Book Image

Beginning C++ Game Programming - Second Edition

By : John Horton
Book Image

Beginning C++ Game Programming - Second Edition

By: John Horton

Overview of this book

The second edition of Beginning C++ Game Programming is updated and improved to include the latest features of Visual Studio 2019, SFML, and modern C++ programming techniques. With this book, you’ll get a fun introduction to game programming by building five fully playable games of increasing complexity. You’ll learn to build clones of popular games such as Timberman, Pong, a Zombie survival shooter, a coop puzzle platformer and Space Invaders. The book starts by covering the basics of programming. You’ll study key C++ topics, such as object-oriented programming (OOP) and C++ pointers, and get acquainted with the Standard Template Library (STL). The book helps you learn about collision detection techniques and game physics by building a Pong game. As you build games, you’ll also learn exciting game programming concepts such as particle effects, directional sound (spatialization), OpenGL programmable shaders, spawning objects, and much more. Finally, you’ll explore game design patterns to enhance your C++ game programming skills. By the end of the book, you’ll have gained the knowledge you need to build your own games with exciting features from scratch
Table of Contents (25 chapters)
23
Chapter 23: Before You Go...

Making the bullets fly

We will make the bullets usable by following these six steps:

  1. Add the necessary include directive for the Bullet class.
  2. Add some control variables and an array to hold some Bullet instances.
  3. Handle the player pressing R to reload.
  4. Handle the player pressing the left mouse button to fire a bullet.
  5. Update all bullets that are in flight in each frame.
  6. Draw the bullets that are in flight in each frame.

Including the Bullet class

Add the include directive to make the Bullet class available:

#include <SFML/Graphics.hpp>
#include "ZombieArena.h"
#include "Player.h"
#include "TextureHolder.h"
#include "Bullet.h"
using namespace sf;

Let's move on to the next step.

Control variables and the bullet array

Here are some variables to keep track of clip sizes, spare bullets, bullets, the remaining bullets in the clip, the current rate of fire (starting at one per second), and...