Buying a game engine isn't something I would really recommend to someone just starting out, but it really is the best learning tool IMO speaking from experience. Now that they all sell indie licenses it doesn't cost $3000 a seat anymore unless you're a company. That's why there are all these little self-starters popping up on Valve Greenlight and the Apple app store and stuff.
They just show you how to do it, there are basic programming paradigms that almost all games use.
Especially in Java there will be a lot of API classes you'd need to learn, like key bindings which inevitably all games in Java will use and I assume they'll show you how to use stuff like that.
And it's true a book will teach you more technical stuff.
Well it's basically all just math. Pretty much the way all games work is they are a massive while loop that calculates all the positions, renders one frame and dispays it.
It'll work the same way in Java but you'll be using Graphics2D to do all the graphics on top of a Canvas or JPanel.
Well the truth is most games don't use real physics even if they seem like they do, real physics would take too much processing to calculate. They are simulated. You just say that such and such is moving across the screen at a rate of 5px/second, calculate the time passed since the last frame draw and set the new coordinate.
You won't be using GUI components for anything in the game unless you want UI overlaid on top, such as a HUD or inventory windows etc.
Welp that's the "official" way to program a game. Now you know. : )
Physics do get more complicated if you are doing more complex interactions, like you said collisions, but for most simple games there are not really any physics at all. You can just simulate most of it.
Well yes I know games are only a simulation of physics through the process of posistioning things to keep them from "going into or through" another 2D object
Just figuring out how its done is weird
Question on objects
If I have a player object but it also has a player JPanel for it
this JPanel is an object from another class
so Player extends this JPanel object class
If I make a new Player object, becaause Player extends the player JPanel class, will it also make a new unque or seperate JPanel player class
You are saying your Player class extends a class that extends JPanel?
I mean, any time you extend a class the subclass is essentially also that class. If you extend JPanel your subclass of JPanel is essentially also a JPanel. This is usually called an "is-a" relationship: en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Is_a
So if you instantiate a new Player object (which extends JPanel) you are also creating a new JPanel, whether you add it to a GUI somewhere or not. If that's what you are asking.
But since you are extending JPanel, due to the way inheritance works, Player is also a JPanel and can be more or less 100% treated like one. Any methods that take JPanel as a parameter also can take a Player object, all methods that can be called on a JPanel can be called on a Player, etc. JPanel is itself the end of a long chain of extensions as well. If Player extends JPanel, then Player is also somewhere up the line a subclass of JComponent for example.
Does that answer the question or was there more to it?
When you create a new Player object it's also a JPanel. If you don't know about type-casting objects you can also turn a subclass object reference in to a superclass reference by saying something like Player player = new Player(); JPanel panel = (JPanel)player; And then you have a reference to a JPanel which is actually a Player.
You can also turn a superclass object reference in to the subclass reference if it is one with the same syntax. Though if the JPanel reference is not actually a Player and you say Player player = (Player)panel; you will get an exception.
I don't know anything about JDBC either if that's what your question is about. Probably you should just post the question since not that many people frequent the chats.
I've tried Netbeans and I'm always impressed by how simple and easy to use it is. But then I love Eclipse because it's like a ridiculously gigantic Swiss army knife with tons of context menus and things. It pisses me off a lot though
The "clean and build" button is right next to the "run" button. So what happens is I put files in the build directory I am using to test the application since that is the default directory for file dialogs. Clean and build deletes them all. So sometimes I accidentally hit clean and build instead of run and I have to go copy all my files again.
I learned that the hard way too. The first time I did it I had my resources in that directory only and I had to go back in Mac's Time Machine to retrieve them.
if I'd been on windows they might as well have been gone forever
The thing I like about Eclipse is that I'll be working on some code and think "I wish there was a shortcut for this". Lo and behold, it was right behind a submenu the whole time.
Anyway, I always seem to end up with several instances of Eclipse because some projects are so finicky with the settings. I try setting stuff by workspace, but it seems like I end up needing a global setting at some point. So then I end up with multiple installs of Eclipse. Not tasty
Though sometimes I end up with so many source files up that I can see myself totally doing that. I discovered Netbeans can do a split panel but I haven't used it a lot yet.
My monitor is too small.
Wait you are doing that just for configurations?
That does seem kind of extreme. What settings are you wanting to change that it's important enough to have multiple installs?
Actually come to think of it. Netbeans lets you set the "main project" so that it's inconvenient to run any other project without using a side menu or something. Multiple installs would let me have multiple main projects.
I wonder if that is inconvenient to do on a Mac, I've never tried it.
Oh that was easy. You can just copy and paste the application.
Since OS X doesn't have all the registry stuff you can just make a copy.
Is cloning good practice in this case? How to do it better?
public ModelCollection startParsing() {
return parseFeed(new ModelSpecialEntry);
}
public ModelCollection parseFeed(ModelEntry pattern) {
ModelCollection modelCollection = new ModelCollection();
while( condition ) {
...
I have an ArrayList<String> that I'd like to return a copy of. ArrayList has a clone method has the following signature:
public Object clone()
After I call this method, how do I cast the returned Object back to ArrayList<String>?