ActionScript applying rotation of sprite to startDrag()'s rectangle bounds - actionscript-3

from my main class i call to create a sprite and add it to the stage
private function addSwatch(evt:MouseEvent):void
{
if (stage.getObjectsUnderPoint(mousePoint()).length == 0)
{
var swatchSide:Number = 100;
var newSwatch:Sprite = new Swatch(0 - swatchSide/2, 0 - swatchSide/2, swatchSide, swatchSide);
newSwatch.x = mouseX;
newSwatch.y = mouseY;
addChild(newSwatch);
}
}
i've added a swatch sprite to the stage which, when dragged, is contained within set boundaries.
this.startDrag(false, swatchBounds());
...
private function swatchBounds():Rectangle
{
var stageBounds = new Rectangle (
0 - defaultSwatchRect.x,
0 - defaultSwatchRect.y,
stage.stageWidth - defaultSwatchRect.width,
stage.stageHeight - defaultSwatchRect.height
);
return stageBounds;
}
if the square sprite is scaled, the following returned rectangle boundary works
private function swatchBounds():Rectangle
{
var stageBounds = new Rectangle (
0 - defaultSwatchRect.x * swatchObject.scaleX,
0 - defaultSwatchRect.y * swatchObject.scaleY,
stage.stageWidth - defaultSwatchRect.width * swatchObject.scaleX,
stage.stageHeight - defaultSwatchRect.height * swatchObject.scaleY
);
return stageBounds;
}
now i'm trying to include the square sprites rotation into the mix. math certainly isn't my forté, but i feel i'm on the write track. however, i just can't seem to wrap my head around it to get it right
private function swatchBounds():Rectangle
{
var stageBounds = new Rectangle (
0 - defaultSwatchRect.x * swatchObject.scaleX * Math.cos(defaultSwatchRect.x * swatchObject.rotation),
0 - defaultSwatchRect.y * swatchObject.scaleY * Math.sin(defaultSwatchRect.y * swatchObject.rotation),
stage.stageWidth - defaultSwatchRect.width * swatchObject.scaleX * Math.cos(defaultSwatchRect.width * swatchObject.rotation),
stage.stageHeight - defaultSwatchRect.height * swatchObject.scaleY * Math.sin(defaultSwatchRect.height * swatchObject.rotation)
);
return stageBounds;
}

My idea is that instead of using complicated trig, just get the bounding rect of swatchObject using swatchObject.getRect() and then create your stageBounds based on that. It should be more than good enough for your purposes.
If that is not what you want, I can help you figure out the math.
And sorry, I can't really give you a function until I figure out what defaultSwatchRect is - where its x and y is and what it's supposed to do.
Another thing you may want to keep in mind for the future: the Math functions (cos, sin) expect the angle in radians, whereas the .rotation property is in degrees, so you must convert before using.

Related

How to create smooth motion for a mouse follower along a predefined path?

I want to make a tracing game. I want my circle to follow the path as the user traces the letter (path of the letter). The user can not go back to the area which is already traced
import flash.events.Event;
import flash.geom.Point;
var i: Number;
var size: int = 80;
var down: Boolean = false;
var up: Boolean = true;
var inside: Boolean = true;
var outside: Boolean = true;
var circle: Shape = new Shape();
stage.addEventListener(Event.ENTER_FRAME, loop);
stage.addEventListener(MouseEvent.MOUSE_UP, mouseup);
char.addEventListener(MouseEvent.MOUSE_DOWN, mousedown);
function loop(e: Event) {
if (down == true) {
// Checks if mouse pointer is on path i.e 'S' alphabet
if (s.hitTestPoint(stage.mouseX, stage.mouseY, true)) {
inside = true;
outside = true;
var point: Point = maskobj.globalToLocal(new Point(stage.mouseX, stage.mouseY));
var point2: Point = new Point();
//Checks if mouse pointer is completely outside of drawn area
for (i = 0; i < 2 * Math.PI; i += (2 * Math.PI) / 10) {
point2.x = stage.mouseX + (size / 3) * Math.cos(i);
point2.y = stage.mouseY + (size / 3) * Math.sin(i);
if ((maskobj.hitTestPoint(point2.x, point2.y, true))) {
outside = false;
break;
}
}
//Checks if mouse pointer is completely inside drawn area
for (i = 0; i < 2 * Math.PI; i += (2 * Math.PI) / 10) {
point2.x = stage.mouseX + (size / 3) * Math.cos(i);
point2.y = stage.mouseY + (size / 3) * Math.sin(i);
if (!(maskobj.hitTestPoint(point2.x, point2.y, true))) {
inside = false;
break;
}
}
//Character will be moved only if mouse position not to far from current position
if (outside == false) {
if (inside == false) {
//Increases drawn area by drawing a circle shape in 'maskobj' MovieClip
circle.graphics.beginFill(0x0000ff);
circle.graphics.drawCircle(point.x, point.y, size);
circle.graphics.endFill();
maskobj.addChild(circle);
//Moves character to new position
char.x = stage.mouseX;
char.y = stage.mouseY;
}
}
}
}
}
function mouseup(e: MouseEvent): void {
up = true;
down = false;
}
function mousedown(e: MouseEvent): void {
down = true;
up = false;
}
When I trace the path,the motion is not smooth. Can someone please suggest a way to make the motion smooth OR suggest another way to achieve the same. Thank you in advance.
I've created a drawing game before that allowed the user to draw a path.
Not sure why Wicked's answer was down-voted, as the first thing you need to do is to use the highest frame rate that you can get away with. The higher the frame rate, the smoother your curve.
I see that your code draws a circle at the current position if the conditions are met. It might be better to draw a line from the last point.x/point.y to the current one instead of just a circle, so that you don't have any holes in your path.
I couldn't get around the fact that the line was jagged (a series of straight lines) as it was being drawn, but as soon as the user lifted their finger I was able to take the points along the line they had drawn and replace them with a smooth bezier Path (a series of simple bezier curves), which worked well. You could also do this on-the-fly once you have 3 points (you need 3 points to draw a curve).
Here is a good reference on how to achieve this, with theory and code samples. See further down the page for bezier paths. You'll need to convert to AS3, but it shouldn't be difficult.
Another tip is to do as little calculation as possible within the ENTER_FRAME. You could pre-calculate the two values used by your loops (2 * Math.PI) and ((2 * Math.PI) / 10) as these are constants. You could also calculate (size/3) once at the top of the function, and especially pre-calculate the 10 values for Math.sin(i) and Math.cos(i) and store them in an Array (basically a LUT - Look Up Table) as these are the heaviest math ops you're doing.
My final tip is that your code doesn't check if the point being drawn is very close to the last point that was drawn. I would recommend you do this, and only draw a point after the mouse has moved a minimum distance (e.g. 2 pixels). Otherwise you could get the mouse sitting still in one spot and your code is drawing circle upon circle on top of itself needlessly.
Try increasing the FPS in your document to atleast double what you currently have
Modify>Document...>Frame Rate

Actionscript 3: Rotate multiple shapes around internal point

I'm having trouble with AS3 which I have to use for a little research project of mine.
The AS3 project would create a number of randomly placed squares which all would rotate around its center point.
I managed to figure out how to rotate it internally using this handy walkthrough.
However I am having trouble applying this method to all squares which were created in a for loop with randomly selected stage points. Only the first created will rotate
Here is the code in question:-
for(var i=0; i<10; i++)
{
var square:Shape = new Shape();
this.addChild(square);
var posX = Math.floor(Math.random() * stage.stageWidth) + 50;
var posY = Math.floor(Math.random() * stage.stageHeight) + 50;
square.x=posX;
square.y=posY;
var curSquareAng:Number=0;
var squareRotCenter:Point=new Point(0,0);
drawShapes();
var squareMat:Matrix=square.transform.matrix.clone();
}
this.addEventListener(Event.ENTER_FRAME, onEnter);
function onEnter(e:Event):void {
curSquareAng = (curSquareAng+2)%360;
rotateSquare(curSquareAng);
}
function rotateSquare(deg:Number):void {
var mat:Matrix= squareMat.clone();
MatrixTransformer.rotateAroundInternalPoint(mat,squareRotCenter.x, squareRotCenter.y, deg);
square.transform.matrix = mat;
}
I realize I likely have to create an array for each of the squares initial center points and loop through them. However I am completely lost on how to do so. As you can likely tell I am unfamiliar with AS3 and would much appreciate any help you can give this beginner programmer. :P
You need to create your own class based on a shape, then you stuff it full of properties that represent rotation center point, current angle and whatever else you'd want your squares to contain, then give the class update method which will do what you wrote in onEnter function for itself only. Then you will have easier control over what your squares are able to do. This technique is called "encapsulation".
On a side note, if you're wanting your square to rotate around internal point of (0,0), you can set their rotation property to achieve the desired effect. For other points, the walkthrough or its equivalent should be used.
public class Square extends Shape {
public var rotationCenter:Point=new Point();
private var currentAngle:Number=0;
public var rotationSpeed:Number=2; // degrees per frame
private var baseMatrix:Matrix;
public function Square() {
// draw the shape on "this.graphics"
this.graphics.beginFill(0xffff00,1);
this.graphics.moveTo(-20,-20);
this.graphics.lineTo(20,-20);
this.graphics.lineTo(20,20);
this.graphics.lineTo(20,-20);
this.graphics.lineTo(-20,-20);
this.graphics.endFill();
// if not set in declaration, set internal vars
baseMatrix=this.transform.matrix; // likely identity matrix, but let's initialize anyway
}
public function storeMatrix():void {
// you are positioning a square after you create it, so probably you want its new location to be transformed
// that one's matrix will no longer be an identity, so go capture
baseMatrix=this.transform.matrix;
}
public function update():void {
// should be called once per frame
currentAngle=(currentAngle+rotationSpeed)%360;
var mat:Matrix= baseMatrix.clone();
MatrixTransformer.rotateAroundInternalPoint(mat,rotationCenter.x, rotationCenter.y, currentAngle);
this.transform.matrix = mat;
}
}
Now, you will have to maintain an array of squares to make them rotate separately:
var squares:Array=[];
for (var i:int=0;i<10;i++) {
var square:Square=new Square();
var posX = Math.floor(Math.random() * stage.stageWidth) + 50;
var posY = Math.floor(Math.random() * stage.stageHeight) + 50;
square.x=posX;
square.y=posY;
// after you position, give it a rotation point
square.rotationCenter.x=Math.random()*40-20;
square.rotationCenter.y=Math.random()*40-20; // -20 to 20, should do for this example
// now fix the position so your square will know that it should rotate
// its *current* transform matrix
square.storeMatrix();
// even if it's actually unchanged by changing X or Y
// also, should you desire to scale some square, you should do that prior to calling this
// now add the square to an array
squares.push(square);
}
addEventListener(Event.ENTER_FRAME,onEnter);
function onEnter(e:Event):void {
for (var i:int=0;i<squares.length;i++) squares[i].update();
// simple, isn't it? Each square will know what to do.
}
Nevermind. Thank you Vesper for putting me on the right track I've managed to solve my problem thanks to your input (not necessarily through your way but your input helped me get to the destination per say).
I think I was making it a little too complicated going though the matrix route and instead used a shape array to loop through the squares and add rotation. The solution I came to is a little simple but gets the job done.
public var rotationSpeed:Number=2; // degrees per frame
public var square:Array = new Array( );
public function Square() {
for (var i:int=0;i<10;i++) {
square[i] = new Shape();
var posX = Math.floor(Math.random() * stage.stageWidth) + 50;
var posY = Math.floor(Math.random() * stage.stageHeight) + 50;
square[i].graphics.lineStyle();
var rgb = Math.random() * 0xFFFFFF;
square[i].graphics.beginFill(rgb);
// -50 determines where the spin will center from.
square[i].graphics.drawRect(-50,-50,100,100);
square[i].graphics.endFill();
square[i].x = posX;
square[i].y = posY;
addChild(square[i]);
}
addEventListener(Event.ENTER_FRAME,onEnter);
}
private function onEnter(e:Event):void {
for (var i:int=0; i < square.length; i++) {
getChildAt(i).rotation += rotationSpeed;
}
}

How to rotate a sprite in actionscript on its center

Okay, so ive read lots of stuff on this, and its gotten repetitive, but none of it fixes my problem or its too hard for me to understand. I am trying to get a sprite of a man, looking at him from the top down, to stare at the mouse wherever it goes in the page. However, instead of rotating where his head is, ath the center of the symbol, he rotates at the top left corner of his sprite. Any help?
stage.addEventListener("mouseMove", eyesFollow);
function eyesFollow(e:MouseEvent):void {
var a = mouseY - man_walking.y;
var b = mouseX - man_walking.x;
var radians = Math.atan2(a,b);
var degrees = ((180/Math.PI)*radians)+90;
man_walking.rotation = (degrees);
}
note: the one post on this that most fits mine has a solution that is just a broken link, so i cant access it.
Assuming the (x, y) position of a sprite is in the upper-left corner, the general process in high-level Lua-ish psuedo-code (sorry, I'm not quite fluent in Actionscript) would be such as:
function rotate()
-- ...find how much you want to rotate...
-- Translate the middle point to (0, 0)
man.translate(-(man.x + man.width/2), -(man.y + man.height/2))
-- Rotate it there.
man.rotate(someTranslation)
-- Lastly, move it back to where it was
man.translate((man.x + man.width/2), (man.y + man.height/2))
end
If your library uses a different method of calculating position and origin, you'll need to adjust the ammount you'll need to translate, but the point stands none the less: first translate the image so that it's middle is at (0,0), rotate it, and then move it back.
I hope this helps! :)
Within Flash Pro, you could simply position the symbol so that the 0,0 coordinate is the point you wish to rotate:
Yahoo Astra has a Dynamic Registration class for things like rotating around a point.
This could be implemented as the following, rotating around 100,100:
DynamicRegistration.rotate(man_walking, new Point(100, 100), degrees);
Yahoo Astra DynamicRegistration class:
/*
Copyright (c) 2008 Yahoo! Inc. All rights reserved.
The copyrights embodied in the content of this file are licensed under the BSD (revised) open source license
*/
package com.yahoo.astra.utils
{
import flash.geom.Point;
import flash.display.DisplayObject;
/**
* Allows you to manipulate display objects based on a registration point other
* than the standard (0,0).
*
* #author Josh Tynjala
*/
public class DynamicRegistration
{
/**
* Moves a <code>DisplayObject</code> to a new position (x,y) based on a registration point. The
* true position of the object will be (x - registration.x, y - registration.y).
*
* #param target the DisplayObject to move
* #param registration the registration point of the DisplayObject
* #param x the new x position, in pixels
* #param y the new y position, in pixels
*/
public static function move(target:DisplayObject, registration:Point, x:Number = 0, y:Number = 0):void
{
//generate the location of the registration point in the parent
registration = target.localToGlobal(registration);
registration = target.parent.globalToLocal(registration);
//move the target and offset by the registration point
target.x += x - registration.x;
target.y += y - registration.y;
}
/**
* Rotates a <code>DisplayObject</code> based on a registration point.
*
* #param target the DisplayObject to move
* #param registration the registration point of the DisplayObject
* #param rotation the new rotation angle
*/
public static function rotate(target:DisplayObject, registration:Point, degrees:Number = 0):void
{
changePropertyOnRegistrationPoint(target, registration, "rotation", degrees);
}
/**
* Scales a <code>DisplayObject</code> based on a registration point.
*
* #param target the DisplayObject to move
* #param registration the registration point of the DisplayObject
* #param scaleX the new x scaling factor
* #param scaleY the new y scaling factor
*/
public static function scale(target:DisplayObject, registration:Point, scaleX:Number = 0, scaleY:Number = 0):void
{
changePropertyOnRegistrationPoint(target, registration, "scaleX", scaleX);
changePropertyOnRegistrationPoint(target, registration, "scaleY", scaleY);
}
/**
* #private
* Alters an arbitary property based on the registration point.
*
* #param target the DisplayObject to move
* #param registration the registration point of the DisplayObject
* #param propertyName the property to change
* #param value the new value of the property to change
*/
private static function changePropertyOnRegistrationPoint(target:DisplayObject, registration:Point, propertyName:String, value:Number):void
{
//generate the location of the registration point in the parent
var a:Point = registration.clone();
a = target.localToGlobal(a);
a = target.parent.globalToLocal(a);
target[propertyName] = value;
//after the property change, regenerate the location of the registration
//point in the parent
var b:Point = registration.clone();
b = target.localToGlobal(b);
b = target.parent.globalToLocal(b);
//move the target based on the difference to make it appear the change
//happened based on the registration point
target.x -= b.x - a.x;
target.y -= b.y - a.y;
}
}
}
try this?
stage.addEventListener("mouseMove", eyesFollow);
var cw:Number = man_walking.width/2,
ch:Number = man_walking.height/2;
function eyesFollow(e:MouseEvent):void {
var a = mouseY - man_walking.y;
var b = mouseX - man_walking.x;
var radians = Math.atan2(a,b);
var degrees = ((180/Math.PI)*radians)+90;
var A:Point=man_walking.parent.globalToLocal(man_walking.localToGlobal(new Point(cw,ch)));
man_walking.rotation = (degrees);
var B:Point=man_walking.parent.globalToLocal(man_walking.localToGlobal(new Point(cw,ch)));
man_walking.y+=A.y - B.y;
man_walking.x+=A.x - B.x;
}

How to rotate a rectangle around centroid in flex 3

I am using matrix.rotate method to rotate the rectangle (box in my case).
My rotate event looks like below
public function transformObject(transformEvent:TransformEvent):void{
var numChildrn:int = _markedObjectLayer.numChildren;
var tempMatrix: Matrix = null;
var tempx:Number;
var tempy:Number;
var tempHeight:Number;
var tempWidth:Number;
for(var i:int = 0; i < numChildrn; i++){
var chld:MarkedObject = ObjectLayer.getChildAt(i)
if (chld.selected){
var height:int = (BoxObject) chld.height;
var width:int = (BoxObject) chld.width;
tempMatrix = chld.transform.matrix;
tempHeight=height;
tempWidth=width;
tempMatrix = MatrixTransformer.transform(tempMatrix,transformEvent.angle);
tempMatrix.tx=tempx;
tempMatrix.ty=tempy
chld.transform.matrix = tempMatrix;
}
}
invalidateDisplayList();
}
}
The Matrix.transform method calls matrix.rotate method
public static function transform(sourceMatrix:Matrix,
rotation:Number=0 ):Matrix
{
sourceMatrix = MatrixTransformer.rotate(sourceMatrix, rotation, "degrees");
return sourceMatrix;
}
/**
* Rotates a matrix and returns the result. The unit parameter lets the user specify "degrees",
* "gradients", or "radians".
*/
public static function rotate(sourceMatrix:Matrix, angle:Number, unit:String = "radians"):Matrix {
if (unit == "degrees")
{
angle = Math.PI * 2 *( angle / 360);
}
sourceMatrix. rotate(angle)
return sourceMatrix;
}
The issue is that x and y are left corener of the box and hence it is rotating around left corner. However, if I try to give temp.x and temp.y as centroid value it does not rotate around centroid?
Can any one suggest what am I doing wrong here?
Thanks
Akshay
If you really want or have to use matrices directly, you can do this more conveniently using a built-in flash class: fl.motion.MatrixTransformer:
MatrixTransformer.rotateAroundInternalPoint(matrix, centroidX, centroidY, angleInDegrees);
See the Adobe docs on MatrixTransformer for more information.
However, if you don't need to use the transformation matrix, the simpler solution would be to:
have your objects drawn in such a way that (0, 0) is their centroid
use the simple rotation property from DisplayObject which achieves the same goal in a much simpler manner
Figured it out. It appears that I was not translating them to appropriate coordinate positions before and after rotation
//Step 1 Fix the co-ordinates of rectangle . I added them to an event so that they remain static
if (TransformEvent.X == 0 && TransformEvent.Y == 0)
{
TransformEvent.X = chld.x;
TransformEvent.Y = chld.y;
}
//next get the centroid of rectangle
tempx = TransformEvent.X + width/2;
tempy= TransformEvent.Y +height/2;
// Step 3: translate before rotation
tempMatrix.translate(-1*tempx,-1*tempy);
//Rotate the rectangle
tempMatrix = MatrixTransformer.transform(tempMatrix,transformEvent.angle);
//translate to centroid after rotation
tempMatrix.translate(tempx,tempy);
//assign back the matrix to the rectangle
chld.transform.matrix = tempMatrix;
Thanks for all your help. Also the this site helped me with translation bit
http://www.foxarc.com/blog/article/66.htm

Finding Something lighter than Sprites!

I am making a Sim City like game. There are lots of tiles. When I first started. I was just using a tilesheet. I was copying the necessary pieaces from the tilesheet. on to a blank bitMapData. I then took the bitMapData and put it into a bitMap which I then put into a DisplayObject. It worked great!
tileSheet:BitMapData <----- data is already in
loop { loop through and tiled
bg:bitMapData= new bitMapData();
bg.copyPixel(tileSheet,rect,point);
}
canvas.BitMap(bg);
addChild(canvas);
Only problem was I needed to make my tiles interactive. I needed to highlight them and change colors and stuff. So I used the Sprite object. It works great but I can only have so many on the stage at once. or else it moves slow when I scroll. I need something Lighter then a sprite, but yet I can still turn into a object to make interactive. Anyone have any ideas ???
If you have a lot of tiles, that will impact performance because Flash needs to update the transformations of a lot of display objects (which internally means a lot of matrix calculations, and subsequent redraws of big areas of the screen.)
There is another way to achieve interactivity, if you find that you must use a single bitmap data for performance. Keep an "abstract" (i.e. not graphical) data model in memory, that stores your game state. Make sure that you are able to read from your store where a certain element is positioned in the game world. Then you can use a flat bitmap data to render the game world, because the individual positions are stored elsewhere.
When the user clicks the DisplayObject containing the bitmap data (a Sprite in which the bitmap is drawn using a bitmap fill, or that wraps a Bitmap), look in your model which of your game elements was hit by that click.
// myTileSprite is a Sprite with a bitmap fill
myTileSprite.addEventListener(MouseEvent.CLICK, handleWorldClick);
function handleWorldClick(ev : MouseEvent) : void
{
var i : int;
// Loop through all game element data models
for (i=0; i<myGameElements.length; i++) {
// Test the mouse position against the element model
if (myGameElements[i].hitTest(myTileSprite.mouseX, myTileSprite.mouseY)) {
trace('this was the element that was clicked: '+myGameElements[i].toString());
}
}
}
Here, whenever the player clicks the world graphics, the loop tries to find that element which was directly under the mouse position. You will need to implement a hitTest() method on all your game element data models, of course. Such a method simply checks the supplied world space position against the tile's area:
// GameElement.hitTest():
/**
* Tests a world position against the position and area of this game
* element tile. Returns a boolean indicating whether this tile was hit.
*/
public function hitTest(mouseX : Number, mouseY : Number) : void
{
var rect : Rectangle = new Rectangle(this.worldX, this.worldY, this.width, this.height);
if (mouseX > rect.left && mouseX < rect.right
&& mouseY > rect.top && mouseY < rect.top) {
return true;
}
else return false;
}
The GameElement class is not an display object, but has worldX and worldY properties indicating where it is located in the world. It's width and height properties define it's dimensions.
The trick from hereon is to make sure that the rendered bitmap and your model storage is synchronized, so that a tile's position on the bitmap really corresponds to it's worldX/worldY properties in the data model.
I am one step ahead of you. And that is a great idea. Its alot easier to keep a data representation of the world when the tiles are squared. I therefore can take my mouseX/tileWidth, and thats hw many columns I moved from left to right. same with the Y axis.
Not only that but coordinates start at top left corner.
But issue I have is that my tiles are Isometric. So instead of the X axis start off like...
012345678
0
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
My tiles are aligned like...
00
1 1
2 2
3 3
4 4
5 6
its a little sloppy. but the right side represents the y axis and the left represents the x axis. and the center origin is in the center of the screen. not on the top left. I am trying to figure out how to measure where my mouse is from the center and out on both sides. This sounds extremely difficult. I am not sure if its possible. The game is suppose to be like a sim city like game. The first sim city was squares not isometric. I dont think they went isometric until they started using 3d. I wonder if its possible to create a illusion of isometric on a square tile.
Ive been reading this great book on isometrics. They show to calculate tiles in 3d space. and even calculate your mouse in 3d space as well. here is the code. Its alot, but I hope someone else understands it more then I. The book was written by jobe makar on building multiplayer worlds. I wanted to share it because the code it is pretty simple as far as amount of code put into it. only 2 classes needed. I am not that good with trigonometry. so I cant really interpret how the math is getting the results. hopefully someone can explain that for me :D.
Y coordinates are not given because the width is = to height. The coordinates method is just a custom made Point class which holds x, y and z.
package com.gamebook.grid {
import com.gamebook.utils.geom.Coordinate;
import com.gamebook.utils.Isometric;
import flash.display.MovieClip;
import flash.events.MouseEvent;
/**
* ...
* #author Jobe Makar - jobe#electrotank.com
*/
public class Map extends MovieClip{
private var _grid:Array;
private var _iso:Isometric;
private var _tileWidthOnScreen:int;
private var _tileHeightOnScreen:int;
private var _tileWidth:Number;
private var _tileHeight:Number;
private var _cols:int;
private var _rows:int;
private var _lastTile:Tile;
public function Map() {
initialize();
}
private function initialize():void{
_iso = new Isometric();
//when mapped to the screen the tile makes a diamond of these dimensions
_tileWidthOnScreen = 64;
_tileHeightOnScreen = 32;
//figure out the width of the tile in 3D space
_tileWidth = _iso.mapToIsoWorld(64, 0).x;
//the tile is a square in 3D space so the height matches the width
_tileHeight = _tileWidth;
buildGrid();
addEventListener(MouseEvent.MOUSE_MOVE, mouseMoved);
}
private function mouseMoved(e:MouseEvent):void {
if (_lastTile != null) {
_lastTile.alpha = 1;
_lastTile = null;
}
var coord:Coordinate = _iso.mapToIsoWorld(mouseX, mouseY);
var col:int = Math.floor(coord.x / _tileWidth);
var row:int = Math.floor(Math.abs(coord.z / _tileHeight));
if (col < _cols && row < _rows) {
var tile:Tile = getTile(col, row);
tile.alpha = .5;
_lastTile = tile;
}
}
private function buildGrid():void{
_grid = [];
_cols = 10;
_rows = 10;
for (var i:int = 0; i < _cols;++i) {
_grid[i] = [];
for (var j:int = 0; j < _rows;++j) {
var t:Tile = new Tile();
var tx:Number = i * _tileWidth;
var tz:Number = -j * _tileHeight;
var coord:Coordinate = _iso.mapToScreen(tx, 0, tz);
t.x = coord.x;
t.y = coord.y;
_grid[i][j] = t;
addChild(t);
}
}
}
private function getTile(col:int, row:int):Tile {
return _grid[col][row];
}
}
}
Then we have the isometric class that calculates 3d space.
package com.gamebook.utils {
import com.gamebook.utils.geom.Coordinate;
/**
* #author Jobe Makar - jobe#electrotank.com
*/
public class Isometric {
//trigonometric values stored for later use
private var _sinTheta:Number;
private var _cosTheta:Number;
private var _sinAlpha:Number;
private var _cosAlpha:Number;
/**
* Isometric class contrustor.
* #param declination value. Defaults to the most common value, which is 30.
*/
public function Isometric() {
var theta:Number = 30;//even though the tiles are already isometric, you still have to put the degrees the tiles will be turned.
var alpha:Number = 45;//45 degrees on y axis, 30 dgrees on x axis
theta *= Math.PI/180; // then you translate to radians
alpha *= Math.PI/180;
_sinTheta = Math.sin(theta);
_cosTheta = Math.cos(theta);
_sinAlpha = Math.sin(alpha);
_cosAlpha = Math.cos(alpha);
}
/**
* Maps 3D coordinates to the 2D screen
* #param x coordinate
* #param y coordinate
* #param z coordinate
* #return Coordinate instance containig screen x and screen y
*/
public function mapToScreen(xpp:Number, ypp:Number, zpp:Number):Coordinate {
var yp:Number = ypp;
var xp:Number = xpp*_cosAlpha+zpp*_sinAlpha;
var zp:Number = zpp*_cosAlpha-xpp*_sinAlpha;
var x:Number = xp;
var y:Number = yp*_cosTheta-zp*_sinTheta;
return new Coordinate(x, y, 0);
}
/**
* Maps 2D screen coordinates into 3D coordinates. It is assumed that the target 3D y coordinate is 0.
* #param screen x coordinate
* #param screen y coordinate
* #return Coordinate instance containig 3D x, y, and z
*/
public function mapToIsoWorld(screenX:Number, screenY:Number):Coordinate {
var z:Number = (screenX/_cosAlpha-screenY/(_sinAlpha*_sinTheta))*(1/(_cosAlpha/_sinAlpha+_sinAlpha/_cosAlpha));
var x:Number = (1/_cosAlpha)*(screenX-z*_sinAlpha);
return new Coordinate(x, 0, z);
}
}
}