Move: Difference between revisions
Describe difference of move handling between Enemy/Notenemy |
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ifaction MYACTION | ifaction MYACTION | ||
{ | { | ||
ifmove mymove {} | ifmove mymove {} // alternatively: ifmove mymove nullop | ||
else | else | ||
move mymove | move mymove |
Revision as of 14:06, 22 February 2020
A move command is used to give velocity to an actor.
Define outside an actor as so:
move <name> <horizontal> <vertical>
<name> is the name of the move command.
Warning: You cannot use the same name from a define, or the game will crash.
<horizontal> is the horizontal velocity of the actor. Negative values reverse direction.
<vertical> is the vertical veloctity of the actor. Negative values cause upward motion.
Used inside an actor, a move command is written as:
move <name> <moveflags...>
<moveflags...> is a (possibly empty) sequence of parameters that specify certain hardcoded movement behavior.
You cannot substitute <name> for a number, define, or gamevar. It has to be predefined with the first definition of move.
moveflags
Values for each <moveflag> (defined in DEFS.CON) are:
moveflag | description | internal value | |
---|---|---|---|
faceplayer | actor faces the player. | 1 | |
geth | use horizontal velocity. | 2 | |
getv | use vertical velocity. | 4 | |
randomangle | actor will face random direction. | 8 | |
faceplayerslow | same as faceplayer, but done gradually. | 16 | |
spin | spin in a clockwise circle. | 32 | |
faceplayersmart | same as faceplayer, but with a slight "lead" on position. | 64 | |
fleeenemy | actor faces away from the player. | 128 | |
jumptoplayer | actor will move vertically and then fall as if jumping. | 257* | |
seekplayer | actor will try to find the best path to the nearest player. | 512 | |
furthestdir | actor faces the furthest distance from the closest player. | 1024 | |
dodgebullet | actor attempts to avoid all shots directed at him. The actor will not avoid GROWSPARK. | 4096 |
Making a Useractor move
A useractor can be made to move as part of a given action. The type of the useractor (ie. Enemy/Notenemy) has an impact on how this functions. Typically one might expect that we can apply the move on each tic of the action but it doesn't work that way for type Enemy. For that type, a move is started with a "momentum". If it is applied on each tic, the actor will not move at all. On each tic it must be checked if the actor is already moving, and only call the move if they aren't.
This behaviour does not occur for a Notenemy useractor type.
In other words, for a Notenemy, this is sufficient:
ifaction MYACTION { move mymove // and apply whatever other flags, e.g. geth }
For an Enemy, use this:
ifaction MYACTION { ifmove mymove {} // alternatively: ifmove mymove nullop else move mymove }