Book Image

C++ Game Animation Programming - Second Edition

By : Michael Dunsky, Gabor Szauer
4.5 (2)
Book Image

C++ Game Animation Programming - Second Edition

4.5 (2)
By: Michael Dunsky, Gabor Szauer

Overview of this book

If you‘re fascinated by the complexities of animating video game characters and are curious about the transformation of model files into 3D avatars and NPCs that can explore virtual worlds, then this book is for you. In this new edition, you’ll learn everything you need to know about game animation, from a simple graphical window to a large crowd of smoothly animated characters. First, you’ll learn how to use modern high-performance graphics, dig into the details of how virtual characters are stored, and load the models and animations into a minimalistic game-like application. Then, you’ll get an overview of the components of an animation system, how to play the animations and combine them, and how to blend from one animation into another. You’ll also get an introduction to topics that will make your programming life easier, such as debugging your code or stripping down the graphical output. By the end of this book, you’ll have gained deep insights into all the parts of game animation programming and how they work together, revealing the magic that brings life to the virtual worlds on your screen.
Table of Contents (22 chapters)
1
Part 1:Building a Graphics Renderer
7
Part 2: Mathematics Roundup
10
Part 3: Working with Models and Animations
15
Part 4: Advancing Your Code to the Next Level

Using helper libraries for Vulkan

Having full control of your graphics hardware sounds cool, but the extensive amount of code for the basic initialization might scare people who are new to Vulkan. Writing about 1,000 lines of code just to get a colored triangle onto the screen may sound frightening.

To reduce the code a bit, two helper libraries are integrated:

  • vk-bootstrap, the Vulkan Bootstrap, which is for the first steps of creating the instance, device, and swapchain
  • The Vulkan Memory Allocator (VMA), taking some of the complexity out of the memory management out of the code

We start with the simplification of the creation of the most important objects.

Initializing Vulkan via vk-bootstrap

If you visit the GitHub page for vk-bootstrap at https://github.com/charles-lunarg/vk-bootstrap, the benefits are listed right at the top of the README file. It will help you with all the steps needed for the following:

  • Instance creation, enabling the validation...