Book Image

Unreal Development Kit Game Programming with UnrealScript: Beginner's Guide

By : Rachel Cordone
Book Image

Unreal Development Kit Game Programming with UnrealScript: Beginner's Guide

By: Rachel Cordone

Overview of this book

Unreal Development Kit is the free edition of Unreal Engine—the largest game engine in existence with hundreds of shipped commercial titles. The Unreal Engine is a very powerful tool for game development but with something so complex it's hard to know where to start.This book will teach you how to use the UnrealScript language to create your own games with the Unreal Development Kit by using an example game that you can create and play for yourself. It breaks down the UnrealScript language into easy to follow chapters that will quickly bring you up to speed with UnrealScript game programming.Unreal Development Kit Game Programming with UnrealScript takes you through the UnrealScript language for the Unreal Development Kit. It starts by walking through a project setup and setting up programs to write and browse code. It then takes you through using variables, functions, and custom classes to alter the game's behavior and create our own functionality. The use and creation of Kismet is also covered. Later, using replication to create and test multiplayer games is discussed. The book closes with code optimization and error handling as well as a few of the less common but useful features of UnrealScript.
Table of Contents (18 chapters)
Unreal Development Kit Game Programming with UnrealScript
Credits
About the Author
About the Reviewers
www.PacktPub.com
Preface
Index

Time for action – Using ReplicatedEvent


We need to make some changes to AwesomeWeaponUpgrade for this to work.

  1. Delete ClientTest, but we're still going to use ServerTest so leave that for now.

  2. Let's rewrite the PostBeginPlay function:

    simulated function PostBeginPlay()
    {
        if(Role == ROLE_Authority)
            SetTimer(3.0, false, 'ServerTest');
    }

    This time we're using a non-repeating timer with a longer delay.

  3. ServerTest doesn't need to be changed for this, so let's leave it as it is.

  4. Now we need to let the game know that we want ReplicatedEvent called when TestInt is replicated, so let's put the variable modifier in:

    var repnotify int TestInt;
  5. Now let's write the ReplicatedEvent function:

    simulated event ReplicatedEvent(name VarName)
    {
        if(VarName == 'TestInt')
            `log("TestInt was replicated!");
    }
  6. Compile the code.

  7. Run the server and the client, and hit the trigger.

  8. Now let's take a look at what happened on the server:

    [0016.42] ScriptLog: ServerTest: 1

    We'll notice that ReplicatedEvent wasn...