Making main screen plugins

What this tutorial covers

As seen in the Making plugins page, making a basic plugin that extends the editor is fairly easy. Main screen plugins allow you to create new UIs in the central part of the editor, which appear next to the “2D”, “3D”, “Script”, and “AssetLib” buttons. Such editor plugins are referred as “Main screen plugins”.

This tutorial leads you through the creation of a basic main screen plugin. For the sake of simplicity, our main screen plugin will contain a single button that prints text to the console.

Initializing the plugin

First create a new plugin from the Plugins menu. For this tutorial, we’ll put it in a folder called main_screen, but you can use any name you’d like.

The plugin script will come with _enter_tree() and _exit_tree() methods, but for a main screen plugin we need to add a few extra methods. Add five extra methods such that the script looks like this:

tool
extends EditorPlugin


func _enter_tree():
    pass


func _exit_tree():
    pass


func has_main_screen():
    return true


func make_visible(visible):
    pass


func get_plugin_name():
    return "Main Screen Plugin"


func get_plugin_icon():
    return get_editor_interface().get_base_control().get_icon("Node", "EditorIcons")

The important part in this script is the has_main_screen() function, which is overloaded so it returns true. This function is automatically called by the editor on plugin activation, to tell it that this plugin adds a new center view to the editor. For now, we’ll leave this script as-is and we’ll come back to it later.

Main screen scene

Create a new scene with a root node derived from Control (for this example plugin, we’ll make the root node a CenterContainer). Select this root node, and in the viewport, click the Layout menu and select Full Rect. You also need to enable the Expand vertical size flag in the inspector. The panel now uses all the space available in the main viewport.

Next, let’s add a button to our example main screen plugin. Add a Button node, and set the text to “Print Hello” or similar. Add a script to the button like this:

tool
extends Button


func _on_PrintHello_pressed():
    print("Hello from the main screen plugin!")

Then connect the “pressed” signal to itself. If you need help with signals, see the Signals article.

We are done with the main screen panel. Save the scene as main_panel.tscn.

Update the plugin script

We need to update the main_screen_plugin.gd script so the plugin instances our main panel scene and places it where it needs to be. Here is the full plugin script:

tool
extends EditorPlugin


const MainPanel = preload("res://addons/main_screen/main_panel.tscn")

var main_panel_instance


func _enter_tree():
    main_panel_instance = MainPanel.instance()
    # Add the main panel to the editor's main viewport.
    get_editor_interface().get_editor_viewport().add_child(main_panel_instance)
    # Hide the main panel. Very much required.
    make_visible(false)


func _exit_tree():
    if main_panel_instance:
        main_panel_instance.queue_free()


func has_main_screen():
    return true


func make_visible(visible):
    if main_panel_instance:
        main_panel_instance.visible = visible


func get_plugin_name():
    return "Main Screen Plugin"


func get_plugin_icon():
    # Must return some kind of Texture for the icon.
    return get_editor_interface().get_base_control().get_icon("Node", "EditorIcons")

A couple of specific lines were added. MainPanel is a constant that holds a reference to the scene, and we instance it into main_panel_instance.

The _enter_tree() function is called before _ready(). This is where we instance the main panel scene, and add them as children of specific parts of the editor. We use get_editor_interface().get_editor_viewport() to obtain the viewport and add our main panel instance as a child to it. We call the make_visible(false) function to hide the main panel so it doesn’t compete for space when first activating the plugin.

The _exit_tree() function is called when the plugin is deactivated. If the main screen still exists, we call queue_free() to free the instance and remove it from memory.

The make_visible() function is overridden to hide or show the main panel as needed. This function is automatically called by the editor when the user clicks on the main viewport buttons at the top of the editor.

The get_plugin_name() and get_plugin_icon() functions control the displayed name and icon for the plugin’s main viewport button.

Another function you can add is the handles() function, which allows you to handle a node type, automatically focusing the main screen when the type is selected. This is similar to how clicking on a 3D node will automatically switch to the 3D viewport.

Try the plugin

Activate the plugin in the Project Settings. You’ll observe a new button next to 2D, 3D, Script above the main viewport. Clicking it will take you to your new main screen plugin, and the button in the middle will print text.

If you would like to try a finished version of this plugin, check out the plugin demos here: https://github.com/godotengine/godot-demo-projects/tree/master/plugins

If you would like to see a more complete example of what main screen plugins are capable of, check out the 2.5D demo projects here: https://github.com/godotengine/godot-demo-projects/tree/master/misc/2.5d