Book Image

3D Game Development with Microsoft Silverlight 3: Beginner's Guide

By : Gaston C. Hillar
Book Image

3D Game Development with Microsoft Silverlight 3: Beginner's Guide

By: Gaston C. Hillar

Overview of this book

Microsoft Silverlight is a programmable web browser plug-in that enables the animation, vector graphics, and audio-video playback features that characterize Rich Internet Applications. Silverlight is a great (and growing) RIA platform and games are the next level to exploit in it. But it doesn't offer 3D capabilities out of the box and integrating a 3D engine can involve lot of complex mathematics and matrix algebra. This book will help C# developers to get their fingers on the pulse of 3D in Silverlight. This book uses Balder, an open source 3D engine offering 3D capabilities for Silverlight 3. It leaves out boring matrix algebra and complex 3D mathematics. By the end of the book you will have explored the entire engine, and will be able to design and program your own 3D games with ease! The book begins by introducing you to the fundamental concepts of 2D games and then drives you into the 3D world, using easy-to-follow, step-by-step examples. The book employs amazing graphics and impressive performance, and increasingly adds more features to a 3D game giving you a rich interactive experience. By following the practical examples in this book, you will learn the important concepts, from the creation of the initial models, up to the addition of physics and artificial intelligence. The book helps you to provide realistic behaviors for 3D characters by enveloping models with different textures, using lights to create effects, animating multiple 3D characters using a physics engine (Farseer Physics Engine), and simulating real-life physics. Videos, music, and sounds associated with specific events offer the final touches to the 3D game development learning experience.
Table of Contents (21 chapters)
3D Game Development with Microsoft Silverlight 3
Credits
About the Author
Acknowledgement
About the Reviewer
Preface
Pop quiz—Answers

Time for action—from DCC tools to WPF


Now, we are going to display the XAML 3D model exported from Blender in an XBAP WPF application:

  1. 1. Create a new C# project using the WPF Browser Application template in Visual Studio or Visual C# Express. Use 3DInvadersXBAP as the project's name.

  2. 2. Open the file that defines the XAML 3D model using Notepad or any other text editor. Select all the content and copy it to the clipboard.

  3. 3. Open the XAML code for Page1.xaml (double-click on it in the Solution Explorer) and paste the previously copied XAML 3D model after the line that begins defining the main Grid (<Grid>). You will see the spaceship appear in the page in the designer window. You can understand how an XAML 3D model is defined and inserted in a Viewport3D container navigating through the document's outline, as shown in the following screenshot:

  4. 4. Build and run the solution. The default web browser will appear showing the spaceship rendered in the 2D window. Resize the web browser...