Book Image

Learn HTML5 by Creating Fun Games

By : Rodrigo Silveira
Book Image

Learn HTML5 by Creating Fun Games

By: Rodrigo Silveira

Overview of this book

HTML is fast, secure, responsive, interactive, and stunningly beautiful. It lets you target the largest number of devices and browsers with the least amount of effort. Working with the latest technologies is always fun and with a rapidly growing mobile market, it is a new and exciting place to be."Learn HTML5 by Creating Fun Games" takes you through the journey of learning HTML5 right from setting up the environment to creating fully-functional games. It will help you explore the basics while you work through the whole book with the completion of each game."Learn HTML5 by Creating Fun Games" takes a very friendly approach to teaching fun, silly games for the purpose of giving you a thorough grounding in HTML5. The book has only as much theory as it has to, often in tip boxes, with most of the information explaining how to create HTML5 canvas games. You will be assisted with lots of simple steps with screenshots building towards silly but addictive games.The book introduces you to HTML5 by helping you understand the setup and the underlying environment. As you start building your first game that is a typography game, you understand the significance of elements used in game development such as input types, web forms, and so on.We will see how to write a modern browser-compatible code while creating a basic Jelly Wobbling Game. Each game introduces you to an advanced topic such as vector graphics, native audio manipulation, and dragging-and-dropping. In the later section of the book, you will see yourself developing the famous snake game using requestAnimationFrame along with the canvas API, and enhancing it further with web messaging, web storage, and local storage. The last game of this book, a 2D Space shooter game, will then help you understand mobile design considerations.
Table of Contents (14 chapters)

Chapter 5. Improving the Snake Game

This chapter is the second and final part of the series where we're building a more robust snake game. In this chapter, we'll take what we already had from Chapter 3, Understanding the Gravity of HTML5, and add more HTML5 APIs to it, so as to make the game more feature rich, providing an even more engaging user experience.

The first version of the game used five HTML5 concepts, namely 2D canvas rendering, offline application cache, web workers, typed arrays, and requestAnimationFrame. In this version, we'll include two features from the new web storage API, namely local storage and session storage. We'll also look at a third API that is part of web storage, IndexedDB, as well as the web messaging feature, which includes cross-domain messaging.

Local storage and session storage are two mechanisms that allow us to save data on the user's browser using a key-value strategy. This is similar to a cookie, where every value must be a string. The difference between...