Rotatesprite: Difference between revisions

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'''rotatesprite''' displays tiles onscreen. This command is only allowed during certain events.
'''rotatesprite''' displays tiles onscreen. This command is only allowed during certain events.


<[[x]]> X coordinate, ranged 0-320
<[[x]]> X coordinate, normally ranged 0-320


<[[y]]> Y coordinate, ranged 0-200  
<[[y]]> Y coordinate, normally ranged 0-200  


<[[zoom]]> is normally 65536. (ex: 131072 is zoomed in 2X and 32768 is half-sized)
<[[zoom]]> is normally 65536. (ex: 131072 is zoomed in 2X and 32768 is half-sized)

Revision as of 02:56, 3 June 2013

rotatesprite <x> <y> <zoom> <ang> <tilenum> <shade> <pal> <orientation> <x1> <y1> <x2> <y2>
rotatespritea <x> <y> <zoom> <ang> <tilenum> <shade> <pal> <orientation> <alpha> <x1> <y1> <x2> <y2>

rotatesprite displays tiles onscreen. This command is only allowed during certain events.

<x> X coordinate, normally ranged 0-320

<y> Y coordinate, normally ranged 0-200

<zoom> is normally 65536. (ex: 131072 is zoomed in 2X and 32768 is half-sized)

<ang> is the angle, normally 0, where 360 degrees corresponds to 2048 Build units

<tilenum> is the tile number.

<shade> is 0 normally but can be any standard shade up to 31 or 63.

<pal> can be from 0-255.

<orientation> a bitfield describing translucency, masking, etc...

<alpha> translucence, 0-255

<x1>, <y1>, <x2>, and <y2> are boundaries on the screen that define where the tile may be drawn. If you want to draw a menu, use orientation bit 8, and the boundaries 0 0 xdim-1 ydim-1 as shown in example #2. If you want to draw a weapon, do not use bit 8 and use boundaries windowx1 windowy1 windowx2 windowy2, as shown in example #1. The difference is that xdim and ydim stay constant, while the other four shrink depending on the player's screen size.

setvar x 164
setvar y 176
setvar z 65536
setvar ang 0
setvar tilenum RPGGUN
setvar shade 0
setvar pal 0
setvar orientation 0
rotatesprite x y z ang tilenum shade pal orientation windowx1 windowy1 windowx2 windowy2

This example displays the loading screen with 90% translucence as a kind of "Please Wait" sign:

setvarvar xdimminus xdim
subvar xdimminus 1
setvarvar ydimminus ydim
subvar ydimminus 1
rotatespritea 160 100 65536 0 LOADSCREEN 0 0 8 230 0 0 xdimminus ydimminus

Note: This command is similar to the deprecated myospal and myospalx commands, but with much more control.