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SFML Game Development By Example

SFML Game Development By Example

By : Pupius
3.9 (22)
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SFML Game Development By Example

SFML Game Development By Example

3.9 (22)
By: Pupius

Overview of this book

Simple and Fast Multimedia Library (SFML) is a simple interface comprising five modules, namely, the audio, graphics, network, system, and window modules, which help to develop cross-platform media applications. By utilizing the SFML library, you are provided with the ability to craft games quickly and easily, without going through an extensive learning curve. This effectively serves as a confidence booster, as well as a way to delve into the game development process itself, before having to worry about more advanced topics such as “rendering pipelines” or “shaders.” With just an investment of moderate C++ knowledge, this book will guide you all the way through the journey of game development. The book starts by building a clone of the classical snake game where you will learn how to open a window and render a basic sprite, write well-structured code to implement the design of the game, and use the AABB bounding box collision concept. The next game is a simple platformer with enemies, obstacles and a few different stages. Here, we will be creating states that will provide custom application flow and explore the most common yet often overlooked design patterns used in game development. Last but not the least, we will create a small RPG game where we will be using common game design patterns, multiple GUI. elements, advanced graphical features, and sounds and music features. We will also be implementing networking features that will allow other players to join and play together. By the end of the book, you will be an expert in using the SFML library to its full potential.
Table of Contents (16 chapters)
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15
Index

Sound spatialization

Both sf::Sound and sf::Music also support spatial positioning. It takes advantage of left and right audio channels and makes it feel like the sound is actually playing around you. There is a catch, though. Every sound or music instance that is desired to be spatial has to only have a single channel. It is more commonly known as a monophonic or mono sound, as opposed to stereo that already decides how the speakers are used.

The way sounds are perceived in three-dimensional space is manipulated through a single, static class: sf::Listener. It's static because there can only ever be one listener per application. The main two aspects of this class we're interested in are the position and direction of the listener. Keep in mind that although we may be working on a 2D game, SFML sounds exist in 3D space. Let's take a look at an example:

sf::Listener::setPosition(5.f, 0.f, 5.f);
sf::Listener::setDirection(1.f, 0.f, 0.f);

First, let's address the three-dimensional...

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