@JakeSteffan in that case you can also practice abstract base classes (enforcing all tree types to specify resources, and preventing a generic Tree from being instantiated)
On the general topic of using classes to define various kinds of game entities... I've read design articles from a game dev or three, who say a component-based system tends to be a better fit. Apparently a lot of Unity games are quite component-based.
This is exactly what's difficult about programming: The best way to write your code depends on what exactly your program needs to do. If you discover a new requirement, well, you'll probably have to rewrite some of your code. And the problem is that you never know all the requirements, so you never know how you should write the code.
I'm working on a smarter binarization method for my OCR project.
I currently grayscale the image, then I count all unique brightness values to get a relative brightness range for the image. So, if the image is generally darker, the background can still be set as the "white" value.
This results in a sort of histogram looking bar chart with lots of bright pixels, and a few darker values with a large count.
Does anyone have a recommendation on a method to pick a point to separate the whites from blacks based off this information?
I just had a look at the wikipedia article for component-based design and as far as I can tell it's just some vague mumbo-jumbo that doesn't really mean anything?
It also looks like mumbo jumbo to me. But on the other hand, en.wikipedia.org/wiki/… lists both Unity and Unreal Engine as component-based tech. These are popular game engines that really have been used to create bona fide games, so they can't be 100% marketing fluff.
I have used both for rudimentary projects, and the style they seem to encourage is, "make a bunch of interfaces with names like '[verb]able', and create real game objects by gluing them together"
@Cyrus the first duckduckgo search hit is eeweb.engineering.nyu.edu/~yao/EL5123/… which is a 46-slide lecture note that includes histogram equalization, the one contrast enhancement strategy I've heard of (as an image processing layman)
docs.unity3d.com/Manual/class-GameObject.html is rather technical, but it talks about how GameObjects and Components can actually be used to do actually interesting things. You don't have to imagine how it might be useful by looking at fake "Duck inherits from Quackable" examples
"GameObjects are the building blocks for scenes in Unity, and act as a container for functional components which determine how the GameObject looks, and what the GameObject does"... Yep, sounds like what I was doing at the time
@Cyrus Sorry, I don't know much about OCR, but I think you're on the right track. A common technique to find the threshold you want is to find the "elbow" or "knee" of the histogram. en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Knee_of_a_curve
If you're doing this semi-manually, eg in Gimp, you can just "eyeball" where the knee is in the histogram, and adjust the slider until the threshold gives a nice result. Writing code to do that automatically is a little harder. ;) Especially if you're trying to isolate text from a complicated background.
@AndrasDeak--СлаваУкраїні Sure. But doing it manually on various input images gives you an idea of what you need to tell your automatic software to do. And if you have a whole bunch of similar images, the manual process can be a useful way to get parameters appropriate for that data set, which you then feed into your automatic software.
so, I want to run this process two times, first time with frames 0,450 or so, second time 450 till end
cap = cv2.VideoCapture(file_name)
poses = []
while cap.isOpened():
ret, img = cap.read()
if ret == False:
break
img.flags.writeable = False
imgRGB = cv2.cvtColor(img, cv2.COLOR_BGR2RGB)
results = video_pose.process(imgRGB)
pose1=[]
# print(results.pose_landmarks)
if results.pose_landmarks:
mp_draw.draw_landmarks(img, results.pose_landmarks, mp_pose.POSE_CONNECTIONS)
for id, lm in enumerate(results.pose_landmarks.landmark):
when I am trying to run it using multiprocessing with two processes, the result (pose1) of the first process that I am getting is correct but that of the second process is not correct
frame count, actually video_pose.process() takes a lot of time for a large number of frames in opencv. So, anything to optimize it will be fine for me.
@DeepakVerma put them in a queue to process, multiprocessing might not be what you are looking for here, you need multithreading where a capture thread and process thread are totally different which essentially saves you time to read the frame and then process it, instead now you read beforehand, put the frames in queue and process them one by one. This is usually also done for cameras that are "laggy", prone to drop frames or just a camera that you cannot access via common methods but only streams
If I inherit a class to my own custom class, it will also get it's __init__() method right? or do I have to define it's __init__() method even if it's the same params that need to be "inited"?
Let's argue psychology: If you ask someone to paypal you a dollar and they're reluctant to do it, is it because of the dollar or because of the effort it requires to paypal money to someone? I think a lot of people won't even seriously consider it just because they don't want to put in that effort.
Bonus thought: You might even get better results if you ask for more money, say 5 dollars
Yeah, you're right. I remember reading an article about a micro-tipping service where you could give a couple pennies to your favorite participating content creators, just by clicking on an icon on their website. This was back in the day when people still had websites instead of Facebook/Twitter/etc.
The service was unprofitable because people were often unwilling to pay even a penny, even though they consciously knew it was a miniscule fraction of their expenses, and it was (mostly) going directly to somebody they liked.
(The service might have kept a small percentage as a transaction fee, I forget)
I figured that this kind of thing is usually possible with ORMs and/or DB-facing web frameworks. I'm more interested in a from-scratch solution, but YMMV
I still have no idea what any of that is but I'll assume it's very useful haha.
I made a Plant class guys, I got a question.
So you know how I have age attributes to my resource objects, well the last one is "Dead", so sometimes the player will come across dead plants and trees, but then I would like it so that the quality of these resources, since they're dead, could get restricted in some way, but I'm having a hard time with it.
I'm guessing there's a way to create some type of relation between the plant quality and the plant age but I'm not sure how to go about establishing that relationship logic.
Guys I think I'm just too skittish to start spamming logic into my code because I'm a perfectionist. I worry that everything I do will end up being as they say "spaghetti code".
Can you set aside small-scale botany design and try to come up with a skeleton for the actual mechanics of your game? That might help you get perspective later.
I'm pretty sure that's why I'm trying to preoccupy my focus on these micromechanics, so that I can hide from the fact if I really had to work on a bird's eye view of what I want to accomplish I wouldn't have any clue where to start.
I struggle with the same thing sometimes. I worry about the design so much that I end up losing interest in the project without ever writing any code...
you might find it hard to predict what kind of interaction is meaningful between aspects of your entities until you have a concrete idea of what the game does and how entities fit in it
The problem I think I'm having is learning right out of the gate functional programming paradigm and then switching to OOP once I started getting the hang of it, and now my mind is scrambling the two and now I can't tell where one ends and one begins, especially when I start doing the logic stuff.
Like if you were to ask me any one thing about anything, I could tell you what it is, but if you say "where should you put this logic" I'd just have to give a blank stare lol.
So for example about this if statement, and trying to figure out where to put it. My thought process is as follows: "Should I put this in a function? I'm not sure. Should I put it inside each class? I have no idea. But if I put it in the "global scope area" that might present problems later, plus it isn't as orderly and organized" lol
Yeah, the global scope is for imports, constants, classes, and functions. The only if statement that goes in the global scope is if __name__ == '__main__':
By putting code inside a function, you're separating it from the other code and giving it a name, which is doubly good for readability. Plus you're making it reusable
I don't like the survival games that exist right now, so I decided I would create my own lol.
You know what would be cool, if they made a survival game where you played the dad, and you had to take care of your 2 kids while being lost in a huge wilderness.
If you die as the dad you become one of your kids and have to take care of your brother or sister.
I'm a glutton for punishment, but then again the grind has to have some kind of purpose and hold my interest. If the game is boring then the grind is completely annoying.
The beauty about grind that's often overlooked is that you need the grind to get that dopamine spike.
There can't be a spike without some sort of "tough journey" to get to said spike.
I used to play Rust on PC, and when I played these 10x modded servers where everything was 10x easier to get, dying was less important, which meant surviving a gun fight was not critical, which means a boring experience because less is on the line.
I think I figured out how to do it, that's why I wanna create a game so badly lol.
I think the key is during the grind, add slot machine like rng. Like you know those games where you go into those towns and loot everything? Looking inside of a drawer in a house, or whatever.
The little dopamine hits when you find something that you have no idea what it could be, makes the grind a lot more manageable and interesting.
I recently had a related thought about Genshin. I realized I enjoy finding treasure chests, even though most of them don't contain anything particularly noteworthy. Just the fact that it's a treasure chest is enough to trick my stupid monkey brain
Yeah that's the trick, because if you have something that's rare, it's free dopamine without player progress, which is key because as a developer you don't want the player to progress, because every step of progression takes away the opportunity to provide them with something valuable to give them more dopamine.
the trick is to reel in users who are susceptible to gambling problems, and to trick them into gambling in a scenario that is not legally recognised as gambling
It's a game that ended up being developed poorly, but some noteworthy takeaways that helped me see the picture was that the environment was a mix between wilderness and towns. Well what happens is no one really cares about the wilderness, everyone was addicted to the town runs.
And the reason they were addicted to it was because every house was searchable, you'd search everywhere in every nook and cranny for mostly useless junk lol.
But people would spend all day just looking on shelves and inside dresser drawers.
They'd find stuff like copper wire and patches of velcro or whatever, rubber bands. But it really helped me to understand what's enticing to people when they play. The town was basically one big slot machine lever lol.
So then why would I build a wilderness game, if no one cares about wilderness and ran sacking towns is where its at? Well I think I figured out something interesting, that if I can make the wilderness loot boxy in the same way these towns are, I think it will have a big impact in how interesting my game will be.
Could it also have had something to do with towns being a "safe zone"? If there are monsters lurking in the wilderness, then players might enjoy hanging out in towns just because it's a chance to relax
If you ever noticed none of the survival games have any wilderness environments that are in depth right. Most wilderness games are like "pick up this branch", or "collect this sea shell", lol.
There's these things called mechs which are the biggest enemies in the game, and they only hover around the military areas of the towns. There's basically nothing to do in the wilderness in the game. Which is kinda sad.
So Aran I should make a function to create that if statement right?
I'm thinking what I should have done was make a Resources class instead of a Tree class, since a Tree is a resource and I'm going to be making Tree, Plant, Mushroom, Rock classes, or do you think it's that big of a deal?
Oh and also stuff like certain species are restricted from being able to randomly choose certain choices, for example if Aspen was randomly selected as a species I'd like to be able to restrict the resources for that species, so that it wouldn't be able to pull "Sap" for example, since Aspens don't have useful sap.
Oh okay, I wasn't even thinking of putting it there.
@JakeSteffan highly tangential note: if you want to sell this game eventually you should know that it's practically impossible to distribute python code in a way that can't be reverse-engineered into python source code.
@JakeSteffan I would make a class attribute that contains all the resources the plant can drop. In the simplest case, just a set like {resource1, resource2}, or something fancier like a {resource1: probability1, resource2: probability2} dict