.0)
var dirty_time = char_fx.env.get("dirty", 1.0)
var text_span = char_fx.env.get("span", 50)
var value = char_fx.character
var matrix_time = fmod(char_fx.elapsed_time + (char_fx.absolute_index / float(text_span)), \
clear_time + dirty_time)
matrix_time = 0.0 if matrix_time < clear_time else \
(matrix_time - clear_time) / dirty_time
if value >= 65 && value < 126 && matrix_time > 0.0:
value -= 65
value = value + int(1 * matrix_time * (126 - 65))
value %= (126 - 65)
value += 65
char_fx.character = value
return true
This will add a few new BBCode commands, which can be used like so:
[center][ghost]This is a custom [matrix]effect[/matrix][/ghost] made in
[pulse freq=5.0 height=2.0][pulse color=#00FFAA freq=2.0]GDScript[/pulse][/pulse].[/center]