About Reactive Graph
What is a Graph?
A graph organizes highly interconnected data. The state of an Entity Component System can be ideally represented with the help of the graph.
graph TD; A(Entity A)===>|Relation A|B(Entity B); A(Entity A)===>|Relation B|C(Entity C); B(Entity B)===>|Relation C|D(Entity D); C(Entity C)===>|Relation D|D(Entity D);
Why do we need a graph?
The main benefits of a graph are:
- A universal data structure for everything
- Relations are first class citizens
- Benefit from types and instances which makes things intuitive
- Benefit from navigation which is fast and intuitive
- Benefit from the semantics of highly connected, intuitive data
- Properties can store not only certain primitive data but complete documents
What type of graph does Reactive Graph implement?
Internally, Reactive Graph is an in-memory graph database with the following characteristics:
Characteristics | Description |
---|---|
Directed Graph | Each relation points from one entity to another entity |
Typed Graph |
|
Property Graph |
|
In addition, Reactive Graph takes up concepts from entity component systems. Types, i.e. entity types and relation types, are assembled using components. The type system itself is flat and supports composition rather than inheritance. Components can be added or removed from instances, i.e. entity instances or relation instances.
What is Reactive?
Now that we understand how data is stored, here's how data interacts. The approach is that the data itself is "alive". To do this, Reactive Graph adopts a concept from reactive programming.
In computing, reactive programming is a declarative programming paradigm concerned with data streams and the propagation of change.
It is the ingenious combination of a graph with reactive programming. The property instances are not static and only contain data. Rather, they are streams of data. If you change the value of a property instance, you fill the data stream of this property instance. Data streams are linked together. For example, if the stream of one property instance is linked to the stream of another property instance and you change the value of the first property instance, the value of the second property instance will automatically change as well. Data is thus propagated from one station to the next, triggering a cascade of propagations.
graph TD; A(Property Instance 1)-->|stream|B(Property Instance 2); A-->|stream|C(Property Instance 3); B-->|stream|D(Property Instance 4); C-->|stream|D; D-->|stream|E(Property Instance 5); B-->|stream|F(Property Instance 6);
In addition, Reactive Graph remembers the last value in each property instance. This is done by subscribing to your own data stream and caching it. This allows subsequent querying of the value of a property instance.
Remember this basic concept:
- Every property is a stream not only data
- Property streams can be subscribed and published
- The streams of two properties can be connected and changes will be propagated (cascade)
Behaviour driven design
The data flow is therefore automatic. Building on this, Reactive Graph applies the concept of behaviour-driven design. The goal is to use these data streams to simulate behaviour.
Behaviors can be implemented on components, entities and relations. To do this, one or more incoming data streams are combined, calculations are performed and written to one or more outgoing data streams.
For example, the entity type "AND gate" implements a behavior by subscribing to the two input properties, combining them into a combination data stream and performing an AND operation on the incoming pairs of values. The result of the AND operation is itself a data stream and this is linked to the output property.
This example shows how an entity type is wired internally. They are all data streams that are cleverly combined with one another and thus depict behavior.
It is interesting that this behavior also works for relations. For example, connectors are also implemented behaviors of streams. It is interesting that connectors connect the data stream from a property instance of the outgoing entity instance with the data stream from a property instance of the incoming entity instance.
graph TD; subgraph key_ctrl ["Entity Instance (Input Key)"] direction RL CTRL_KEY(Property<br><br>key_name=CTRL); CTRL_KD(Output Property<br><br>key_down); end subgraph key_f10 ["Entity Instance (Input Key)"] F10_KD(Output Property<br><br>key_down); F10_KEY(Property<br><br>key_name=F10); end CTRL_KD--->|connector|LHS; F10_KD--->|connector|RHS; subgraph logicalgate ["Entity Instance (Logical Gate)"] LHS(Input Property<br><br>LHS)o-->ZIP; RHS(Input Property<br><br>RHS)o-->ZIP; ZIP(Zipped stream of LHS and RHS)-->COMBINATOR; COMBINATOR(Combinator Function<br><br>AND)-->RESULT; RESULT(Output Property<br><br>Result); end RESULT--->|connector|CMD_EXIT; subgraph system_command_exit ["Entity Instance (System Command)"] CMD_COMMAND(Property<br><br>Command); CMD_EXIT(Input Property<br><br>trigger) end
For example the AND-Gate
accepts inputs at the properties lhs
and rhs
. Both streams are
subscribed and zipped. The zipped stream is calculated with a function - in this case the
AND-Operator. This results in another (invisible) stream which is connected with the property
result
. The entity type AND-Gate
defines that the properties lhs
, rhs
and result
have to exist. Furthermore, the socket types are defined: lhs
and rhs
are Input-Socket
s
and result
is a Output-Socket
. The behaviour is like the internal wiring of entity
instances and of relation instances. A behaviour can be added to entity instances and removed
from entity/relation instances.
In the Reactive Graph Flow there are ComponentBehaviour
s, EntityBehaviours
and
RelationBehaviours
.
Type | Behaviour |
---|---|
Entity Type "and" | Entity Behaviour Logical Gate with AND-combinator |
Relation Type "default_connector" | Relation Behaviour Default Connector |
Behaviours are provided by plugins.
What is a flow?
Control flows can be implemented based on the graph, the data streams and the behavior-driven design. It is important here that the available modules that implement the behavior are linked with connectors.
For example, a flow can consist of a logic that links several AND gates with each other using connectors. Both the AND gate and the connector are behaviors. But the arrangement of these behaviors within a flow makes them powerful.
Entire game modes can be implemented with the help of flows. Or just parts of it that are used in multiple game modes, such as a mechanism to pick up, drop, and score flags.
Flows are also useful for making maps more interactive. With the help of flows and behaviors, it can be ensured that a door opens in a map when you press switch 1 and switch 2. Or you determine the color of your own team's base based on the current score. Or you control particle emitters, depending on how many players are near the emitter. The possibilities for this are endless and want to be used!
flowchart LR subgraph flow ["Flow"] direction LR subgraph key_ctrl ["Entity Instance (Input Key)"] CTRL_KD(Output Property<br><br>key_down); end subgraph key_f10 ["Entity Instance (Input Key)"] F10_KD(Output Property<br><br>key_down); end CTRL_KD-->|connector|LHS; F10_KD-->|connector|RHS; subgraph logicalgate ["Entity Instance (Logical Gate)"] LHS(Input Property<br><br>LHS)-.->RESULT; RHS(Input Property<br><br>RHS)-.->RESULT; RESULT(Output Property<br><br>Result); end RESULT-->|connector|CMD_EXIT(Input Property trigger); subgraph system_command_exit ["Entity Instance (System Command)"] CMD_COMMAND(Property<br><br>Command); CMD_EXIT(Input Property<br><br>trigger) end end