doodle/pkg/play_scene.go

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2018-06-21 02:00:46 +00:00
package doodle
import (
"fmt"
"git.kirsle.net/apps/doodle/pkg/balance"
"git.kirsle.net/apps/doodle/pkg/collision"
"git.kirsle.net/apps/doodle/pkg/doodads"
"git.kirsle.net/apps/doodle/pkg/keybind"
"git.kirsle.net/apps/doodle/pkg/level"
"git.kirsle.net/apps/doodle/pkg/log"
"git.kirsle.net/apps/doodle/pkg/modal/loadscreen"
"git.kirsle.net/apps/doodle/pkg/physics"
"git.kirsle.net/apps/doodle/pkg/scripting"
"git.kirsle.net/apps/doodle/pkg/uix"
"git.kirsle.net/go/render"
"git.kirsle.net/go/render/event"
"git.kirsle.net/go/ui"
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)
// PlayScene manages the "Edit Level" game mode.
type PlayScene struct {
// Configuration attributes.
Filename string
Level *level.Level
CanEdit bool // i.e. you came from the Editor Mode
HasNext bool // has a next level to load next
// Private variables.
d *Doodle
drawing *uix.Canvas
scripting *scripting.Supervisor
running bool
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// UI widgets.
supervisor *ui.Supervisor
screen *ui.Frame // A window sized invisible frame to position UI elements.
editButton *ui.Button
// The alert box shows up when the level goal is reached and includes
// buttons what to do next.
alertBox *ui.Window
alertBoxLabel *ui.Label
alertReplayButton *ui.Button // Replay level
alertEditButton *ui.Button // Edit Level
alertNextButton *ui.Button // Next Level
alertExitButton *ui.Button // Exit to menu
// Custom debug labels.
debPosition *string
debViewport *string
debScroll *string
debWorldIndex *string
// Player character
Player *uix.Actor
playerPhysics *physics.Mover
antigravity bool // Cheat: disable player gravity
noclip bool // Cheat: disable player clipping
playerJumpCounter int // limit jump length
// Inventory HUD. Impl. in play_inventory.go
invenFrame *ui.Frame
invenItems []string // item list
invenDoodads map[string]*uix.Canvas
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}
// Name of the scene.
func (s *PlayScene) Name() string {
return "Play"
}
// Setup the play scene.
func (s *PlayScene) Setup(d *Doodle) error {
Wallpapers and Bounded Levels Implement the Wallpaper system into the levels and the concept of Bounded and Unbounded levels. The first wallpaper image is notepad.png which looks like standard ruled notebook paper. On bounded levels, the top/left edges of the page look as you would expect and the blue lines tile indefinitely in the positive directions. On unbounded levels, you only get the repeating blue lines but not the edge pieces. A wallpaper is just a rectangular image file. The image is divided into four equal quadrants to be the Corner, Top, Left and Repeat textures for the wallpaper. The Repeat texture is ALWAYS used and fills all the empty space behind the drawing. (Doodads draw with blank canvases as before because only levels have wallpapers!) Levels have four options of a "Page Type": - Unbounded (default, infinite space) - NoNegativeSpace (has a top left edge but can grow infinitely) - Bounded (has a top left edge and bounded size) - Bordered (bounded with bordered texture; NOT IMPLEMENTED!) The scrollable viewport of a Canvas will respect the wallpaper and page type settings of a Level loaded into it. That is, if the level has a top left edge (not Unbounded) you can NOT scroll to see negative coordinates below (0,0) -- and if the level has a max dimension set, you can't scroll to see pixels outside those dimensions. The Canvas property NoLimitScroll=true will override the scroll locking and let you see outside the bounds, for debugging. - Default map settings for New Level are now: - Page Type: NoNegativeSpace - Wallpaper: notepad.png (default) - MaxWidth: 2550 (8.5" * 300 ppi) - MaxHeight: 3300 ( 11" * 300 ppi)
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s.d = d
s.scripting = scripting.NewSupervisor()
s.supervisor = ui.NewSupervisor()
// Show the loading screen.
loadscreen.ShowWithProgress()
go func() {
if err := s.setupAsync(d); err != nil {
log.Error("PlayScene.setupAsync: %s", err)
return
}
loadscreen.Hide()
}()
return nil
}
// setupAsync initializes the play screen in the background, underneath
// a Loading screen.
func (s *PlayScene) setupAsync(d *Doodle) error {
// Create an invisible 'screen' frame for UI elements to use for positioning.
s.screen = ui.NewFrame("Screen")
s.screen.Resize(render.NewRect(d.width, d.height))
// Level Exit handler.
s.SetupAlertbox()
s.scripting.OnLevelExit(func() {
d.Flash("Hurray!")
// Pause the simulation.
s.running = false
// Toggle the relevant buttons on.
if s.CanEdit {
s.alertEditButton.Show()
}
if s.HasNext {
s.alertNextButton.Show()
}
// Always-visible buttons.
s.alertReplayButton.Show()
s.alertExitButton.Show()
// Show the alert box.
s.alertBox.Show()
})
// Initialize debug overlay values.
s.debPosition = new(string)
s.debViewport = new(string)
s.debScroll = new(string)
s.debWorldIndex = new(string)
customDebugLabels = []debugLabel{
{"Pixel:", s.debWorldIndex},
{"Player:", s.debPosition},
{"Viewport:", s.debViewport},
{"Scroll:", s.debScroll},
}
// Initialize the "Edit Map" button.
s.editButton = ui.NewButton("Edit", ui.NewLabel(ui.Label{
Text: "Edit (E)",
Font: balance.PlayButtonFont,
}))
s.editButton.Handle(ui.Click, func(ed ui.EventData) error {
s.EditLevel()
return nil
})
s.supervisor.Add(s.editButton)
// Set up the inventory HUD.
s.setupInventoryHud()
// Initialize the drawing canvas.
s.drawing = uix.NewCanvas(balance.ChunkSize, false)
s.drawing.Name = "play-canvas"
s.drawing.MoveTo(render.Origin)
s.drawing.Resize(render.NewRect(d.width, d.height))
s.drawing.Compute(d.Engine)
// Handler when an actor touches water or fire.
s.drawing.OnLevelCollision = func(a *uix.Actor, col *collision.Collide) {
Various updates New doodad interactions: * Sticky Buttons will emit a "sticky:down" event to linked doodads, with a boolean value showing the Sticky Button's state. * Normal Buttons will listen for "sticky:down" -- when a linked Sticky Button is pressed, the normal Button presses in as well, and stays pressed while the sticky:down signal is true. * When the Sticky Button is released (e.g. because it received power from another doodad), any linked buttons which were sticky:down release as well. * Switch doodads emit a new "switch:toggle" event JUST BEFORE sending the "power" event. Sensitive Doodads can listen for switches in particular this way. * The Electric Door listens for switch:toggle; if a Switch is activated, the Electric Door always flips its current state (open to close, or vice versa) and ignores the immediately following power event. This allows doors to toggle on/off regardless of sync with a Switch. Other changes: * When the player character dies by fire, instead of the message saying "Watch out for fire!" it will use the name of the fire swatch that hurt the player. This way levels could make it say "Watch out for spikes!" or "lava" or whatever they want. The "Fire" attribute now just means "instantly kills the player." * Level Editor: You can now edit the Title and Author name of your level in the Page Settings window. * Bugfix: only the player character ends the game by dying in fire. Other mobile doodads just turn dark but don't end the game. * Increase the size of Trapdoor doodad sprites by 150% as they were a bit small for the player character. * Rename the game from "Project: Doodle" to "Sketchy Maze"
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if col.InFire != "" {
a.Canvas.MaskColor = render.Black
Various updates New doodad interactions: * Sticky Buttons will emit a "sticky:down" event to linked doodads, with a boolean value showing the Sticky Button's state. * Normal Buttons will listen for "sticky:down" -- when a linked Sticky Button is pressed, the normal Button presses in as well, and stays pressed while the sticky:down signal is true. * When the Sticky Button is released (e.g. because it received power from another doodad), any linked buttons which were sticky:down release as well. * Switch doodads emit a new "switch:toggle" event JUST BEFORE sending the "power" event. Sensitive Doodads can listen for switches in particular this way. * The Electric Door listens for switch:toggle; if a Switch is activated, the Electric Door always flips its current state (open to close, or vice versa) and ignores the immediately following power event. This allows doors to toggle on/off regardless of sync with a Switch. Other changes: * When the player character dies by fire, instead of the message saying "Watch out for fire!" it will use the name of the fire swatch that hurt the player. This way levels could make it say "Watch out for spikes!" or "lava" or whatever they want. The "Fire" attribute now just means "instantly kills the player." * Level Editor: You can now edit the Title and Author name of your level in the Page Settings window. * Bugfix: only the player character ends the game by dying in fire. Other mobile doodads just turn dark but don't end the game. * Increase the size of Trapdoor doodad sprites by 150% as they were a bit small for the player character. * Rename the game from "Project: Doodle" to "Sketchy Maze"
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if a.ID() == "PLAYER" { // only the player dies in fire.
s.DieByFire(col.InFire)
}
} else if col.InWater {
a.Canvas.MaskColor = render.DarkBlue
} else {
a.Canvas.MaskColor = render.Invisible
}
}
// Given a filename or map data to play?
if s.Level != nil {
log.Debug("PlayScene.Setup: received level from scene caller")
Wallpapers and Bounded Levels Implement the Wallpaper system into the levels and the concept of Bounded and Unbounded levels. The first wallpaper image is notepad.png which looks like standard ruled notebook paper. On bounded levels, the top/left edges of the page look as you would expect and the blue lines tile indefinitely in the positive directions. On unbounded levels, you only get the repeating blue lines but not the edge pieces. A wallpaper is just a rectangular image file. The image is divided into four equal quadrants to be the Corner, Top, Left and Repeat textures for the wallpaper. The Repeat texture is ALWAYS used and fills all the empty space behind the drawing. (Doodads draw with blank canvases as before because only levels have wallpapers!) Levels have four options of a "Page Type": - Unbounded (default, infinite space) - NoNegativeSpace (has a top left edge but can grow infinitely) - Bounded (has a top left edge and bounded size) - Bordered (bounded with bordered texture; NOT IMPLEMENTED!) The scrollable viewport of a Canvas will respect the wallpaper and page type settings of a Level loaded into it. That is, if the level has a top left edge (not Unbounded) you can NOT scroll to see negative coordinates below (0,0) -- and if the level has a max dimension set, you can't scroll to see pixels outside those dimensions. The Canvas property NoLimitScroll=true will override the scroll locking and let you see outside the bounds, for debugging. - Default map settings for New Level are now: - Page Type: NoNegativeSpace - Wallpaper: notepad.png (default) - MaxWidth: 2550 (8.5" * 300 ppi) - MaxHeight: 3300 ( 11" * 300 ppi)
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s.drawing.LoadLevel(d.Engine, s.Level)
s.drawing.InstallActors(s.Level.Actors)
} else if s.Filename != "" {
loadscreen.SetSubtitle("Opening: " + s.Filename)
log.Debug("PlayScene.Setup: loading map from file %s", s.Filename)
// NOTE: s.LoadLevel also calls s.drawing.InstallActors
s.LoadLevel(s.Filename)
}
if s.Level == nil {
log.Debug("PlayScene.Setup: no grid given, initializing empty grid")
s.Level = level.New()
Wallpapers and Bounded Levels Implement the Wallpaper system into the levels and the concept of Bounded and Unbounded levels. The first wallpaper image is notepad.png which looks like standard ruled notebook paper. On bounded levels, the top/left edges of the page look as you would expect and the blue lines tile indefinitely in the positive directions. On unbounded levels, you only get the repeating blue lines but not the edge pieces. A wallpaper is just a rectangular image file. The image is divided into four equal quadrants to be the Corner, Top, Left and Repeat textures for the wallpaper. The Repeat texture is ALWAYS used and fills all the empty space behind the drawing. (Doodads draw with blank canvases as before because only levels have wallpapers!) Levels have four options of a "Page Type": - Unbounded (default, infinite space) - NoNegativeSpace (has a top left edge but can grow infinitely) - Bounded (has a top left edge and bounded size) - Bordered (bounded with bordered texture; NOT IMPLEMENTED!) The scrollable viewport of a Canvas will respect the wallpaper and page type settings of a Level loaded into it. That is, if the level has a top left edge (not Unbounded) you can NOT scroll to see negative coordinates below (0,0) -- and if the level has a max dimension set, you can't scroll to see pixels outside those dimensions. The Canvas property NoLimitScroll=true will override the scroll locking and let you see outside the bounds, for debugging. - Default map settings for New Level are now: - Page Type: NoNegativeSpace - Wallpaper: notepad.png (default) - MaxWidth: 2550 (8.5" * 300 ppi) - MaxHeight: 3300 ( 11" * 300 ppi)
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s.drawing.LoadLevel(d.Engine, s.Level)
s.drawing.InstallActors(s.Level.Actors)
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}
// Set the loading screen text with the level metadata.
loadscreen.SetSubtitle(
s.Level.Title,
"by "+s.Level.Author,
)
// Load all actor scripts.
s.drawing.SetScriptSupervisor(s.scripting)
if err := s.scripting.InstallScripts(s.Level); err != nil {
log.Error("PlayScene.Setup: failed to InstallScripts: %s", err)
}
// Load in the player character.
s.setupPlayer()
// Run all the actor scripts' main() functions.
if err := s.drawing.InstallScripts(); err != nil {
log.Error("PlayScene.Setup: failed to drawing.InstallScripts: %s", err)
}
if s.CanEdit {
d.Flash("Entered Play Mode. Press 'E' to edit this map.")
} else {
d.Flash("%s", s.Level.Title)
}
// Pre-cache all bitmap images from the level chunks.
// Note: we are not running on the main thread, so SDL2 Textures
// don't get created yet, but we do the full work of caching bitmap
// images which later get fed directly into SDL2 saving speed at
// runtime, + the bitmap generation is pretty wicked fast anyway.
loadscreen.PreloadAllChunkBitmaps(s.Level.Chunker)
s.running = true
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return nil
}
// setupPlayer creates and configures the Player Character in the level.
func (s *PlayScene) setupPlayer() {
// Load in the player character.
player, err := doodads.LoadFile(balance.PlayerCharacterDoodad)
if err != nil {
log.Error("PlayScene.Setup: failed to load player doodad: %s", err)
player = doodads.NewDummy(32)
}
// Find the spawn point of the player. Search the level for the
// "start-flag.doodad"
var (
spawn render.Point
flagCount int
)
for actorID, actor := range s.Level.Actors {
if actor.Filename == "start-flag.doodad" {
if flagCount > 1 {
break
}
// TODO: start-flag.doodad is 86x86 pixels but we can't tell that
// from right here.
size := render.NewRect(86, 86)
log.Info("Found start-flag.doodad at %s (ID %s)", actor.Point, actorID)
spawn = render.NewPoint(
// X: centered inside the flag.
actor.Point.X+(size.W/2)-(player.Layers[0].Chunker.Size/2),
// Y: the bottom of the flag, 4 pixels from the floor.
actor.Point.Y+size.H-4-(player.Layers[0].Chunker.Size),
)
flagCount++
}
}
// Surface warnings around the spawn flag.
if flagCount == 0 {
s.d.Flash("Warning: this level contained no Start Flag.")
} else if flagCount > 1 {
s.d.Flash("Warning: this level contains multiple Start Flags. Player spawn point is ambiguous.")
}
s.Player = uix.NewActor("PLAYER", &level.Actor{}, player)
s.Player.MoveTo(spawn)
s.drawing.AddActor(s.Player)
s.drawing.FollowActor = s.Player.ID()
// Set up the movement physics for the player.
s.playerPhysics = &physics.Mover{
MaxSpeed: physics.NewVector(balance.PlayerMaxVelocity, balance.PlayerMaxVelocity),
// Gravity: physics.NewVector(balance.Gravity, balance.Gravity),
Acceleration: 0.025,
Friction: 0.1,
}
// Set up the player character's script in the VM.
if err := s.scripting.AddLevelScript(s.Player.ID()); err != nil {
log.Error("PlayScene.Setup: scripting.InstallActor(player) failed: %s", err)
}
}
// SetupAlertbox configures the alert box UI.
func (s *PlayScene) SetupAlertbox() {
window := ui.NewWindow("Level Completed")
window.Configure(ui.Config{
Width: 320,
Height: 160,
Background: render.Grey,
})
window.Compute(s.d.Engine)
{
frame := ui.NewFrame("Open Drawing Frame")
window.Pack(frame, ui.Pack{
Side: ui.N,
Fill: true,
Expand: true,
})
/******************
* Frame for selecting User Levels
******************/
s.alertBoxLabel = ui.NewLabel(ui.Label{
Text: "Congratulations on clearing the level!",
Font: balance.LabelFont,
})
frame.Pack(s.alertBoxLabel, ui.Pack{
Side: ui.N,
FillX: true,
PadY: 16,
})
/******************
* Confirm/cancel buttons.
******************/
bottomFrame := ui.NewFrame("Button Frame")
frame.Pack(bottomFrame, ui.Pack{
Side: ui.N,
FillX: true,
PadY: 8,
})
// Button factory for the various options.
makeButton := func(text string, handler func()) *ui.Button {
btn := ui.NewButton(text, ui.NewLabel(ui.Label{
Font: balance.LabelFont,
Text: text,
}))
btn.Handle(ui.Click, func(ed ui.EventData) error {
handler()
return nil
})
bottomFrame.Pack(btn, ui.Pack{
Side: ui.W,
PadX: 2,
})
s.supervisor.Add(btn)
btn.Hide() // all buttons hidden by default
return btn
}
s.alertReplayButton = makeButton("Play Again", func() {
s.RestartLevel()
})
s.alertEditButton = makeButton("Edit Level", func() {
s.EditLevel()
})
s.alertNextButton = makeButton("Next Level", func() {
s.d.Flash("Not Implemented")
})
s.alertExitButton = makeButton("Exit to Menu", func() {
s.d.Goto(&MainScene{})
})
}
s.alertBox = window
s.alertBox.Hide()
}
// EditLevel toggles out of Play Mode to edit the level.
func (s *PlayScene) EditLevel() {
log.Info("Edit Mode, Go!")
s.d.Goto(&EditorScene{
Filename: s.Filename,
Level: s.Level,
})
}
// RestartLevel starts the level over again.
func (s *PlayScene) RestartLevel() {
log.Info("Restart Level")
s.d.Goto(&PlayScene{
Filename: s.Filename,
Level: s.Level,
CanEdit: s.CanEdit,
})
}
Various updates New doodad interactions: * Sticky Buttons will emit a "sticky:down" event to linked doodads, with a boolean value showing the Sticky Button's state. * Normal Buttons will listen for "sticky:down" -- when a linked Sticky Button is pressed, the normal Button presses in as well, and stays pressed while the sticky:down signal is true. * When the Sticky Button is released (e.g. because it received power from another doodad), any linked buttons which were sticky:down release as well. * Switch doodads emit a new "switch:toggle" event JUST BEFORE sending the "power" event. Sensitive Doodads can listen for switches in particular this way. * The Electric Door listens for switch:toggle; if a Switch is activated, the Electric Door always flips its current state (open to close, or vice versa) and ignores the immediately following power event. This allows doors to toggle on/off regardless of sync with a Switch. Other changes: * When the player character dies by fire, instead of the message saying "Watch out for fire!" it will use the name of the fire swatch that hurt the player. This way levels could make it say "Watch out for spikes!" or "lava" or whatever they want. The "Fire" attribute now just means "instantly kills the player." * Level Editor: You can now edit the Title and Author name of your level in the Page Settings window. * Bugfix: only the player character ends the game by dying in fire. Other mobile doodads just turn dark but don't end the game. * Increase the size of Trapdoor doodad sprites by 150% as they were a bit small for the player character. * Rename the game from "Project: Doodle" to "Sketchy Maze"
2021-03-31 06:33:25 +00:00
// DieByFire ends the level by "fire", or w/e the swatch is named.
func (s *PlayScene) DieByFire(name string) {
log.Info("Watch out for %s!", name)
s.alertBox.Title = "You've died!"
Various updates New doodad interactions: * Sticky Buttons will emit a "sticky:down" event to linked doodads, with a boolean value showing the Sticky Button's state. * Normal Buttons will listen for "sticky:down" -- when a linked Sticky Button is pressed, the normal Button presses in as well, and stays pressed while the sticky:down signal is true. * When the Sticky Button is released (e.g. because it received power from another doodad), any linked buttons which were sticky:down release as well. * Switch doodads emit a new "switch:toggle" event JUST BEFORE sending the "power" event. Sensitive Doodads can listen for switches in particular this way. * The Electric Door listens for switch:toggle; if a Switch is activated, the Electric Door always flips its current state (open to close, or vice versa) and ignores the immediately following power event. This allows doors to toggle on/off regardless of sync with a Switch. Other changes: * When the player character dies by fire, instead of the message saying "Watch out for fire!" it will use the name of the fire swatch that hurt the player. This way levels could make it say "Watch out for spikes!" or "lava" or whatever they want. The "Fire" attribute now just means "instantly kills the player." * Level Editor: You can now edit the Title and Author name of your level in the Page Settings window. * Bugfix: only the player character ends the game by dying in fire. Other mobile doodads just turn dark but don't end the game. * Increase the size of Trapdoor doodad sprites by 150% as they were a bit small for the player character. * Rename the game from "Project: Doodle" to "Sketchy Maze"
2021-03-31 06:33:25 +00:00
s.alertBoxLabel.Text = fmt.Sprintf("Watch out for %s!", name)
s.alertReplayButton.Show()
if s.CanEdit {
s.alertEditButton.Show()
}
s.alertExitButton.Show()
s.alertBox.Show()
// Stop the simulation.
s.running = false
}
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// Loop the editor scene.
func (s *PlayScene) Loop(d *Doodle, ev *event.State) error {
// Skip if still loading.
if loadscreen.IsActive() {
return nil
}
// Update debug overlay values.
*s.debWorldIndex = s.drawing.WorldIndexAt(render.NewPoint(ev.CursorX, ev.CursorY)).String()
*s.debPosition = s.Player.Position().String() + " vel " + s.Player.Velocity().String()
*s.debViewport = s.drawing.Viewport().String()
*s.debScroll = s.drawing.Scroll.String()
s.supervisor.Loop(ev)
// Has the window been resized?
if ev.WindowResized {
w, h := d.Engine.WindowSize()
if w != d.width || h != d.height {
d.width = w
d.height = h
s.drawing.Resize(render.NewRect(d.width, d.height))
return nil
}
}
// Switching to Edit Mode?
if s.CanEdit && keybind.GotoEdit(ev) {
s.EditLevel()
return nil
}
// Is the simulation still running?
if s.running {
// Loop the script supervisor so timeouts/intervals can fire in scripts.
if err := s.scripting.Loop(); err != nil {
log.Error("PlayScene.Loop: scripting.Loop: %s", err)
}
s.movePlayer(ev)
if err := s.drawing.Loop(ev); err != nil {
log.Error("Drawing loop error: %s", err.Error())
}
// Update the inventory HUD.
s.computeInventory()
}
return nil
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}
// Draw the pixels on this frame.
func (s *PlayScene) Draw(d *Doodle) error {
// Skip if still loading.
if loadscreen.IsActive() {
return nil
}
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// Clear the canvas and fill it with white.
d.Engine.Clear(render.White)
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// Draw the level.
s.drawing.Present(d.Engine, s.drawing.Point())
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// Draw out bounding boxes.
if DebugCollision {
for _, actor := range s.drawing.Actors() {
d.DrawCollisionBox(s.drawing, actor)
}
}
// Draw the UI screen and any widgets that attached to it.
s.screen.Compute(d.Engine)
s.screen.Present(d.Engine, render.Origin)
// Draw the Edit button.
var (
canSize = s.drawing.Size()
size = s.editButton.Size()
padding = 8
)
s.editButton.MoveTo(render.Point{
X: canSize.W - size.W - padding,
Y: canSize.H - size.H - padding,
})
s.editButton.Present(d.Engine, s.editButton.Point())
// Draw the alert box window.
if !s.alertBox.Hidden() {
s.alertBox.Compute(d.Engine)
s.alertBox.MoveTo(render.Point{
X: (d.width / 2) - (s.alertBox.Size().W / 2),
Y: (d.height / 2) - (s.alertBox.Size().H / 2),
})
s.alertBox.Present(d.Engine, s.alertBox.Point())
}
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return nil
}
// movePlayer updates the player's X,Y coordinate based on key pressed.
func (s *PlayScene) movePlayer(ev *event.State) {
var (
playerSpeed = float64(balance.PlayerMaxVelocity)
velocity = s.Player.Velocity()
direction float64
jumping bool
)
// Antigravity: player can move anywhere with arrow keys.
if s.antigravity {
velocity.X = 0
velocity.Y = 0
// Shift to slow your roll to 1 pixel per tick.
if keybind.Shift(ev) {
playerSpeed = 1
}
if keybind.Left(ev) {
velocity.X = -playerSpeed
} else if keybind.Right(ev) {
velocity.X = playerSpeed
}
if keybind.Up(ev) {
velocity.Y = -playerSpeed
} else if keybind.Down(ev) {
velocity.Y = playerSpeed
}
} else {
// Moving left or right.
if keybind.Left(ev) {
direction = -1
} else if keybind.Right(ev) {
direction = 1
}
// Up button to signal they want to jump.
if keybind.Up(ev) && (s.Player.Grounded() || s.playerJumpCounter >= 0) {
jumping = true
if s.Player.Grounded() {
// Allow them to sustain the jump this many ticks.
s.playerJumpCounter = 32
}
}
// Moving left or right? Interpolate their velocity by acceleration.
if direction != 0 {
// TODO: fast turn-around if they change directions so they don't
// slip and slide while their velocity updates.
velocity.X = physics.Lerp(
velocity.X,
direction*s.playerPhysics.MaxSpeed.X,
s.playerPhysics.Acceleration,
)
} else {
// Slow them back to zero using friction.
velocity.X = physics.Lerp(
velocity.X,
0,
s.playerPhysics.Friction,
)
}
// Moving upwards (jumping): give them full acceleration upwards.
if jumping {
velocity.Y = -playerSpeed
}
// While in the air, count down their jump counter; when zero they
// cannot jump again until they touch ground.
if !s.Player.Grounded() {
s.playerJumpCounter--
}
}
// Move the player unless frozen.
// TODO: if Y=0 then gravity fails, but not doing this allows the
// player to jump while frozen. Not a HUGE deal right now as only Warp Doors
// freeze the player currently but do address this later.
if s.Player.IsFrozen() {
velocity.X = 0
}
s.Player.SetVelocity(velocity)
// If the "Use" key is pressed, set an actor flag on the player.
s.Player.SetUsing(keybind.Use(ev))
s.scripting.To(s.Player.ID()).Events.RunKeypress(keybind.FromEvent(ev))
}
// Drawing returns the private world drawing, for debugging with the console.
func (s *PlayScene) Drawing() *uix.Canvas {
return s.drawing
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}
// LoadLevel loads a level from disk.
func (s *PlayScene) LoadLevel(filename string) error {
s.Filename = filename
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level, err := level.LoadFile(filename)
if err != nil {
return fmt.Errorf("PlayScene.LoadLevel(%s): %s", filename, err)
}
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s.Level = level
Wallpapers and Bounded Levels Implement the Wallpaper system into the levels and the concept of Bounded and Unbounded levels. The first wallpaper image is notepad.png which looks like standard ruled notebook paper. On bounded levels, the top/left edges of the page look as you would expect and the blue lines tile indefinitely in the positive directions. On unbounded levels, you only get the repeating blue lines but not the edge pieces. A wallpaper is just a rectangular image file. The image is divided into four equal quadrants to be the Corner, Top, Left and Repeat textures for the wallpaper. The Repeat texture is ALWAYS used and fills all the empty space behind the drawing. (Doodads draw with blank canvases as before because only levels have wallpapers!) Levels have four options of a "Page Type": - Unbounded (default, infinite space) - NoNegativeSpace (has a top left edge but can grow infinitely) - Bounded (has a top left edge and bounded size) - Bordered (bounded with bordered texture; NOT IMPLEMENTED!) The scrollable viewport of a Canvas will respect the wallpaper and page type settings of a Level loaded into it. That is, if the level has a top left edge (not Unbounded) you can NOT scroll to see negative coordinates below (0,0) -- and if the level has a max dimension set, you can't scroll to see pixels outside those dimensions. The Canvas property NoLimitScroll=true will override the scroll locking and let you see outside the bounds, for debugging. - Default map settings for New Level are now: - Page Type: NoNegativeSpace - Wallpaper: notepad.png (default) - MaxWidth: 2550 (8.5" * 300 ppi) - MaxHeight: 3300 ( 11" * 300 ppi)
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s.drawing.LoadLevel(s.d.Engine, s.Level)
s.drawing.InstallActors(s.Level.Actors)
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return nil
}
// Destroy the scene.
func (s *PlayScene) Destroy() error {
return nil
}