I'd love to see a good clean implementation of some game engine some day. Some good design that doesn't require 27 levels deep hierarchies or C-style enums/arrays and unique IDs.
@Jefffrey Nope. I've been there. And I've spent the night doing answers in random boost libraries (boost-graph, anyone? boost-geometry maybe, then?) You quickly learn to avoid needless complexity :/
@sehe Ok let's assume we use composition. And let's assume we have 20 entities type that all have a position component, and 10 that does not. Do you overload the function that handle the movement 20 times?
> I thought overloading was the practice of making all variables global so that they can be reused for a different purpose elsewhere in the program. Or is that garbage collection? lol
I just realized that I could just go and get a copy of Windows on DreamSpark, create a system image and use that one every computer I have without having to worry about number of licenses.
@CatPlusPlus Having a kind of composition that doesn't force me to overload 20+ functions just because the type of Cat, Giraffe, Raptor are different, but they all share the same component Position which is needed by the function.
Well, I'm not really talking about shoving random types in a vector. I mean like if the user can for example input multiple data types in a file like a string, float, or int and you're reading from a file is it really bad to store them all in a vector with a variant?
@Rapptz Depends on the relationship between the data. In a typical case, a mixture like that indicates some sort of logical record structure, where each item should be given the correct type.
@R.MartinhoFernandes Hmm. Ok. But some entities does not have a position member. So, what? Do the program crash every time an entity that does not have that specific component is encountered?
Let's keep it simple. The idea is to have a container of "entities" that are passed to different functions (the collision detection/movements/drawing/etc update functions) and each function need to know if an entity have a specific set of components. If it does then the function run on that entity, if it does not the entity is simply ignored by the function.
@CatPlusPlus The problem with polymorphism and inheritance, is that entities in a game have very different attributes that can hardly be described and reused with 2000 level deeps hierarchies.
It's not a blind dislike, trust me I've seen a lot of code from game developers because I really wanted to make a game myself but I found myself completely turned off by it.
@R.MartinhoFernandes If you use multiple inheritance it does not have to be that deep. You are right on that. But I've been here enough to know that multiple inheritance is shit (at least that's what I've heard in here).
There are a multitude of ways to represent and implement entity component systems, but here is an explanation of one way. Keep in mind there is no concrete definition of entity/component/system architectures, so this is just one implementation.
I'm going to introduce an analogy for entity/compon...
Let's say I have a game editor, and I want to be able to create some game object/entity call it whatever you want that can contain an arbitrary amount of properties. Say I drop in some mesh "component" then the game designer says hey, i want it to be physically simulated, then he adds that, and then later on he wants it to make sound, so he adds that too. How do you then update those objects in a consistent manner code wise?
Without having a programmer create a new fucking class everytime