NAME

SDLx::Sprite::Animated - create animated SDL sprites easily!

SYNOPSIS

use SDLx::Sprite::Animated;

# simplest possible form, where 'hero.png' is an image containing
# fixed-length sprites in sequence. It doesn't matter if they are
# placed vertically or horizontally, as long as the the widest
# side is a multiple of the (narrowest) other. The widget will
# automatically divide it in the proper frames, provided there is
# no slack space between each frame.

my $animation = SDLx::Sprite::Animated->new->load('hero.png');

# that's it! Defaults are sane enough to DWIM in simple cases,
# so you just have to call draw() on the right place. If you
# need to setup your animation or have more control over it,
# feel free to use the attributes and methods below.

# these are the most useful methods to use in your game loop
# (or wherever you want to manipulate the animation):
$animation->next;
$animation->previous;
$animation->reset;

$animation->current_frame;   # current frame number
$animation->current_loop;    # current loop number

# you can control positioning just like a regular SDLx::Sprite:
$animation->rect
$animation->x;
$animation->y;

# just like a regular Sprite, we fetch our source rect from ->clip,
# updating it on each call to ->next (or ->previous, or ->reset).
# If source rects for your animation are further appart (or less)
# than the rect's width and height, you can adjust the animation
# x/y offsets:
$animation->step_x(15);
$animation->step_y(30);

$animation->draw($screen); # remember to do this! :)

# we can also call ->next() automatically after each draw():
$animation->start;
$animation->stop;

# default is to go to the next frame at each draw(). If this is
# too fast for you, change the attribute below:
$animation->ticks_per_frame(10);

# select type of animation loop when it reaches the last frame:
$animation->type('circular'); # restarts loop at the beginning
$animation->type('reverse');  # goes backwards

$animation->max_loops(3); 0 or undef for infinite looping


# as usual, you can setup most of the above during object spawning
my $animation = SDLx::Animation->new(
                     image  => 'hero.png',
                     rect   => SDL::Rect->new(...),
                     step_x => 20,
                     step_y => 0,
                     ...
                );

DESCRIPTION

An animation is a series of frames that are played in order. Frames are loaded from an image, usually referred to as a Sprite Sheet or Sprite Strip.

This module let's you interact with such strips and create sprite animations just as easily as you would manipulate a regular SDLx::Sprite object.

WARNING! VOLATILE CODE AHEAD

This is a new module and the API is subject to change without notice. If you care, please join the discussion on the #sdl IRC channel in irc.perl.org. All thoughts on further improving the API are welcome.

You have been warned :)

ATTRIBUTES AND METHODS

SDLx::Sprite::Animated is a subclass of SDLx::Sprite, inheriting all its attributes and methods. Please refer to that module's documentation for information on those.

The one difference in behavior is that, while a standard SDLx::Sprite uses ->clip() to select the part of the surface to display, SDLx::Sprite::Animated treats ->clip() as the initial rect, from which to start the animation.

The following attributes and methods are available:

new

new( %options )

Creates a new SDLx::Sprite::Animated object. No option is mandatory. It accepts all the options from a regular SDLx::Sprite object plus these:

  • step_x => $integer

    Uses $integer as the number of pixels to move on the x-axis (left-to-right, 0 being no dislocation whatsoever, when the strip goes from top to bottom) to reach the next frame.

  • step_y => $integer

    Uses $integer as the number of pixels to move on the y-axis (top-to-bottom, 0 being no dislocation whatsoever, when the strip goes from left to right) to reach the next frame.

  • max_loops => $integer

    Uses $integer as the number of times to loop the animation (when it reaches the end of the strip).

  • ticks_per_frame => $integer

    Uses $integer to set how many calls to draw() must be issued before we go to the next frame during autoplay (i.e. between calls to start() and stop()).

  • type => $string

    Uses $string to set the type of animation loop when it reaches the last frame in the strip. See the type() method below for information on available looping types.

step_x()

step_x( $integer )

Uses $integer as the number of pixels to move on the x-axis (left-to-right, 0 being no dislocation whatsoever, when the strip goes from top to bottom) to reach the next frame.

Defaults to the same width as the clip() rect.

step_y()

step_y( $integer )

Uses $integer as the number of pixels to move on the y-axis (top-to-bottom, 0 being no dislocation whatsoever, when the strip goes from left to right) to reach the next frame.

Defaults to the same height as the clip() rect.

max_loops()

max_loops( $integer )

Uses $integer as the number of times to loop the animation (when it reaches the end of the strip). After that all calls to previous() or next() will be no-ops.

Set it to 0 or undef to allow infinite loops. Default is 0 (infinite).

ticks_per_frame()

ticks_per_frame( $integer )

Uses $integer to set how many calls to draw() must be issued before we go to the next frame during autoplay (i.e. between calls to start() and stop()).

Default is just 1 tick per frame, so you might want to change this if it's too fast.

type()

type( $string )

Uses $string to set the type of animation loop when it reaches the last frame in the strip. Available looping types are:

  • 'circular'

    Restarts loop at the beginning of the strip. If you have 4 frames, the flow will be 1-2-3-4-1-2-3-4-1-2-3-4-1-2-... up until the number of loops you set in the max_loops() attribute.

  • 'reverse'

    Loops back and forth on the strip. If you have 4 frames, the flow will be 1-2-3-4-3-2-1-2-3-4-3-2-... up until the number of loops you set in the max_loops() attribute.

Case is irrelevant for type(), so for example 'Circular', 'CIRCULAR' and 'CiRcUlAr' are all accepted as 'circular'. The return value is guaranteed to be lowercase.

Default value is 'circular'.

next()

Goes to the next frame in the strip. Calling this method will also reset the tick counter used by ticks_per_frame().

If max_loops() has reached its limit, this will be a no-op.

Returns the object, allowing method chaining.

previous()

Goes to the previous frame in the strip. Calling this method will also reset the tick counter used by ticks_per_frame().

If max_loops() has reached its limit, this will be a no-op.

Returns the object, allowing method chaining.

reset()

Goes to the first frame in the strip, meaning whatever clip is set to.

If max_loops() has reached its limit, this will be a no-op.

Returns the object, allowing method chaining.

current_frame()

Returns the current frame number. Note that this is 1-based (first frame is 1, second is 2, etc).

current_loop()

Returns the loop counter, i.e. which run number is it at. This is also 1-based (first time is 1, second time is 2, etc). Note that we only keep track of the counter if max_loops() is set to a finite number. Otherwise, this will be a no-op.

start()

After you call this method, the object will issue a call to ->next() automatically for you every time ->draw() is called ticks_per_frame() times.

If you want to stop autoplay, see stop() below.

Default is off (no autoplay).

stop()

Stops autoplay. After you call this, the object will need you to call ->previous() and ->next() explicitly to change frames.

To resume autoplay from wherever you are, use start().

If you want to restart autoplay from the initial frame, just do:

$sprite->reset->start;

AUTHORS

Dustin Mays, <dork.fish.wat@gmail.com>

Breno G. de Oliveira, <garu at cpan.org>

Kartik thakore <kthakore at cpan.org>

SEE ALSO

SDL::Surface, SDL