How can I get specific fields from an AnimationTimer object? - java

I've written a simple game using JavaFX for the GUI and AnimationTimer for the game itself, but I've found that any fields that update within the AnimationTimer object can't be found outside of the object. I've managed to continuously record how long a game runs, and the score of that game, but can't find a way to get these values out of the AnimationTimer object so I can add them to my GUI.
I've already tried java.lang.Reflect, but I can't seem to get it to work.
AnimationTimer animations = new AnimationTimer() //creates animations
{
#Override
public void handle(long now)
{
//update frames
if(jump == 0) //moves the player model to the starting position
{
playerY = 160;
}
else if(jump == 1) //moves the player model up (jumping)
{
playerY = 100;
}
if(shout == 1) //makes player immune while "shouting"
{
player.setFill(Color.GREEN);
}
if(shout == 0) //makes player not immune anymore
player.setFill(Color.BLUE);
if(obstacleX == PLAYER_X) //updates the score
{
points += 10;
score.setText("Score: " + String.valueOf(points));
}
if(player.getBoundsInParent().intersects(obstacle.getBoundsInParent())) //detects if the player model touches an obstacles
{
if(obstacle.getEndY() == 0)
{
if(player.getFill() == Color.BLUE)
player.setFill(Color.RED);
}
else if(obstacle.getEndY() == 130)
player.setFill(Color.RED);
}
if(obstacleX > 0) //moves the obstacles' reference point from the right to the left
obstacleX -= 5;
if(obstacleX == 0)
{
obstacleX = 400;
int[] array = new int[]{0, 0, 130};
Random randomNum = new Random();
int i = randomNum.nextInt(array.length);
random = array[i];
obstacle.setEndY(random);
}
//render frames
player.setCenterY(playerY);
obstacle.setStartX(obstacleX); //this and line 110 move the obstacle across the scene
obstacle.setEndX(obstacleX);
try{ //exception handler for outputs
if(player.getFill() == Color.GREEN)
{
digitalOutput6.setDutyCycle(1); //turns on green LED
digitalOutput0.setDutyCycle(0);
}
if(player.getFill() == Color.BLUE)
{
digitalOutput6.setDutyCycle(0); //turns off LEDs
digitalOutput0.setDutyCycle(0);
}
if(player.getFill() == Color.RED) //stops the animation when the player model reacts to touching an obstacle
{
endTime = System.currentTimeMillis() - startTime;
finalScore = score.getText();
this.stop(); //ends game
gameOver = 1;
digitalOutput0.setDutyCycle(1); //turns on red LED
digitalOutput6.setDutyCycle(0);
gameStage.setScene(gameEnd); //establishing scene
gameStage.setTitle("Game Over");
gameStage.show();
}
} //end of try block
catch(PhidgetException e)
{
System.out.println("Phidget Output Error");
}
} //end of animation handle itself
}; //end of animation method
I tried using
long finalTime = animations.getLong(endTime);
and
String endScore = animations.getField(finalScore);
But no luck. Any help appreciated.

AnimationTimer itself doesn't expose any attributes, make a custom class which wraps an AnimationTimer object in it, and save any attributes you want to access.
When you initialize the custom class, initialize the AnimationTimer object and override the function (as what you've done), also updates whatever attributes you want to expose.
I am not familiar with javafx, there might be other better ways, this is the one quick solution I can think of.
Did a quick search, these examples might be helpful:
https://netopyr.com/2012/06/14/using-the-javafx-animationtimer/
https://tbeernot.wordpress.com/2011/11/12/javafx-2-0-bubblemark/

First of all do not use Reflections on Anonymous classes It will work but will cause a lot of ineffeciency and dirty code.
Second of all, you try to acces fields which are in the Methodscope of
handle(long now) not in the Class scope.
AnimationTimer t = new AnimationTimer() {
int fieldInt = 0; // would be accessible
#Override
public void handle(long now) {
//do something
}
};
AnimationTimer t = new AnimationTimer() {
#Override
public void handle(long now) {
int fieldInt = 0; // is not accessible as regular field
//do something
}
};
What you can do is the following:
Use a class that extends a Animationtimer
public class Scheduler extends AnimationTimer{
private int gameEnd = 42;
private String someValue = "hello";
#Override
public void handle(long now) {
gameEnd += 1;
if(gameEnd >= 1000000) {
someValue ="Bye bye";
}
}
public String getSomeValue() {
return someValue;
}
here you can use:
Scheduler s = new Scheduler();
s.start();
//whatever you want to do
System.out.Println(s.getSomeValue());
or when you want to use the Anonymous class approach, you should create a Property that is outside of AnimationTimer and use it. (Wich is a thing that I would prefer, because you can have a changeListener on the Property and recieve a callback when the value is changed)
public void whateverMethod() {
SimpleIntegerProperty gameEndProp = new SimpleIntegerProperty(42);
AnimationTimer t = new AnimationTimer() {
#Override
public void handle(long now) {
gameEndProp.set(gameEndProp.get()+1);
}
};
t.start();
//Do something
System.out.println(gameEndProp.get());
}

Related

LibGDX trying to create a method that handles click input on a sprite

So this is my code, the problem lies in the timer, I get an error saying that timesClicked is accessed from within inner class, therefore needs to be declared final.
However, if I declare it final, I won't be able to change it. So what do I do?
public static void displayItem(Player Dawid, Item item, int timesClicked, Sprite itemSprite){
if (Gdx.input.justTouched()) {
camera.unproject(touchPoint.set(Gdx.input.getX(), Gdx.input.getY(), 0));
if (Assets.healthPotionSPR.getBoundingRectangle().contains(touchPoint.x, touchPoint.y)) {
if (timesClicked == 1){
Shop.checkRequirement(item.getBuyPrice(), Dawid, item);
Dawid.setGold(Dawid.getGold() - HealthPotion.buyPrice);
item.setStock(item.getStock()+1);
topText = "Kupiłeś eliksir zdrowia!";
}
Assets.sellText = item.getSellPrice() + "g";
Assets.buyText = item.getBuyPrice() + "g";
timesClicked++;
timer.schedule(new TimerTask() {
#Override
public void run() {
timesClicked = 0;
}
}, 500);
}
}
}
I want to create this method, and I need to be able to provide a static int that would be eddited depending on amounts of clicks and time between each click.
EDIT
ok I got it, so there's a public static int timesClicked, then the method goes :
public static void displayItem(Player Dawid, Item item, int timesClicked, Sprite itemSprite){
if (Gdx.input.justTouched()) {
camera.unproject(touchPoint.set(Gdx.input.getX(), Gdx.input.getY(), 0));
if (itemSprite.getBoundingRectangle().contains(touchPoint.x, touchPoint.y)) {
if (timesClicked == 1){
Shop.checkRequirement(item.getBuyPrice(), Dawid, item);
}
Assets.sellText = item.getSellPrice() + "g";
Assets.buyText = item.getBuyPrice() + "g";
spriteClicked++;
timesClicked = spriteClicked;
timer.schedule(new TimerTask() {
#Override
public void run() {
spriteClicked = 0;
}
}, 500);
}
}
}
You can use a MutableObject or something similar. If you don't use Apache Commons you can simply create one like this:
public class MutableInt {
public int value;
public int get() {
return value;
}
public void set(int value) {
this.value = value;
}
}
This way you can create a MutableInt and declare it final, but you will still be able to change the int value in it:
// declare this somewhere in the top of your method
final MutableInt clicked = new MutableInt();
clicked.set(timesClicked); // initialize
// ... other code
// replaces "timesClicked++;"
clicked.set(clicked.get() + 1); // or maybe write an "increase" method for this ...
timer.schedule(new TimerTask() {
#Override
public void run() {
// replaces "timesClicked = 0;"
clicked.set(0); // no problem anymore, because "clicked" is final
}
}, 500);
BTW: Maybe I get this wrong, but it seems like you are trying to change the value of timesClicked in the calling method. But timesClicked only exists in the displayItem method, so whenever the method is called again, the value of timesClicked will be reset, so it will never be more than 1.
Maybe try using a global field instead of a method parameter.
EDIT:
If you want to change the value "timesClicked" of another object, you can use the reference of this object instead of the int parameter like this:
public static void displayItem(Player Dawid, Item item, HealthPotionClicked variableHoldingObject, Sprite itemSprite){
// ...
variableHoldingObject.setTimesClicked(variableHoldingObject.getTimesClicked() + 1);
timer.schedule(new TimerTask() {
#Override
public void run() {
variableHoldingObject.setTimesClicked(0);
}
}, 500);
}
This way you won't even need the MutableObject.

how to keep the graphic2D shape to stay for a period time in java?

I'm going to create a moving circle for my later project, and the circle will keep moving, and it interior color will change like color emitting , the changing color will from little circle to larger circle in 5 levels, so how to keep each color change to stay a while and I hope these code present with thread, so I create two thread for the purpose, one control circle moving, another control the circle's interior color emit
here is my code:
import java.awt.*;
import static java.awt.Color.black;
import static java.awt.Color.yellow;
import static java.awt.FlowLayout.RIGHT;
import java.awt.event.*;
import java.awt.geom.Arc2D;
import java.awt.geom.Ellipse2D;
import java.awt.geom.GeneralPath;
import java.awt.geom.Rectangle2D;
import static java.lang.Math.abs;
import java.util.Random;
import javax.swing.*;
import java.util.concurrent.ExecutorService;
class thepane extends JPanel implements Runnable{
public float x,y,r;
public float speedx,speedy;
thepane(float lx,float ly,float lr, float sx,float sy){
loadspeed(sx,sy);
load(lx,ly,lr);
for(int i=0;i<5;i++)
fc[i]=new Color(nd.nextInt(255),nd.nextInt(255),nd.nextInt(255));
}
public void load(float lx,float ly,float lr){
x=lx;y=ly;r=lr;
}
public void loadspeed(float sx,float sy){
speedx=sx;speedy=sy;
}
public void xmoving(){
x+=speedx;
}
public void ymoving(){
y-=speedy;
}
public void touchbond(){
if(x>getWidth()-r||x<0)
speedx*=-1;
if(y>getHeight()-r||y<0)
speedy*=-1;
if(x>getWidth()-r)
x=getWidth()-r;
else if(x<0)
x=0;
if(y>getHeight()-r)
y=getHeight()-r;
else if(y<0)
y=0;
}
Random nd=new Random();
int colorcount=0;
int emitcount=0;
boolean emit=false;
Color[] fc=new Color[5];
Graphics2D comp2D ;
Thread athread;
#Override
public void paintComponent(Graphics comp) {
comp2D = (Graphics2D) comp;
//create rectangle background
comp2D.setColor(Color.BLACK);
comp2D.fillRect(0, 0, getWidth(), getHeight());
//set information text
comp2D.setFont( new Font("Arial", Font.BOLD, 12));
comp2D.setColor(Color.WHITE);
comp2D.drawString("Centre("+(x+r/2)+' '+(y+r/2)+"), xspeed: "+speedx+" yspeed: "+speedy, 10f,10f );
comp2D.drawString("panel width "+getWidth()+" panel height "+getHeight()+" circle radius "
+r, 10f, 22f);
}
//thread run()
#Override
public void run() {
x=100;y=100;
System.out.println("thread in pane start!!!! (current colorcount = "+colorcount+')');
while(true){
circleEmit(fc[colorcount%5]);
repaint();
sleeping(1);
// comp2D=(Graphics2D)this.getGraphics();
// colorEmit(comp2D);
}
}
//wait method
public void waiting(){
try{wait();}
catch(Exception e){}}
public void waiting2D(int time){
try{comp2D.wait(time);}
catch(Exception e){}
}
public void waiting(int time){
try{wait(time);}
catch(Exception e){}
}
//sleep method
public void sleeping(int n){
try{
Thread.sleep(n);
}catch(Exception f){
System.out.print(f);
}
}
Ellipse2D.Float[] e=new Ellipse2D.Float[5];
public void loade(){
float centrex=x+r/2,centrey=y+r/2;
e[0]= new Ellipse2D.Float(centrex-r/10, centrey-r/10, r/5, r/5);
e[1]= new Ellipse2D.Float(centrex-r/5, centrey-r/5, 2*r/5, 2*r/5);
e[2]= new Ellipse2D.Float(centrex-3*r/10, centrey-3*r/10, 3*r/5, 3*r/5);
e[3]= new Ellipse2D.Float(centrex-2*r/5, centrey-2*r/5, 4*r/5, 4*r/5);
e[4]= new Ellipse2D.Float(centrex-r/2, centrey-r/2, r, r);
}
public Color ff;
public synchronized void circleEmit(Color fc){
comp2D=(Graphics2D)this.getGraphics();
loade();
comp2D.setColor(fc);
comp2D.fill(e[emitcount%5]);
waiting(5);
emitcount++;
}
public synchronized void callnotify(){
this.notify();
}
//iterative way to generate color emit
public void colorEmit(Graphics2D comp2D){
//create circle
//set circle property
float centrex=x+r/2,centrey=y+r/2;//so x=centrex-r/2;y=centrey+r/2
Ellipse2D.Float e1 = new Ellipse2D.Float(centrex-r/10, centrey-r/10, r/5, r/5);
Ellipse2D.Float e2 = new Ellipse2D.Float(centrex-r/5, centrey-r/5, 2*r/5, 2*r/5);
Ellipse2D.Float e3 = new Ellipse2D.Float(centrex-3*r/10, centrey-3*r/10, 3*r/5, 3*r/5);
Ellipse2D.Float e4 = new Ellipse2D.Float(centrex-2*r/5, centrey-2*r/5, 4*r/5, 4*r/5);
Ellipse2D.Float e5 = new Ellipse2D.Float(centrex-r/2, centrey-r/2, r, r);
if(colorcount>=4)
emit(comp2D,fc[(colorcount-4)%5],e5);
waiting(1000);
if(colorcount>=3)
emit(comp2D,fc[(colorcount-3)%5],e4);
waiting(1000);
if(colorcount>=2)
emit(comp2D,fc[(colorcount-2)%5],e3);
waiting(1000);
if(colorcount>=1)
emit(comp2D,fc[(colorcount-1)%5],e2);
waiting(1000);
emit(comp2D,fc[colorcount%5],e1);
waiting(1000);
colorcount++;
}
private void emit(Graphics2D comp,Color thecolor,Ellipse2D.Float f){
comp.setColor(thecolor);
comp.fill(f);
}
}
//------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
//main class
public class drawpanel extends Thread implements ActionListener{
JFrame frame=new JFrame();
thepane panel;
JButton FlyingBalls=new JButton("balls"),exit=new JButton("Exit"),stop=new JButton("Stop");
JButton slow=new JButton("slow down"),resume=new JButton("resume");
Float x,y,r;
public void sleeping(int n){
try{
Thread.sleep(n);
}catch(Exception f){
System.out.print(f);
}
}
Thread newthread,pthread;
Thread[] five=new Thread[5];
drawpanel(){
frame.setTitle("FlyingBalls");
frame.setLocation(100, 100);
frame.setLayout(null);
//x,y,r,speedx,speedy
panel=new thepane(nd.nextInt(800),nd.nextInt(500),40,nd.nextFloat()*20+1,nd.nextFloat()*10+1);
panel.setSize(800,500);
frame.setSize(810,580);
frame.add(panel);
FlyingBalls.setSize(80,30);exit.setSize(70,30);stop.setSize(70,30);slow.setSize(140,30);
resume.setSize(100,30);
FlyingBalls.addActionListener(this);
exit.addActionListener(this);
stop.addActionListener(this);slow.addActionListener(this);resume.addActionListener(this);
frame.add(FlyingBalls);frame.add(exit); frame.add(stop);frame.add(slow);frame.add(resume);
FlyingBalls.setLocation(20,500);exit.setLocation(190, 500);stop.setLocation(110,500);
slow.setLocation(270,500);resume.setLocation(420,500);
frame.setVisible(true);
frame.setDefaultCloseOperation(JFrame.EXIT_ON_CLOSE);
//control moving ball
newthread=new Thread(this);
//control color change
for(int i=0;i<5;i++){
five[i]=new Thread(panel);
}
// newthread.start();
panel.colorcount++;
five[0].start();
panel.colorcount=2;
// five[1].start();
panel.waiting(5);
}
public static void main(String[] arg){
drawpanel apanel=new drawpanel();
}
int bw=800,bh=500;
void setp(){
x=panel.x;y=panel.y;
}
void touchbond(){
System.out.println("width:"+panel.getWidth()+"Height:"+panel.getHeight());
System.out.println("xposition:"+x+"yposition:"+y);
if(x+r>panel.getWidth()){
panel.speedx*=-1;
x=bw-r;
}
else if(x-r<0){
panel.speedx*=-1;
x=r;
}
if(y-r<0){
panel.speedy*=-1;
y=r;
}
else if(y+r>panel.getHeight()){
panel.speedy*=-1;
y=bh-r;
}
panel.x=x;panel.y=y;
}
int T=10;
Random nd=new Random();
#Override
public void run(){
r=panel.r;
panel.loadspeed(-6.33f,-3.4f);
while(true){
if(stopcount==0){//button control variable
panel.xmoving();panel.ymoving();
panel.touchbond();
sleeping(T);}
panel.loade();
// panel.callnotify();
// panel.colorEmit(panel.comp2D);
panel.repaint();
}
}
#Override
public void start(){
}
int count=0,stopcount=0;
#Override
public void actionPerformed(ActionEvent e) {
if(e.getSource()==exit){
System.exit(0);
}
if(e.getSource()==FlyingBalls){
//panel=new thepane();
}
if(e.getSource()==resume){
stopcount=0;T=10;
panel.emit=false;
}
if(e.getSource()==slow){
if(count%2==0)
T=500;
else
T=10;
count++;
}
if(e.getSource()==stop){
stopcount++;
panel.emit=true;
}
}
}
So, lots of theory to cover.
Firstly...
Animation is not easy, good animation is hard.
Swing is single threaded and is not thread safe
This means that you should not perform any long running or blocking operations within the context of the Event Dispatching Thread.
It also means that you shouldn't modify the UI or anything the UI relies on from outside the context of the Event Dispatching Thread
More threads != more work
More threads doesn't always mean you're going to get more done. In fact, in this scenario, it could really cause a huge number of issues, as you need the ability to reason out the state at a single point in time (when painting)
Animation Theory
Okay, animation is simply the illusion of change, how you accomplish that will come down to the problem you trying to solve.
For me, the best animations are time based animations, not linear.
A linear animation keeps updating from its start state till it reaches its end state, in a constant progression. These don't tend to scale well and can suffer issues on low performant systems.
A time based animation is one where the amount of time is defined and then, based on a anchor time (ie start time) and the state of the animation is updated based on the amount of time which is passed. This is a really simple way to achieve "frame dropping". You'd also be very surprised to find that in general terms, time based animations tend to look better across more platforms.
A time based animation is also more capable of generating "easement" effects, but that's getting way deeper then we need to go right now.
Okay, but what's this got to do with your problem? Well, actually, quite a bit.
The first thing we need is some kind of "main-loop" from which all the animation can be driven. Typically, I'd look to a good animation library, but failing that, a simple Swing Timer will do the basic good really well.
It generates its ticks in the Event Dispatching Thread, which makes it very useful for our needs. See How to Use Swing Timers for more details
So, we start with something like...
private Timer timer;
//...
timer = new Timer(5, new ActionListener() {
#Override
public void actionPerformed(ActionEvent e) {
// Update the state
repaint();
}
});
//...
timer.start();
This gives us our "main loop", from which we can update the state as needed and then trigger a repaint of the component.
For the purpose of this demonstration, I'm going to devise a self-contained unit of "animation duration", used to track the amount of time which has passed since the animation was started, this is personal choice, but it would allow me to drive a number of animations and it contains the logic to a single unit of work.
public class AnimationDuration {
private Duration duration;
private Instant startedAt;
public AnimationDuration(Duration duration) {
this.duration = duration;
}
public Duration getDuration() {
return duration;
}
public void start() {
startedAt = Instant.now();
}
public void stop() {
startedAt = null;
}
public boolean isRunning() {
return startedAt != null;
}
public float getProgress() {
Duration runningTime = Duration.between(startedAt, Instant.now());
if (runningTime.compareTo(duration) > 0) {
runningTime = duration;
}
long total = duration.toMillis();
float progress = runningTime.toMillis() / (float) total;
return progress;
}
}
This basically allows to trigger the animation to start running (anchor point in time) and then get the progress of the animation at any point in time. This provides a normalised concept from 0-1, so if we want to make it longer or shorter, all we do is adjust the duration and everything else is taken care of.
For your specific problem, I'd consider some kind of "time line" or "key frames", which defines that certain actions should occur at certain points of time along the time line.
Now, the following is a really simple concept, but it gets the job.
public interface KeyFrame {
public float getProgress();
}
public class TimeLine<K extends KeyFrame> {
private List<K> keyFrames;
public TimeLine() {
keyFrames = new ArrayList<>(25);
}
// Returns the key frames between the current progression
public K getKeyFrameAt(float progress) {
for (int index = 0; index < keyFrames.size(); index++) {
K keyFrame = keyFrames.get(index);
if (progress >= keyFrame.getProgress()) {
if (index + 1 < keyFrames.size()) {
K nextFrame = keyFrames.get(index + 1);
// But only if your between each other
if (progress < nextFrame.getProgress()) {
return keyFrame;
}
} else {
// Nothing after me :D
return keyFrame;
}
}
}
return null;
}
public void add(K keyFrame) {
keyFrames.add(keyFrame);
Collections.sort(keyFrames, new Comparator<KeyFrame>() {
#Override
public int compare(KeyFrame lhs, KeyFrame rhs) {
if (lhs.getProgress() > rhs.getProgress()) {
return 1;
} else if (lhs.getProgress() < rhs.getProgress()) {
return -1;
}
return 0;
}
});
}
}
This allows you to define certain KeyFrames along the timeline, based on a normalised concept of time and then provides the ability to get the KeyFrame based on the current progression through animation.
There are much more complex solutions you might consider, which would generate self contained events based on time progressions automatically, but I prefer been able to driver the animation itself independently, makes these types of things more flexible - add a JSlider and you can manipulate the progression manually ;)
The next thing we need is something to carry the properties for the circle KeyFrame ...
public class CirclePropertiesKeyFrame implements KeyFrame {
private float progress;
private double radius;
private Color color;
public CirclePropertiesKeyFrame(float progress, double radius, Color color) {
this.progress = progress;
this.radius = radius;
this.color = color;
}
#Override
public float getProgress() {
return progress;
}
public Color getColor() {
return color;
}
public double getRadius() {
return radius;
}
#Override
public String toString() {
return "KeyFrame progress = " + getProgress() + "; raidus= " + radius + "; color = " + color;
}
}
Now, we need to put it together...
public class TestPane extends JPanel {
private AnimationDuration timelineDuration;
private TimeLine<CirclePropertiesKeyFrame> timeLine;
private Timer timer;
private CirclePropertiesKeyFrame circleProperties;
public TestPane() {
timelineDuration = new AnimationDuration(Duration.ofSeconds(10));
timeLine = new TimeLine<>();
timeLine.add(new CirclePropertiesKeyFrame(0, 5, Color.CYAN));
timeLine.add(new CirclePropertiesKeyFrame(0.2f, 10, Color.BLUE));
timeLine.add(new CirclePropertiesKeyFrame(0.4f, 15, Color.GREEN));
timeLine.add(new CirclePropertiesKeyFrame(0.6f, 20, Color.YELLOW));
timeLine.add(new CirclePropertiesKeyFrame(0.8f, 25, Color.MAGENTA));
timer = new Timer(5, new ActionListener() {
#Override
public void actionPerformed(ActionEvent e) {
if (timelineDuration.isRunning()) {
float progress = timelineDuration.getProgress();
if (progress >= 1.0) {
timelineDuration.stop();
}
CirclePropertiesKeyFrame keyFrame = timeLine.getKeyFrameAt(progress);
circleProperties = keyFrame;
}
repaint();
}
});
}
#Override
public void addNotify() {
super.addNotify();
timelineDuration.start();
timer.start();
}
#Override
public void removeNotify() {
super.removeNotify();
timer.stop();
timelineDuration.stop();
}
#Override
public Dimension getPreferredSize() {
return new Dimension(200, 200);
}
#Override
protected void paintComponent(Graphics g) {
super.paintComponent(g);
Graphics2D g2d = (Graphics2D) g.create();
if (circleProperties != null) {
double radius = circleProperties.radius;
double xPos = (getWidth() / 2) - radius;
double yPos = (getHeight() / 2) - radius;
g2d.setColor(circleProperties.color);
g2d.fill(new Ellipse2D.Double(xPos, yPos, radius * 2, radius * 2));
}
g2d.dispose();
}
}
And then we end up with something like...
Now, this is a 10 second sequence, so every 2 seconds it will update. Try changing the duration of the AnimationDuration and see what happens.
Note This is a non-repeating animation (it doesn't loop). You could make it loop, but the calculation to do so becomes more complicate, as you need to consider by how much you're over the expected Duration and then apply that to the next cycle, so it looks smooth
But what about movement?
Well, actually, pretty much already answered that question. You would also place the movement code inside the Timers ActionListener, right before the repaint request. In fact, I might be tempted to create some kind of class that could take the current KeyFrame information and combine it with the location properties, this would then be used the paintComponent method to draw the circle.
I want to blend the animation states ...
Well, that's a much more difficult question, especially when it comes to colors.
The basic theory is, you need the two key frames which set either side of the current progression. You would then apply a "blending" algorithm to calculate the amount of change to be applied between the two key frames.
Not impossible, just a step more difficult

How to create an update function for multiple ImageViews?

I'm trying to create an update function for multiple ImageView's but kept running into issues. I'm currently passing an individual ImageView to the updateBlobPosition function inside a timer, which works fine for one ImageView. But as soon I pass a second ImageView (blob2), now both ImageViews mimic each other as they have the same trajectory and velocity.
In addition, when one ImageView hits a wall and bounces back, the other one does the same. What I want is for each ImageView to be independent of each other. Any help would be appreciated.
...
blob1.setX(generateRandomNumber(0, 930));
blob1.setY(generateRandomNumber(0, 1750));
blob2.setX(generateRandomNumber(0, 930));
blob2.setY(generateRandomNumber(0, 1750));
...
//start the timer
timer.schedule(new TimerTask() {
#Override
public void run() {
handler.post(new Runnable() {
#Override
public void run() {
playerMovement();
updateBlobPosition(blob1);
updateBlobPosition(blob2);
collision(blob1);
collision(blob2);
}
});
}
}, 0, 20);
...
protected ImageView updateBlobPosition(ImageView blob) {
blobX = blob.getX();
blobY = blob.getY();
blobX += blobVelocityX;
blobY += blobVelocityY;
//left
if ((blob.getX() + blobVelocityX < 0)) {
blobVelocityX = -blobVelocityX;
}
//right
else if (blob.getX() - blobVelocityX > 930) {
blobVelocityX = -Math.abs(blobVelocityX);
}
//top
if ((blob.getY() + blobVelocityY < -20)) {
blobVelocityY = -blobVelocityY;
}
//bottom
else if (blob.getY() - blobVelocityY > 1750) {
blobVelocityY = -Math.abs(blobVelocityY);
}
blob.setX(blobX);
blob.setY(blobY);
return blob;
}
You're using the same velocity variables for both. So of course they be updated in the same way. If you want them to move independently, give them independent speeds.

Java slideshow image delay using paintComponent

I am putting together a slideshow program that will measure a user's time spent on each slide. The slideshow goes through several different magic tricks. Each trick is shown twice. Interim images are shown between the repetition. Transition images are shown between each trick.
On the first repetition of a trick the JPanel color flashes on the screen after a click before the next image is shown. This doesn't happen during the second repetition of the same trick. It's possible that the image is taking too long to load.
Is there an easy way to pre-load the images so that there isn't a delay the first time through?
NOTE: Original code deleted.
EDIT 1/10/2013: This code now works on slower machines. trashgod's second addendum helped the most. The mouseClick control structure periodically asks SwingWorker classes to load 40 images or less of the current trick while also setting the used images to null. I have simplified my code down for this to just two Image[]s and added a main method so it stands alone. Images are still required to run though. This is now pretty bare bones code, and if you're trying to make a slideshow with a lot of images I think it would be a good place to start.
NOTE: I think I figured out how to properly implement SwingWorker while still using multiple Image[]s. trashgod and kleopatra is this implementation in-line with what you were suggesting? I didn't end up using publish and process since I couldn't figure out how to get that to work appropriately with an indexed array, but because the StringWorker doesn't load all images in the array (only 40), and the code calls StringWorker every 20 images, there should be a pretty good buffer.
EDIT 1/10/2013 Changed out MouseListener by instead extending MouseAdapter on my Mouse class. Also fixed my paintComponent method to include a call to super.paintComponent(g).
Added publish/process methods to my SwingWorker class ImageWorker. Added a wrapper class, ArrayWrapper to allow passing imageArray[i] and its corresponding index int i with publish to process.
package slideshow3;
import javax.swing.*;
import java.awt.*;
import java.awt.event.ActionEvent;
import java.awt.event.MouseEvent;
import java.awt.event.MouseAdapter;
import java.io.File;
import java.io.IOException;
import javax.imageio.ImageIO;
import java.util.List;
public class SlideShow3 extends JFrame
{
//screenImage will be replaced with each new slide
private Image screenImage;
private int width;
private int height;
//Create panel for displaying images using paintComponent()
private SlideShow3.PaintPanel mainImagePanel;
//Used for keybinding
private Action escapeAction;
//Image array variables for each trick
private Image[] handCuffs; //h
private Image[] cups; //c
//Used to step through the trick arrays one image at a time
private int h = 0;
private int c = 0;
//Used by timeStamp() for documenting time per slide
private long time0 = 0;
private long time1;
public SlideShow3()
{
super();
//Create instance of each Image array
handCuffs = new Image[50];
cups = new Image[176];
//start(handCuffsString);
start("handCuffs");
try
{
screenImage = ImageIO.read(new File("images/begin1.jpg"));
}
catch (IOException nm)
{
System.out.println("begin");
System.out.println(nm.getMessage());
System.exit(0);
}
/******************************************
* Removes window framing. The next line sets fullscreen mode.
* Once fullscreen is set width and height are determined for the window
******************************************/
this.setUndecorated(true);
GraphicsEnvironment.getLocalGraphicsEnvironment().getDefaultScreenDevice().setFullScreenWindow(this);
width = this.getWidth();
height = this.getHeight();
//Mouse click binding to slide advance control structure
addMouseListener(new Mouse());
//Create panel so that I can use key binding which requires JComponent
mainImagePanel = new PaintPanel();
add(mainImagePanel);
/******************************************
* Key Binding
* ESC will exit the slideshow
******************************************/
// Key bound AbstractAction items
escapeAction = new EscapeAction();
// Gets the mainImagePanel InputMap and pairs the key to the action
mainImagePanel.getInputMap().put(KeyStroke.getKeyStroke("ESCAPE"), "doEscapeAction");
// This line pairs the AbstractAction enterAction to the action "doEnterAction"
mainImagePanel.getActionMap().put("doEscapeAction", escapeAction);
/******************************************
* End Key Binding
******************************************/
}
public static void main(String[] args)
{
SwingUtilities.invokeLater(new Runnable() {
#Override
public void run()
{
SlideShow3 show = new SlideShow3();
show.setVisible(true);
}
});
}
//This method executes a specific SwingWorker class to preload images
public void start(String e)
{
if(e.equals("handCuffs"))
{
new ImageWorker(handCuffs.length, h, e).execute();
}
else if(e.equals("cups"))
{
new ImageWorker(cups.length, c, e).execute();
}
}
//Stretches and displays images in fullscreen window
private class PaintPanel extends JPanel
{
#Override
public void paintComponent(Graphics g)
{
if(screenImage != null)
{
super.paintComponent(g);
g.drawImage(screenImage, 0, 0, width, height, this);
}
}
}
/******************************************
* The following SwingWorker class Pre-loads all necessary images.
******************************************/
private class ArrayWrapper
{
private int i;
private Image image;
public ArrayWrapper(Image image, int i)
{
this.i = i;
this.image = image;
}
public int getIndex()
{
return i;
}
public Image getImage()
{
return image;
}
}
private class ImageWorker extends SwingWorker<Image[], ArrayWrapper>
{
private int currentPosition;
private int arraySize;
private String trickName;
private Image[] imageArray;
public ImageWorker(int arraySize, int currentPosition, String trick)
{
super();
this.currentPosition = currentPosition;
this.arraySize = arraySize;
this.trickName = trick;
}
#Override
public Image[] doInBackground()
{
imageArray = new Image[arraySize];
for(int i = currentPosition; i < currentPosition+40 && i < arraySize; i++)
{
try
{
imageArray[i] = ImageIO.read(new File("images/" + trickName + (i+1) + ".jpg"));
ArrayWrapper wrapArray = new ArrayWrapper(imageArray[i], i);
publish(wrapArray);
}
catch (IOException e)
{
System.out.println(trickName);
System.out.println(e.getMessage());
System.exit(0);
}
}
return imageArray;
}
#Override
public void process(List<ArrayWrapper> chunks)
{
for(ArrayWrapper element: chunks)
{
if(trickName.equals("handCuffs"))
{
handCuffs[element.getIndex()] = element.getImage();
}
else if(trickName.equals("cups"))
{
cups[element.getIndex()] = element.getImage();
}
}
}
#Override
public void done()
{
try
{
if(trickName.equals("handCuffs"))
{
handCuffs = get();
}
else if(trickName.equals("cups"))
{
cups = get();
}
}
catch(InterruptedException ignore){}
catch(java.util.concurrent.ExecutionException e)
{
String why = null;
Throwable cause = e.getCause();
if(cause != null)
{
why = cause.getMessage();
}
else
{
why = e.getMessage();
}
System.err.println("Error retrieving file: " + why);
}
}
}
/******************************************
* End SwingWorker Pre-Loading Classes
******************************************/
//Prints out time spent on each slide
public void timeStamp()
{
time1 = System.currentTimeMillis();
if(time0 != 0)
{
System.out.println(time1 - time0);
}
time0 = System.currentTimeMillis();
}
/******************************************
* User Input Classes for Key Binding Actions and Mouse Click Actions
******************************************/
private class EscapeAction extends AbstractAction
{
#Override
public void actionPerformed(ActionEvent e)
{
System.exit(0);
}
}
public class Mouse extends MouseAdapter
{
#Override
public void mouseClicked(MouseEvent e)
{
if(!(h<handCuffs.length) && !(c<cups.length))
{
timeStamp();
System.exit(0);
}
else if(h<handCuffs.length)
{
timeStamp();
screenImage = handCuffs[h];
repaint();
System.out.print("handCuffs[" + (h+1) + "]\t");
h++;
//purge used slides and refresh slide buffer
if(h == 20 || h == 40)
{
for(int i = 0; i < h; i++)
{
handCuffs[i] = null;
}
start("handCuffs");
}
if(h == 45)
{
start("cups");
}
}
else if(c<cups.length)
{
timeStamp();
screenImage = cups[c];
repaint();
System.out.print("cups[" + (c+1) + "]\t");
c++;
//purge used slides and refresh slide buffer
if(c == 20 || c == 40 || c == 60 || c == 80 || c == 100 || c == 120 || c == 140 || c == 160)
{
for(int i = 0; i < c; i++)
{
cups[i] = null;
}
start("cups");
}
}
}
}
/******************************************
* End User Input Classes for Key Binding Actions and Mouse Click Actions
******************************************/
}
This example uses a List<ImageIcon> as a cache of images returned by getImage(). Using getResource(), the delay is imperceptible. The next and previous buttons are bound to the Space key by default.
Addendum: You can control navigation by conditioning a button's setEnabled() state using an instance of javax.swing.Timer, for example.
Addendum: Your second example waits until the mouse is clicked to begin reading an image, an indeterminate process that may return a copy immediately or may not complete until after repaint(). Instead, begin reading the images in the background using ImageIO.read(), as shown here. You can process() your List<Image> and show progress, as seen here. The SwingWorker can be launched from the initial thread, running while you subsequently build your GUI on the EDT. You can display the first image as soon as it is processed.

GameLoop Thread occasionally slow

For the game I'm currently writing for Android devices, I've got a class called RenderView, which is a Thread and updates and renders everything. Occasionally the class logs the message "Game thread is only updating the update method and is not rendering anything". The game is running at 30 fps on my nexus s. And I get the message a couple of times throughout the session. Could someone tell me how I could optimize the class or if I'm forgetting something or that it's totally normal?
Here's my code:
public class RenderView extends SurfaceView implements Runnable {
public final String classTAG = this.getClass().getSimpleName();
Game game;
Bitmap framebuffer;
Thread gameloop;
SurfaceHolder holder;
boolean running;
int sleepTime;
int numberOfFramesSkipped;
long beginTime;
long endTime;
long lastTime;
int differenceTime;
int framePeriod;
Canvas canvas;
int frameCount;
WSLog gameEngineLog;
public RenderView(Game game, Bitmap framebuffer) {
super(game);
this.game = game;
this.framebuffer = framebuffer;
this.holder = getHolder();
framePeriod = 1000/game.getFramesPerSecond();
lastTime = System.currentTimeMillis();
gameEngineLog = game.getGameEngineLog();
}
#Override
public void run() {
while(running == true) {
if(holder.getSurface().isValid()) {
beginTime = System.currentTimeMillis();
numberOfFramesSkipped = 0;
game.getCurrentScreen().update();
game.getCurrentScreen().render(); // Draw out everything to the current virtual screen (the bitmap)
game.getGraphics().renderFrameBuffer(); // Actually draw everything to the real screen (combine both bitmaps)
canvas = holder.lockCanvas();
if(canvas != null) { // Fix for mysterious bug ( FATAL EXCEPTION: Thread)
// The viewing area of our virtual screen on our real screen
canvas.drawBitmap(framebuffer, null, game.getWSScreen().getGameScreenextendeddst(), null);
holder.unlockCanvasAndPost(canvas);
}
else {
gameEngineLog.e(classTAG, "Surface has not been created or otherwise cannot be edited");
}
endTime = System.currentTimeMillis();;
differenceTime = (int) (endTime - beginTime);
sleepTime = (int) (framePeriod - differenceTime);
if(sleepTime > 0) {
try {
Thread.sleep(sleepTime);
} catch (InterruptedException exception) {
exception.printStackTrace();
}
}
else {
while(sleepTime < 0 && numberOfFramesSkipped < game.getMaxFrameSkippes()) {
gameEngineLog.d(classTAG, "Game thread is only updating the update method and is not rendering anything");
try {
Thread.sleep(5);
}
catch (InterruptedException exception) {
exception.printStackTrace();
}
game.getCurrentScreen().update();
sleepTime += framePeriod;
numberOfFramesSkipped++;
}
}
// Frame Per Second Count
frameCount++;
if(lastTime + 1000 < System.currentTimeMillis()) {
game.getGameEngineLog().d(classTAG, "REAL FPS: " + frameCount);
lastTime = System.currentTimeMillis();
frameCount = 0;
}
}
}
}
public void resume() {
running = true;
gameloop = new Thread(this);
gameloop.start();
}
public void pause() {
running = false;
while(running == true) {
try {
gameloop.join();
running = false;
}
catch (InterruptedException e) {
}
}
gameloop = null;
}
}
Here's the code for the Graphics class (the getGraphics() just return an graphics object):
public class Graphics {
public final String classTAG = this.getClass().getSimpleName();
Game game;
Canvas frameBuffer;
Canvas canvasGameScreenextended;
Canvas canvasGameScreen; // Used for customeScreen
Bitmap gameScreenextended;
Bitmap gameScreen;
Rect gameScreendst;
Rect gameScreenextendeddst;
WSLog gameEngineLog;
Graphics(Game game, Bitmap framebuffer, Bitmap gameScreen) {
this.game = game;
// Initialize canvases to render to
frameBuffer = new Canvas(framebuffer);
canvasGameScreen = new Canvas(gameScreen);
// Initialize images to be rendered to our composition
this.gameScreen = gameScreen;
// Set up the Log
gameEngineLog = game.getGameEngineLog();
}
public void resetCanvasGameScreenextended() {
// This method has to be called each time the screen scaling type changes
canvasGameScreenextended = new Canvas(game.getWSScreen().getGameScreenextended());
gameScreenextended = game.getWSScreen().getGameScreenextended();
}
public Canvas getCanvasGameScreenextended() {
return canvasGameScreenextended;
}
public Canvas getCanvasGameScreen() {
return canvasGameScreen;
}
public void renderFrameBuffer() {
// Composition
// First layer (bottom)
frameBuffer.drawBitmap(gameScreen, null, game.getWSScreen().getGameScreendst(), null);
// Second layer (top)
frameBuffer.drawBitmap(gameScreenextended, null, game.getWSScreen().getGameScreenextendeddst(), null);
}
public void clearFrameBuffer() {
canvasGameScreen.drawColor(Color.BLACK);
//canvasGameScreenextended.drawColor(Color.BLACK);
gameScreenextended.eraseColor(Color.TRANSPARENT); // Make top layer transparent
}
}
Here's the code for the screen class (the getCurrentScreen() method returns a screen object):
public class Screen {
public final String classTAG = this.getClass().getSimpleName();
protected final Game game;
protected final Graphics graphics;
protected Screen(Game game) {
this.game = game;
this.graphics = game.getGraphics();
//game.getInput().reset();
}
public void update() {
}
public void render() {
}
/** Initialize all the sensory that should be used within this screen.*/
public void resume() {
}
public void pause() {
game.getInput().useAccelerometer(false);
game.getInput().useKeyboard(false);
game.getInput().useTouchscreen(false);
}
public void onDispose() {
game.getGraphics().clearFrameBuffer();
}
public void setScreenResizeType(int screenResizeType) {
}
The Screen class is extended and the render() method is shadowed with methods like:
graphics.getCanvasGameScreen().drawRect(play, red);
The funny thing is, when I override the render() method and don't place any code in it, the logger fires constantly with the message: "Game thread is only updating the update method and is not rendering anything". What kind of sorcery is this?!
Help is hugely appreciated!
As far as I understand from your updated post, there is no rendering problem actually. Instead, your code mistakenly prints that message.
This is because you check if(sleepTime > 0) , so if the rendering is very fast and sleepTime is zero, you get that message. Just change it to if(sleepTime >= 0).

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