Book Image

Game Development Patterns and Best Practices

By : John P. Doran, Matt Casanova
Book Image

Game Development Patterns and Best Practices

By: John P. Doran, Matt Casanova

Overview of this book

You’ve learned how to program, and you’ve probably created some simple games at some point, but now you want to build larger projects and find out how to resolve your problems. So instead of a coder, you might now want to think like a game developer or software engineer. To organize your code well, you need certain tools to do so, and that’s what this book is all about. You will learn techniques to code quickly and correctly, while ensuring your code is modular and easily understandable. To begin, we will start with the core game programming patterns, but not the usual way. We will take the use case strategy with this book. We will take an AAA standard game and show you the hurdles at multiple stages of development. Similarly, various use cases are used to showcase other patterns such as the adapter pattern, prototype pattern, flyweight pattern, and observer pattern. Lastly, we’ll go over some tips and tricks on how to refactor your code to remove common code smells and make it easier for others to work with you. By the end of the book you will be proficient in using the most popular and frequently used patterns with the best practices.
Table of Contents (19 chapters)
Title Page
Credits
About the Authors
About the Reviewers
www.PacktPub.com
Customer Feedback
Preface
4
Artificial Intelligence Using the State Pattern

Chapter overview


In this chapter, we will be focusing on creating a game object that is flexible enough to adapt as our game design changes. We will do this by first looking at the two most common ways that new programmers create a game object, and the problems that arise when we use these approaches. Then we will discuss two design patterns that can help us solve our problem. Finally, we will arrive at our solution of creating a reusable, flexible game object. Since we know our game design and game objects are likely to change, the questions we are going to answer are the following:

  • Is it possible to write game objects in a reusable way?
  • How can we decouple our game objects from our core engine code?
  • If we have a reusable game object, how can we make it flexible enough to use in different games or account for changes in our game design while the game is being developed?

Along the way, we will discuss a few important design principles that will come up again and again in this book that will...