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Beginning C++ Game Programming

Beginning C++ Game Programming

By : John Horton
4.3 (27)
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Beginning C++ Game Programming

Beginning C++ Game Programming

4.3 (27)
By: John Horton

Overview of this book

Always dreamed of creating your own games? With the third edition of Beginning C++ Game Programming, you can turn that dream into reality! This beginner-friendly guide is updated and improved to include the latest features of VS 2022, SFML, and modern C++20 programming techniques. You'll get a fun introduction to game programming by building four fully playable games of increasing complexity. You'll build clones of popular games such as Timberman, Pong, a Zombie survival shooter, and an endless runner. The book starts by covering the basics of programming. You'll study key C++ topics, such as object-oriented programming (OOP) and C++ pointers and get acquainted with the Standard Template Library (STL). The book helps you learn about collision detection techniques and game physics by building a Pong game. As you build games, you'll also learn exciting game programming concepts such as vertex arrays, directional sound (spatialization), OpenGL programmable shaders, spawning objects, and much more. You’ll dive deep into game mechanics and implement input handling, levelling up a character, and simple enemy AI. Finally, you'll explore game design patterns to enhance your C++ game programming skills. By the end of the book, you'll have gained the knowledge you need to build your own games with exciting features from scratch.
Table of Contents (24 chapters)
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22
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23
Index

AABB Collision Detection and Physics – Finishing the Pong Game

In this chapter, we will code our second class. We will see that although the ball is obviously quite different from the bat, we will use the exact same techniques to encapsulate the appearance and functionality of a ball inside a Ball class, just like we did with the bat and the Bat class. We will then add the finishing touches to the Pong game by coding some collision detection and scorekeeping. This might sound complicated but as we are coming to expect, SFML will make things much easier than they otherwise would be.

We will cover the following topics in this chapter:

  • Coding the Ball class
  • Using the Ball class
  • Collision detection and scoring
  • Running the game
  • Learning about the C++ spaceship operator

We will start by coding the class that represents the ball.

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