I'm looking to implement movement from character to character on a tiled board. I have a 7x7 board set up with each tile representing a character. The player is able to move in up to the 8 directions around the tile (providing proper game logic). I am able to accurately get the character at a given tile based on a onTouch() Action_Down.
For a more elegant solution though I am looking to press and drag to move between tiles/create words. I'm not exactly sure where I should start with this.
I can figure out all the logic for appropriate moves etc. But my question is how to recognize a left movement from 1 position to another as selecting tiles?
My current idea is to have hard boarders but that will not work for diagonal. Then my next idea is to have diagonal boarders instead so like:
This solution seems a little complex though. Is there any easier way to accomplish this?
Related
I am using LibGdx to develop a game. For Now I am not using scene2D. I am struck up in increasing the levels of the game as I do not have the scrolling screen.
I like to design a a scrolling screen as it is in many games which are level based (for ref, lets say Candy crush). Could you please point me a example on how to have such a scrolling screen to show a bigger area where I can show many levels.
Thanks is Advance !
Using the Scene2D function is not necessary for this and is more for GUI implementation and different screens. The Scroll pane really shines when creating reading content that does not fit your phone. I do advice to start learning Scene2D to create MenuScreens and UI though.
What Candy Crush "simply" does is having multiple backgrounds that are placed next to each other and tile seamlessly. They use buttons in the correct place for levels. By dragging a finger across the screen the camera will move in that direction. For the movement from one level to the next there is probably something like a spline in play.
It is important only to draw the background tiles and buttons that are actually visible on the screen if you have many. Since these have fixed positions and you know your camera area and position you can calculate what to draw and what not. Just drawing everything each frame is likely to slow down your fps.
You can do a search on:
Tilemaps, for you backgrounds but you probably want them in just one direction so a simple 1D array would suffice.
Dragging, to move your camera. Here I gave a basic explanations on how I do it.
Splines, are a bit tougher and you do not really need them. They could be used to animate or move something along a curve.
Thats all, expecting you know how to create something like a button (click a sprite).
I'd like to create a custom map. It should be or look like one picture, but according to the part of which the user clicks, it should move the user to a different location (i.e. start a different activity). I've seen it done in several games but I don't know how to do it myself.
The part of the picture should have non-geometrical borders (obviously it would be easily done with many square images). Sadly, I don't even know what term describes what I want to do so I wasn't able to find any helpful tutorials or discussed topics.
Example:
Picture: http://i236.photobucket.com/albums/ff40/iathen/mapEx.png
If the user touches the purple slide, (s)he should be leaded to activity_1
If the user touches the blue slide, (s)he should be leaded to activity_2
If the user touches the green slide, (s)he should be leaded to activity_3
In my experience there are 2 main (most used) ways to achieve this.
The first (my favorite):
Get the data from a PNG
You should write multiple layers to a canvas. These layers constitute your "zones" (blue, green, purple in the image). To obtain the data of these areas, you get it from PNGs (with transparencies off course) to write the canvas with whatever you want. You must store the values where there can be a tap from the user (non-transparent areas). Notice that this values can be scaled up/down depending on the map size, screen resolution, map dimensions, etc.
Once you've written the layers to the canvas you should check for a match of the user tap and the stored areas you have. You should take into consideration here the order in which the user tap is processed in your code. For instance, in your image, the purple layer is on top so it must be processed first, the blue as second, and the green as the last one. This way you can have an "island" inside a bigger area.
The second way:
Generate the boundaries programmaticaly
I think this solution is self-explanatory. The only I've faced with this variant is that when the surfaces boundaries get messy, it's really complicated to generate the proper equations.
EDIT:
Using the first approach you can employ multiple PNGs to load data or use a single PNG with data coded into the bytes (i.e. RGB values). It's up to you to decide which one to implement.
Hope it helps!
Since a touchscreen itself isn't very accurate, your collision detection for the buttons doesn't need to be either. It would be a waste of time to try to make a complicated collision detection algorithm to detect a touch within those weird shapes.
Since you are making a game, I assume you know how to handle custom touch events, as well as canvas (at least). There are many ways to do what you want, but in the specific example image you linked is kind of a special case.
You could create a giant bounding circle around the three blobs, and then check if the user touched within the bounds of the circle (ie check if the distance from the touch to the center of the circle is less than or equal to the radius). Once you determine that it is, you could check which section of the circle it falls into by splitting it up into 3 equal sections. Requires some math, but shouldn't be that complicated.
It wouldn't be a perfect solution, but it should be good enough. Although, you might have to change the buttons a little so they aren't so stretched out horizontally, otherwise a bounding circle wouldn't be ideal.
Personally, in my games I always have "nodes" that represent the visual elements of the game, such as buttons. Instead of using a large image like you are doing, I would create separate images for each button, and then check their collisions with touch events independently. That way I could have each button check with their own individual bounding circles, or, if absolutely necessary, I could even have custom algorithms for each individual button.
These aren't perfect solutions. If you do want a pixel-perfect solution, you'll need to implement some polygon collision detection algorithms
One thing to consider is screen size and ratio. The only constants you should use are for percentages.
I need to handle 3 types of gestures in my app: points, lines and circles.
Circles and lines are vectored (may be drawn in different directions, like in windows 8 picture password).
Now I'm looking for a better way for it - read about GestureOverlayView, but, how I understood, those gestures should be given initially, and my lines will be at different angles, and circles at different diameters.
Is there any easy way to do it, or better to use onTouchEvent and detect gestures mathematically?
When you said you "need to handle 3 types of gestures", what exactly do you mean by 'handle', ie. what do you need to do with the gestures? Do you mean that you need to determine if a particular gesture is a point, line or circle?
If you want to analyse a gesture, as it is being drawn or after it is drawn, you could create a Path object and update it in each onTouchEvent. Then you would do your mathematical calculations with the points along that Path. http://developer.android.com/reference/android/graphics/Path.html
Is it possible to detect every pixel being touched? More specifically, when the user touches the screen, is it possible to track all the x-y coordinates of the cluster of points touched by the user? How can I tell the difference between when users are drawing with their thumb and when they are drawing with the tip of a finger? I would like to reflect the brush difference depending on how users touch the screen, and would also like to track x-y coordinates of all the pixels being touched over time. Thanks so much in advance for any help.
This would be very tricky primarily because every android phone is going to behave differently. There are some touch screen devices that are very, very sensitive and some that are basically "dull" by comparison.
It also sounds more like you are wanting to track pressure - how hard is the user pushing on the screen - which is actually supported on android devices.
I think some of your answer may be found by monitoring all of the touch events - in practice, most applications ignore a great number of events or perform some kind of "smoothing" of the events since there is literally a deluge of touch events when the user is manipulating the screen. Doing this may negatively impact your applications performance though.
I would recommend that you look into pressure sensitivity and calculate a circular region around the primary touch point based on pressure, then build your brush around that.
Another idea would be to incorporate more of a gesture approach to what you are trying to do - for example, visualize touching the screen with the tip of two fingers together (index and middle) and rolling the middle finger around the index finger or simply moving the middle finger up and down in relation to the index finger. Both fingers would be moved together for painting. This could be used to manipulate drawing angle on the fly or perhaps even toggle between a set of pre-selected brushes or could change brush size on the fly as you are painting.
Some of the above ideas I would love to see implemented - let me know when you have your app ready.
Good luck!
Rodney
If you have a listener on your image it will respond that there was a touch within that bounding box, basically.
So, to get what you want, you could, but, I would never do this, create a box around every pixel, or small group of pixels, and listen for a touch.
Wherever you get a touch, it may fire off an event, then you can react accordingly.
I can't think of any other solution that will give you each pixel that a person touched, at one time.
You may want to read up on multitouch though, as there are some suggestions in here that my help you:
http://android-developers.blogspot.com/2010/06/making-sense-of-multitouch.html
If you're looking for a way to get your content view as a View after Activity#setContentView(int), then you can set an id on the outer-most element of your layout:
android:id="#+id/entire_view" and reference it in your onCreate() method after setContentView:
View view = getViewById(R.id.entire_view);
view.setOnTouchListener( ... );
I have been trying to make a layout for an Android app that functions like a car Speedometer.
Something like this:
I basically want there to be 5 clickable Views across the radius of the dial, and have the dial point to the currently selected item. If possible it would be good to be able to click and drag the dial. I would also want this layout to work nicely with different screen sizes and resolutions, including tablets.
How could something like this be accomplished?
I don't know exactly how much this will help, but it goes over a similar design and shows how to place things at angles around a curve.
For each selectable view, I would also advise that you keep use keep track of the coordinates of each item, so you can use trig to calculate the proper angle for the dial to display (getting the dial to display at an angle is covered in that link).
So, you can set up OnClickListeners for each of your selectable items about the gauge, and in each instance, calculate the proper angle for the dial to spin to, and position it there using the information found in that link.
I'm not sure how much this helped, if at all, but it should at least give you an idea on creating custom Views and whatnot.
Good luck!