Possible to make CSS3 dynamic for a number of classes? - html

First off, im sorry if the following question is way to vague and unprecise, but this was my best explanation:
I've just started going trough HTML5 & CSS3. I'm drawing a line from point x1y1 to x2y2 with css3.
My question is, is there some way to dynamically call css3 code?
For example, say i have 10 names in a database, i want to place them inside the HTML doc and draw a line to each name from the center. Like a sun (the center) and the sunbeams (with the names at the end).
So for lets say name1 from the center of the "sun" points out 10degrees, the next beam could be 15 and the next after that 20 and so on..
2 days later the database might contain 20 names for which i want 20 sunbeams pointing out but without having to add 10 more .classnames stuff in my CSS3 doc
Is this even possible?
Thanks! :)
EDIT: Typo

You can have another common class name for all beams say "beam_class" and define their properties in it, so you don't have to worry about the creating new classes for each beam.

Related

Actionscript 3 Dynamic line drawing with changing alpha

I have been creating a training tool for a customer in Flash, using Actionscript 3. In it i have to create one continuous line generated over time, whose alpha is controlled by a static object and its distance from a continuous moving object. The closer the two are, the stronger the line, the further the weaker. This alpha only effects the the line at the current time, leaving the historical alpha as it was when the the line was produced. The way I have currently made it is by generating lots of small lines, which when joined together make one big line. Thus each small line has a different alpha. The overall effect is to create fade ins and outs based on the distance between the two objects with historical alpha still showing. Does anyone out there have a better way of achieving this effect? Hopefully, I have not just confused everybody.

Understanding AS3 parent/child relationships

I've looked around the site, but as a beginner, the AS3 lingo is a bit beyond me. I know that parent/child is used to pass information, commands, and variables between scenes and movie clips embedded in each other, but I don't quite understand HOW or WHY it works.
When I say beginner, I mean it. This is my first flash project. In case it helps, this is what I'm trying to do:
I'm making a type effectiveness calculator for Pokemon. I've successfully made 3 movie clip "dials" that will cycle through the different Pokemon Types when buttons on them are pressed. 18 Types, 18 frames per "dial". 19 frames on the third "dial", for a blank type.
I've also made a 4th movie clip that will display the effectiveness, from 0.25x up to 4x.
So, basically, I need to...
1) Pull either a numerical variable (or frame number) up from each of the "dials"
2) Calculate the effectiveness based on those numbers in Scene 1 (or a new, all-inclusive movie clip if that's easier)
3) Then send the result (or desired frame number) down to the 4th movie clip to display the effectiveness.
Aaaaaaaand I have zero clue how to do that. I'd appreciate an explanation as opposed to just telling me how. I WANT to understand.
Thanks in advance, everyone!
You are wanting to understand Object Oriented Programming. Specifically the concept of "containers". Google "AS3 OOP containers tutorial" and you'll find what you need.

Drawing shapes versus rendering images?

I am using Pygame 1.9.2a with Python 2.7 for designing an experiment and have been so far using Pygame only on a need basis and am not familiar with all Pygame classes or concepts (Sprites, for instance, I have no idea about).
I am required to draw many (45 - 50 at one time) shapes on the screen at different locations to create a crowded display. The shapes vary from displaced Ts , displaced Ls to line intersections. [ Like _| or † or ‡ etc.]! I'm sorry that I am not able to post an image of this because I apparently do not have a reputation of 10, which is necessary to post images.
I also need these shapes in 8 different orientations. I was initially contemplating generating point lists and using these to draw lines. But, for a single shape, I will need four points and I need 50 of these shapes. Again, I'm not sure how to rotate these once drawn. Can I use the Pygame Transform or something? I think they can be used, say on Rects. Or will I have to generate points for the different orientations too, so that when drawn, they come out looking rotated, that is, in the desired orientation?
The alternative I was thinking of was to generate images for the shapes in GIMP or some software like that. But, for any screen, I will have to load around 50 images. Will I have to use Pygame Image and make 50 calls for something like this? Or is there an easier way to handle multiple images?
Also, which method would be a bigger hit to performance? Since, it is an experiment, I am worried about timing precision too. I don't know if there is a different way to generate shapes in Pygame. Please help me decide which of these two (or a different method) is better to use for my purposes.
Thank you!
It is easer to use pygame.draw.rect() or pygame.draw.polygon() (because you don't need to know how to use GIMP or InkScape :) ) but you have to draw it on another pygame.Surface() (to get bitmap) and than you can rotate it, add alpha (to make transparet) and than you can put it on screen.
You can create function to generate images (using Surface()) with all shapes in different orientations at program start. If you will need better looking images you can change function to load images created in GIMP.
Try every method on your own - this is the best method to check which one is good for you.
By the way: you can save generated images pygame.image.save() and then load it. You can have all elements on one image and use part of image Surface.get_clip()

html5 svg vs canvas for granite like background

i want to make to make a granite like background like http://www.tivli.com/ with a gradient at the center. i have found how to do gradient with both in the w3c tutorials, but are there any tutorials on how to make granite backgrounds in html5 canvas or svg? Thanks.
The site you referenced actually uses a simple 'noize.png' and then uses css3 radial gradients to buildup that background. I know you already knew that, I'm mentioning this for future readers.
Given this fact, I'll assume in the rest of my answer you want to learn, not a copy-pasta solution.
I've given up on svg looong time ago. But in canvas it's easy and fun... (especially now flash is FINALLY officially dead. Hurray).
So as others have already suggested in the comments to your question, why not use a seamless noise image? (you know where to find one :P).
You could still embed this image as 'DATA' in the html(, HINT: even or even feed image-data straight into canvas that will render it as your 'noise.php').
But then.. you are right: what if you wanted to change the noize-size?
And you want to know how to make granite/noise anyway..
And is mathematically/programmatically describing this noise lower in character-count (file-size) than supplying a ready-made image(-fragment)?
Start UPDATE 2 part 1:
Actually, after some good night sleep I realized/remembered that visual noise is one of the BEST way's to determine randomness. Humans are notoriously good at finding visual patterns, even professionals use this (and as such this is also heavily used in cryptography where one would need -for instance- a useful one time pad).
Also see 'commander' Crockford's YUI-lecture 'Principles of Security' from 19m07s to 22m37s.
Now why is this important? Well ECMA-script (aka javascript) defines a loose Math.random() function:
"returns a number value with positive sign, greater than or equal to 0 but less than 1, chosen randomly or pseudo randomly with
approximately uniform distribution over that range, using an
implementation-dependent algorithm or strategy"
Re-read the italic/bold part and welcome yourself to reality: each and every browser (brand/version) has it's own random-routine!!
"But what does it mean?" Well.. simply put.. Depending on browser(version)'s ES-Script implementation (cough cough IE): Noise based on Math.random() will/might render visible patterns in your noise (independently of possible tile-size)!!
So for the rest of this answer we are going to assume either an ideal world where browsers spit-out proper random numbers, or that you took control and use a stronger 'predictable' random-solution as is discussed on this wonderful article that google's bubble accidentally leaked :)
End Update 2 part 1
So let's start with the radial gradient-part. You already figured that one out.
Ok, then follows the noise-function in canvas (you could you could do this before the radial gradient, but this order gives a nicer grain and diffuses color banding the gradient produces -on a average lcd you would see them anyway since they're not true color-) : this is done by generating random pixels.
There would be a lot of different algorithms to use, I've used a straight-forward one that you can understand without math..
Note that generating noise for a modern day full-screen resolution is easily larger than 1 mega-pixel in resolution, so this would be slow! To overcome this we need to generate and RE-USE a small seamless tile. We use this as a pattern-fill in our full-size image that already has the radial gradient.
I also assume you want the radial gradient liquidly placed in the middle of the view-port, so if you want to go the fixed way (as opposed to the noize.png/css3 way you referenced), you'll also need an extra eventhandler 'onResize()' to have canvas render a new background.
Why? Well if you where to let the browser scale this background-image (created upon page-load) automatically, then the nice grain-size of your noise would change to, EVEN leading to visible PATTERNS that you would not want..
(Since I desperately want to go to sleep now..): The rest is thoroughly explained in the source-code of the function I wrote for you..
Here is the link to the fully documented code I wrote for you: jsfiddle.net/sU74C/ and here you can see it in full-screen preview.   UPDATE 1: function genNoise 80% FASTER!!
Use it if you like (retaining the link to this answer) or learn from it and do your own thing.
PLEASE DON'T FORGET to accept AN answer to this question (hopefully mine :))
Hope this helps!
UPDATE 2 part 2:
There are more way's to interact with canvas. One could also calculate/(re-)use/generate/save/import pixel-maps/array's (as png or base64 or jpg or ...) for instance, see this excellent article on faster 8bit and even faster 32bit (if the browser supports 'Uint8ClampedArray' as the type of the data property of the ImageData object) pixel-array's, including a proper solution to account for the endianness of the processor!!
So after giving this some considerable thought, it turns out that to do this 'right' is actually a challenge and should be divided in 2 parts:
Where do I get my noise-data (Math.random() or custom random or pre-defined external (image, json-string, random.com) or embedded (packed?) data)?
What is the fastest way to build/store/re-use this noise on full-screen size/canvas.
Given the statements in part 1 of this update and that we don't want patterns in our visible noise, I'm starting to lean to using some pre-rendered 'random' noise data (meant to tile seamlessly) that is embedded in the noise-generator: otherwise there is the overhead of running your own none-engine-optimized random function (times..a lot..).
Also I think one might get away with just black and white and transparency afterwards.. This might considerably speed-up things up AND reduce embedded pixel-data.
Think about it: black or white equals 0 or 1..
In base 64 one character can represent 6 bits. So a 30x30px image has 900 px divided by 6 bits = 150 characters (sweet-spot increments by 6px, so next is 36px*36px is 216 characters).

Representing a Monopoly board in flash?

I'm brand new to Flash (and game programming, really), but want to learn a bit of it. My overall learning project is to create a Monopoly clone in Flash. Unfortunately, I'm struggling to get over even my first hurdle - how to create the board graphically, and how then to deal with it in the code. So far, my thoughts are to break the board down into the different sizes of tiles (the normal property ones, the corner 4 and a large one for the middle section), then somehow place these all in the correct position relative to each other and keep that positioning correct as the pieces (and thus the camera view) move about the board. (And, hopefully some day have a zooming ability too...)
Is this a good approach, or is there a better one? Does anyone know where I can find a tutorial specifically on creating board games in Flash (any sort really, wouldn't have to be Monopoly but just a game that has a board which tokens move across - and preferably which has to pan as well).
Also, as an aside, is there any way to have a dynamically coloured rectangle in a flash MovieClip (like you can have dynamic textboxs)? I ask because it would be useful if there was, as I could generate every property tile with just one MovieClip which took a name, a value and a colour...
everything you describe here you can do pretty easily once you get the hang of component sprites. personally i would make a single sprite that will then hold all of the "tiles" in the game, this would allow you to "zoom" the board while keeping all the pieces relative:
if you create this parent to have an addTile() and getTile(index:int):Sprite method then you can easily push the tiles and retrieve them from an array, so that Go is at index 0, old kent road is at 1 etc. that way you can use a single integer value to determine the position of the player piece as you can then use getTile(int).x etc.
the position of the tiles themselves can be worked out relative to the others. if you have a tile that is 20px wide and 40px high then you can position the tile as x = index * 20 for the first row, after the initial 11, you need to rotate them all and then use the y index instead (rotation = 90; x = 11*20; y = (index-11)*20) this will depend exactly on your origin point of your Sprite.
to draw coloured boxes you use the graphics of the Sprite, there are plenty of tuts on API drawing out there, but here is a basic box of 10x10px:
var drawing:Sprite = new Sprite();
drawing.graphics.beginFill(0x0000FF);
drawing.graphics.drawRect(0, 0, 10, 10);
drawing.graphics.endFill();
Another approach to your question could be to learn about Object Oriented Programming. That may not solve your representing the board graphically straight away, but it would definitely help you structure your game.
With OOP, you could define a "Property" Class with a set of properties such as streetName , color , price etc... I haven't played Monopoly in a while but you can get the general idea, i.e. to create a base object and make it specific by setting the object's properties. Your question about the colored rectangle can actually apply to other properties, a great way to avoid unnecessary repetition.
Broadly speaking OOP tends to emulate real life situations, so you could actually look at your Monopoly game, break it into its various parts, find common properties etc... I won't start a lesson here :) I'd be pretty bad at it, but there's plenty of resources out there . Look for OOP, Design Patterns & Actionscript3.
After a little research, you may find that your question about how to handle graphics may not be such a problem after all.
Your questions are way too general. I'm sure you don't want us to walk you through your whole project right?
Now to gain some experience, I suggest to you simply work through a few flash gaming tutorials. There are a LOT of those, I googled for 2-3 seconds and found this:
http://pelfusion.com/tutorials/35-flash-game-development-tutorials-fla-files/
I'm sure you feel disappointed by this answer, but this is the first step in solving your own problems. The internet has more than enough general game tutorials already. If you have specific problems, we might be of better help to you.
I assume with dynamically colored rectangles, you mean simply changing the color during runtime. Well you simply give the rectangle a name, and change the color property of it in code. Like this: rectangle.Color = Something.
You might want to start out with a simpler project just to learn some of the basics, maybe a little game where the player has to move a rectangle from one side of the screen to the other using the arrow keys or mouse, upon which a score is incremented or something. This will help teach you how the coordinate system works, among other things.
To draw stuff using code, you can create a new Sprite or MovieClip object and use its graphics property to draw primitive shapes (rectangles, etc.) to it at runtime.