SGE Concepts

Naming Conventions

There are many cases where you will want to derive a class from a SGE class. Since there can be multiple implementations of the SGE, it can be easy when doing so to overwrite a special variable used by some implementations internally, which can be disastrous. To avoid such occasions, implementations are expected to never introduce any attribute names which are not explicitly mentioned in the documentation for a class unless the new attribute names are preceded by an underscore, as in the hypothetical attribute name _foo. This naming convention will protect users of the SGE from unexpected errors provided that they do not use such names themselves.

A suggested convention for users of the SGE to use for “private” attributes in place of the usual leading underscore is to precede these attributes with v_ or p_.

Events

The SGE uses an event-based system, with events defined by special class methods with names starting with event_.

Except in certain special cases, the order that events are handled in is arbitrary; if Event A and Event B happen at the same time, one implementation might handle Event A first, another might handle Event B first, and another might handle either Event A or Event B first depending on the circumstances. This is particularly important to keep in mind because, for example, there is no guarantee that the Step Event will be executed before or after collision detection is applied in a given frame, so code should not be written with that expectation.

The Mouse

The mouse is handled somewhat unusually by the SGE. Rather than having functions or variables report the mouse position relative to the screen, the mouse position within the room, calculated based on its position on the screen by the SGE, is recorded in a special StellarClass object which represents the mouse. This mouse object can be found as sge.game.mouse, and it has the special object ID, "mouse".

The mouse object differs from most StellarClass objects in a few ways. Its speed variables cannot be manually set, and they always report numbers which correspond to the average motion of the mouse during the last quarter of a second. Setting sge.game.mouse.visible toggles whether or not the mouse cursor itself is visible, and setting sge.game.mouse.sprite sets the mouse cursor to the sprite assigned.

In all other ways, the mouse object is exactly the same as all other StellarClass objects.

Colors

Colors can be defined for the SGE in a few different ways.

HTML Color Names

The sixteen basic HTML colors, provided as strings, are accepted by the SGE. These are case-insensitive, so "red" is interpreted the same as "Red" or "rEd". The colors are:

  • "white"
  • "silver"
  • "gray
  • "black"
  • "red"
  • "maroon"
  • "yellow"
  • "olive"
  • "lime"
  • "green"
  • "aqua"
  • "teal"
  • "blue"
  • "navy"
  • "fuchsia"
  • "purple"

RGB(A) Tuples

A tuple containing three or four values is accepted as a color by the SGE. Each index represents a component of a color: first red, then green, then blue, with the values being integers from 0 to 255. For example, (255, 128, 0) indicates a color with full red intensity, 50% green intensity, and no blue intensity, which is a shade of orange. Note that the components are colors of light, not colors of pigment.

The fourth value of the tuple, if specified, indicates the alpha transparency of the color, with the possible values again being integers from 0 to 255. 255 is fully opaque, 0 is fully transparent, and any value in between indicates the amount of opacity; for example, 128 is 50% transparent. If the fourth value is unspecified, it is assumed that the color is fully opaque.

RGBA tuples are the only way to specify alpha transparency of colors in SGE. All other methods for indicating color assume full opacity.

HTML Hex Strings and Integers

HTML hex strings and integers are accepted as colors by the SGE. HTML hex strings are in the format "#RRGGBB", where RR, GG, and BB are replaced with the red, green, and blue components of the color, respectively, in hexadecimal form. FF (equivalent to 255 in decimal form) is full intensity of the respective color, and 00 (equivalent to 0 in decimal form) is no intensity of the respective color. For example, "#FF8000" is the same as (255, 128, 0), or orange.

Integers, treated as hexadecimals, are also accepted. These are in the same form as HTML hex strings, but integral. For example, 0xFF8000 is the same as "#FF8000".

Position

In all cases of positioning for the SGE, it is based on a two-dimensional graph with each unit being a pixel. This graph is not quite like regular graphs; the horizontal direction, normally called x, is the same as the x-axis on a regular graph; 0 is the origin, positive numbers are to the right of the origin, and negative numbers are to the left of the origin. However, in the vertical direction, normally called y, 0 is the origin, positive numbers are below the origin, and negative numbers are above the origin. While slightly jarring if you are used to normal graphs, this is in fact common in 2-D game development and is so how pixels in most image formats are indexed.

Except where otherwise specified, the origin is always located at the top-leftmost position of an object.

In addition to integers, position variables are allowed by the SGE to be floating-point numbers.

Z-Axis

The SGE uses a Z-axis to determine where objects are placed in the third dimension. Objects with a higher Z value are considered to be closer to the viewer and thus will be placed over objects which have a lower Z value. Note that the Z-axis does not allow 3-D gameplay or effects; it is only used to tell the SGE what to do with objects that overlap. For example, if an object called spam has a Z value of 5 while an object called eggs has a Z value of 2, spam will obscure part or all of eggs when the two objects overlap.

If two objects with the same Z-axis value overlap, the SGE arbitrarily chooses which one is considered to be closer to the viewer. The SGE is allowed to change this decision, but only while the objects in question are not overlapping, since changing the decision while the two objects are overlapping would cause an undesirable flicker effect.

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