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padpyght

A poorly-named, open-source gamepad visualizer inspired by PadLight.

Binary packages for Win32 and Linux64 (perhaps Mac in the future?). As per the GNU General Public License, please don't upload these elsewhere unless you also direct people back to where they can find the source.

Problem reports, feature requests, and new skins (copyright permitting) are very welcome!

How to use

Download and unzip the release package, and run padpyght.exe.

It will present you with a list of connected gamepads and available padpyght skins. Select one of each, then click the "run" button. If it's your first time running with that combination of gamepad and skin, the program will ask you to map the controls. Pay attention to the title of the window during this! The window title will tell you what to do, while the visualization animates each action. If you make a mistake, you can revisit this mapper from the initial selection screen by clicking "remap" instead of "run."

Once in visualization mode, NumPad + and - will resize the window by 10% at a time.

A note for anyone following a tutorial

There are a few tutorials I've seen on the internet for how to use padpyght (thanks so much, by the way, if you've made one of these!), written/recorded before a major rewrite of this project occurred in August 2015. If you're following one of these and you get lost, the pre-rewrite version may help you temporarily: https://github.com/lifning/padpyght/tree/legacy - but note that you'll be missing some of the newer features, such as interactive control mapping.

Running from source

Command line: python2 -m padpyght [skin name] [joypad number]

You'll need Python 2.7 and pygame 1.9.

If you have PGU installed, you can omit both arguments (simply python2 -m padpyght) for a GUI which will let you choose the joystick and skin to use from lists.

If you haven't yet interactively mapped the given skin's inputs to the given joypad's physical buttons, you will be asked to do so before the visualizer starts (if the graphical representation isn't clear enough, please watch the window's title or command prompt for what it's expecting you to do), after which it will immediately begin visualization as normal.

Building packages

To build release packages, simply type make and find the resulting padpyght-win32.zip and padpyght-linux.tar.gz in the dist/ directory. It requires that PyInstaller, Python, PyGame, and PGU be installed, and that you have all of these things installed in Wine as well. If you don't want to use Wine (if you don't care about making Windows binaries, or perhaps if you're using MSYS or similar from Windows and have no need to run Wine), just run make linux instead of the default target.

TODO

  • Revise existing skins to make shoulder buttons more visible / visible at all
  • Figure out how to snoop the Dolphin/libusb direct access mode
  • Add trigger-clicks (i.e. Gamecube shoulders)
  • Expose skin.ini-to-json converter in UI somehow
  • Find someone with a Mac to help make/test a package build for it
  • Skins:
    • N64 skin. (Hori mini skin too?)
    • A fight stick of some sort.
    • Xbone/X360.
    • The Gamecube ASCII controller Kappa

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An open-source gamepad visualizer in Python

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