A fork of BLUI that is kept relatively up to date.
Latest release is updated to CEF 80.0.3987.132.
To install check out the latest releases https://github.com/getnamo/BLUI-Unreal/releases and drag and drop Plugins folder into your project root folder
Unreal thread: https://forums.unrealengine.com/community/released-projects/29036-blui-open-source-html5-js-css-hud-ui
The native plugin didn't contain any self contained drag and drop examples so I've added some.
A user widget (UMG) blueprint which embeds a BLU texture as an image brush. Contains various utility functions to allow loading and parsing urls easily. Call InitBluEye
with starting url and browser window size to start this widget. See BluiWorldWidgetActorExample for an example of how it's used in practice.
Encapsulated BluiWidget user widget in an actor. Drag and drop this actor into your scene and it will auto-spawn the required BluTickActor to make everything work.
3 BluiWorldWIdgetActorExample actors with youtube.com
, blui ue4
and local://test.html
specified as their URL respectively
By default the actor will check the url for local://
protocol and load local content first if detected. This should be placed inside the following directory: {project root}/Content/html
. NB: You can still use the vanilla blui://
protocol which will load content relative to your project root.
e.g. having a test.html file inside your Content/html folder
Basic URL validity is also tested, but you can safely ignore http:// etc. E.g. just specifying youtube.com will resolve correctly
If your URL isn't valid however, it will redirect the string as a search term e.g. typing a sentance or a search term.
You can untick Should Auto Search Invalid Url to disable this behavior.
By default the actor has a BLUI resolution of 1000x1000, you can change this by just changing the user widget draw size.
Since 4.0.0 - This actor is no longer needed. Ticking happens internally.
Older verions: Instead of ticking in your level bp, I prefer to use a simple actor to do the ticking. Other convenience blueprints may spawn this as necessary so if you use those, you don't ever need to use this directly.
Thanks to @oivio we have the Demo project updated to the latest release. See https://github.com/getnamo/BLUI-Unreal/releases/tag/3.4.0 for the 4.22 Demo project release (BLUI-v3.4.0-UE4.22-DemoExamples.7z)
Click on image to take you to video.
BLUI is an Unreal Engine 4 plugin that allows easy interaction with the Chromium Embedded Framework. It provides a simple Material Instance and input functions to help streamline the rendering of rich HTML interfaces.
BLUI tries to stay out of the way as much as possible. All rendering of the DOM and processing of the JavaScript happens in a separate process, just like Chromium. BLUI only updates the texture inside the material instance when Chromium requests a redraw, not every tick, saving a bit more processing along the way.
- Chromium Powered (same thing that powers Google Chrome!)
- Fully compatible with every web technology that Chrome/Chromium works with. (HTML5, WebAudio, WebSockets etc.)
- No specific ties to any in game class, simple use Blueprints (or C++) to create a new "BluEye" object and grab its material instance, then you can paint it on anything!
- Execute JavaScript in the "browser" from your game to pass data to the web page
- Using
blu_event
JS native function you can pass data from the page's JavaScript back into UE4! - C++ or Blueprints, works with both!
Then copy the BLUI
folder into the "Plugins" folder within your project directory, and enable the plugin.
Re-generate your project's Visual Studio file and load up the editor. Then check the plugin list to ensure it has been loaded!
Set your default URL or use the "Load URL" node/method to load a URL that starts with local://
this will point to the Content/html directory root of the project or the game (if packaged). So if you wanted to load an HTML file from YourProject/Content/html/UI/file.html
, set the URL to local://UI/file.html