PyBevy is in an early and experimental stage. The API is incomplete, subject to breaking changes without notice, and you should expect bugs. Many features are still under development.
Touch Input Events
Handle touch screen input events for mobile and touch devices.
Introduction
Touch events include position, phase (started, moved, ended, canceled), and a unique ID for multi-touch tracking.
from pybevy.prelude import *
from pybevy.input import TouchInputTouch Event System
def touch_system(touches: MessageReader[TouchInput]) -> None:
for event in touches.read():
print(f"Touch {event.id}: phase={event.phase}, pos=({event.position.x:.0f}, {event.position.y:.0f})")Running the App
@entrypoint
def main(app: App) -> App:
return app.add_plugins(DefaultPlugins).add_systems(Update, touch_system)
if __name__ == "__main__":
main().run()Running this example
Use PyBevy's hot reload feature to run and develop this example. If you don't have PyBevy installed, check out the Quick Start guide.
The code will reload automatically when you make changes to the file.
From Python to Rust
Notice how the core concepts in the code—Commands, Assets, App, and Systems—are identical to the original Bevy example?
This is the power of pybevy! It lets you learn Bevy's powerful, data-driven architecture in friendly Python.
When your project grows and you're ready for maximum, native performance, you'll already know the concepts to start writing systems in Bevy Engine with Rust.