Hi folks. I'm brand new to lua and Love, and have been doing hobbyist PHP for a while before I realized that I wanted a 2d environment.
Apologies if this is clearly covered somewhere - I've been through the tutorials and dug through documentation and forums.. I'm still super early in the learning process.
I'm trying to figure out how to make something "move". I played a lot with the mouse dragging tutorial, and that got me started. I modified it to make it so that the rectangle simply jumps to wherever I click the mouse, but then I wanted to have it move from one location to the other in a perceptible way, as opposed to the "teleportation" method of simply being redrawn at its destination.
So - how is this kind of thing done in this environment? Being from a PHP background, I imagined that you might have some sort of loop that updates its x/y coords for origin and destination, and draws it; then updates its coords and draws it, etc. I fooled around with this approach, but I can't figure out how to get a loop to iterate slow enough to be perceptible.
Thanks!
object movement [newbie, theory]
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- Robin
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Re: object movement [newbie, theory]
Welcome!
Forget about loops -- LÖVE works differently. love.update(dt) and love.draw() are both run once a frame. They both got a small window of time to do what they have to do before they start slowing things down. As long as you are in love.update(dt) and love.draw(), the game is "stuck" and doesn't move.
So how do you let an object move?
Here's one way:
(I hope you can fill in the rest.)
If you like to move your rectangle to a specific location, say (xnew, ynew), you do something like this:
Try playing with these example until you get a feel for how everything works.
You can always ask more questions if something's not clear.
Forget about loops -- LÖVE works differently. love.update(dt) and love.draw() are both run once a frame. They both got a small window of time to do what they have to do before they start slowing things down. As long as you are in love.update(dt) and love.draw(), the game is "stuck" and doesn't move.
So how do you let an object move?
Here's one way:
Code: Select all
function love.update(dt)
xposition = xposition + xspeed * dt
yposition = yposition + yspeed * dt
end
If you like to move your rectangle to a specific location, say (xnew, ynew), you do something like this:
Code: Select all
function love.update(dt)
xposition = xposition * 0.99 + xnew * 0.01
yposition = yposition * 0.99 + ynew * 0.01
end
You can always ask more questions if something's not clear.
Help us help you: attach a .love.
Re: object movement [newbie, theory]
Awesome, thanks.
Here's the code that I came up with (much of it cribbed from the previously mentioned tutorial)
Here's the code that I came up with (much of it cribbed from the previously mentioned tutorial)
Code: Select all
-- simplemovement
function love.load()
rect = {
x = 100,
y = 100,
width = 100,
height = 100,
targetX = 700,
targetY = 500,
dragging = { active = false, diffX = 0, diffY = 0 }
}
end
function love.update(dt)
if rect.dragging.active then
rect.x = rect.x * 0.99 + rect.targetX * 0.01
rect.y = rect.y * 0.99 + rect.targetY * 0.01
--rect.x = rect.x * 1.01
--rect.y = rect.y * 1.01
end
end
function love.draw()
love.graphics.print('Hello World!', 400, 300)
local e, f = love.mouse.getPosition()
love.graphics.print("The mouse is at (" .. e .. "," .. f .. ")", 50, 50)
love.graphics.print("The box is at (" .. rect.x .. "," .. rect.y .. ")", 100, 100)
love.graphics.rectangle("fill", rect.x, rect.y, rect.width, rect.height)
end
function love.mousepressed(x, y, button)
if button == "l" -- if left button is pressed
then
rect.dragging.active = true
rect.dragging.diffX = x - rect.x
rect.dragging.diffY = y - rect.y
rect.targetX = x
rect.targetY = y
end
end
function love.mousereleased(x, y, button)
if button == "l" then rect.dragging.active = false end
end
- Roland_Yonaba
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Re: object movement [newbie, theory]
Yeah, fine.
You should use dt in the update callback, it'll make your moves more framerate-independant.
But it's not obliged, though.
You should use dt in the update callback, it'll make your moves more framerate-independant.
But it's not obliged, though.
Re: object movement [newbie, theory]
I noticed that the code I posted performs differently on two systems. Perhaps this is related to processor speed difference?
Is it possible to combine these approaches? To code it so that it moves toward a target, and includes dt as well?
Can someone break down 'dt' and how it works in this code?
I tried this, but it does not work the way I want.
Is it possible to combine these approaches? To code it so that it moves toward a target, and includes dt as well?
Can someone break down 'dt' and how it works in this code?
I tried this, but it does not work the way I want.
Code: Select all
local e, f = love.mouse.getPosition()
rect.x = rect.x * 0.990 + e * 0.005 + dt * 0.005
rect.y = rect.y * 0.990 + f * 0.005 + dt * 0.005
- Robin
- The Omniscient
- Posts: 6506
- Joined: Fri Feb 20, 2009 4:29 pm
- Location: The Netherlands
- Contact:
Re: object movement [newbie, theory]
So dt is the number of seconds since the last frame (usually quite a small number). In your code, you multiply it by 0.005 and add it to rect.x and rect.y. That means the code works almost the same asxjermx wrote:Can someone break down 'dt' and how it works in this code?
Code: Select all
local e, f = love.mouse.getPosition()
rect.x = rect.x * 0.990 + e * 0.005
rect.y = rect.y * 0.990 + f * 0.005
This is a simple thing you might want to try:
Code: Select all
local e, f = love.mouse.getPosition()
local timeleft = dt
while timeleft > 0 do
rect.x = rect.x * 0.995 + e * 0.005
rect.y = rect.y * 0.995 + f * 0.005
timeleft = timeleft - 0.01
end
I haven't tested this, tell us how and if it works.
Help us help you: attach a .love.
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