Book Image

C++ Game Development By Example

By : Siddharth Shekar
Book Image

C++ Game Development By Example

By: Siddharth Shekar

Overview of this book

Although numerous languages are currently being used to develop games, C++ remains the standard for fabricating expert libraries and tool chains for game development. This book introduces you to the world of game development with C++. C++ Game Development By Example starts by touching upon the basic concepts of math, programming, and computer graphics and creating a simple side-scrolling action 2D game. You'll build a solid foundation by studying basic game concepts such as creating game loops, rendering 2D game scenes using SFML, 2D sprite creation and animation, and collision detection. The book will help you advance to creating a 3D physics puzzle game using modern OpenGL and the Bullet physics engine. You'll understand the graphics pipeline, which entails creating 3D objects using vertex and index buffers and rendering them to the scene using vertex and fragment shaders. Finally, you'll create a basic project using the Vulkan library that'll help you get to grips with creating swap chains, image views, render passes, and frame buffers for building high-performance graphics in your games. By the end of this book, you’ll be ready with 3 compelling projects created with SFML, the Vulkan API, and OpenGL, and you'll be able take your game and graphics programming skills to the next level.
Table of Contents (18 chapters)
Free Chapter
1
Section 1: Basic Concepts
4
Section 2: SFML 2D Game Development
8
Section 3: Modern OpenGL 3D Game Development
12
Section 4: Rendering 3D Objects with Vulkan

Creating the window surface

We need an interface for the window we created for the current platform so that we can present the images we will render. We use the VKSurfaceKHR property to get access to the window surface. To store the surface information that the OS supports, we will call the glfw function, glfwCreateWindowSurface, to create the surface that's supported by the OS.

In VulkanContext.h, add a new variable of the VkSurfaceKHR type called surface, as follows:

private: 
 
   //surface 
   VkSurfaceKHR surface; 
 

Since we need access to the window instance we created in source.cpp, change the initVulkan function so that it accepts a GLFWwindow, as follows:

   void initVulkan(GLFWwindow* window); 
 

In VulkanContext.cpp, change the initVulkan implementation as follows and call the glfwCreateWindowSurface function, which takes in the Vulkan instance and the window...