Library Reference
These are the optional modules, some of which make up the Standard Packet. They are located in lib/
. Some libraries depend on other libraries.
2D Arrays (array2d.f)
2D Arrays are either statically allocated, or, exist as "header" information about an arbitrary block of memory.
You could use a 2D array header to perform operations on a section of a static 2d array, or allocate a 2d array from the OS heap, which is what's done in buffer2d.f
.
2move
( src /pitch dest /pitch nrows /bytes -- )
clip
( col row ncols nrows ndestcols ndestrows -- col row ncols nrows )
array2d-head,
( cols rows -- ) create a 2d array header in dictionary
array2d
( numcols numrows -- ) create a 2d array in dictionary
count2d
( array2d -- addr #cells ) get address and total number of all cells
dims@
( array2d -- #cols #rows ) get array2d's dimensions
loc
( col row array2d -- addr ) get address of cell at col, row
pitch@
( array2d -- /pitch ) get array2d's pitch in bytes
addr-pitch
( col row array2d -- addr /pitch )
some2d
( ... col row #cols #rows array2d XT -- ... ) ( ... addr #cells -- ... ) iterate
some2d>
( col row #cols #rows array2d -- ) ( addr #cells -- ) iterate
fill2d
( val col row #cols #rows array2d -- ) fill each cell of 2d array with value
Warning: As of 1.7, the following words in array2d.f are untested. They were tested and working before they were brought into Ramen from a previous engine, but it's possible that some may be broken due to API changes. 2MOVE CLIP BATCH WRITE2D
2D Buffers (buffer2d.f)
2D buffers are 2D arrays that are allocated from the system heap.
2D buffer declaration example:
Audio (audio1.f)
Provides basic audio.
play
( sample -- ) Play sample asset. (Not ALLEGRO_SAMPLE structs.)
stream
( addr c loopmode -- ) Stream audio file. You can stream only one file at a time.
Loop modes: once
bidir
looping
The audio files supported are the same as the ones supported by Allegro. (WAV, AIFF, OGG, MP3, MOD, S3M, IT, XM, possibly more).
variable strm
points to the current playing ALLEGRO_AUDIO_STREAM.
Collision Grid (cgrid.f)
Fast collisions suitable for shootemups, simulations, and large open worlds. It works by giving each object a hitbox (of type cbox
), breaking up the game world into a grid, and only checking the other objects in the same grid space.
To use it, you first create a collision grid. Then at some point you "bin" the objects you want to check an object against. You can do this once, such as for background objects when you load a map, or every frame, in the case of moving objects. (Note that when you want to bin objects every frame, you must clear the grid first.) Finally you check an object against the grid, upon which a given XT will be executed upon any collisions.
An object can be binned into only one cgrid at a time.
Before you bin an object, you have to set ahb
, a struct that describes the object's rectangle. (structure: x1,y1,x2,y2)
Note: By default, the size of rectangles can't be bigger than 512x512 pixels. To get around this limitation you can break up larger rectangles using break2d
, found in stride2d.f
Collision grid declaration example:
ahb
( -- cbox ) "absolute hitbox"
cbox!
( x y w h cbox -- )
cbox@
( cbox -- x y w h )
resetcgrid
( cgrid -- )
addcbox
( cbox cgrid -- )
checkcgrid
( cbox1 xt cgrid -- ) check a cbox against
checkcbox
( cbox1 xt cgrid -- )
cgrid-size
( cgrid -- w h )
See rectland.f for a complete example.
Draw (draw.f)
See Drawing.
Numeric Range Tools (rangetools.f)
Tools for working with 1D and 2D ranges.
Rectangles (rect.f)
Generic data structure representing a rectangle.
Radix Sort (rsort.f)
Here is a list of the operations for working with rectangles. Their stack effects are self-explanatory.
Note: The following words also work with vectors - x@ y@ x! y!
x@
y@
w@
h@
xy@
wh@
rect.
xywh@
x2@
y2@
xy2@
x!
y!
w!
h!
xy!
wh!
xywh!
x2!
y2!
xy2!
Fast radix sort routine. The algorithm is specially tailored for sorting fixed point integers from 0 to 65535. Used by zsort.f
.
Sprites (sprites.f)
rsort
( addr n xt - ) ( addr -- n ) destructively sort an array of values.
Note: Any decimal portions will be ignored, and values above 65535 will be sorted incorrectly.
area
( x y w h - x1 y1 x2 y2 )
lowerupper
( n n - lower higher )
between
( n n - n ) pick random value between 2 values. (inclusive)
vary
( n rnd - n ) randomize a value N by range RND
2vary
( n n rnd rnd - n n )
either
( a b - a | b ) randomly return one of two values
2ratio
( x y w h xfactor yfactor - x y ) find a point within a rectangle, proportionally.
middle
( x y w h - x y ) get center of rectangle
2halve
( x y - x/2 y/2 )
center
( w1 h1 x y w2 h2 - x y ) center a rectangle (1) in the middle of another one (2). returns x/y of top-left corner of centered rectangle.
2rnd
( x y - x y )
somewhere
( x y w h - x y ) find a random point in a rectangle
overlap?
( x1 y1 x2 y2 x3 y3 x4 y4 - flag ) check if two areas overlap
inside?
( x y x1 y1 x2 y2 - flag ) check if a point is in an area
See Sprites.
Stage (stage.f)
Simple scrolling 2D game framework. Use as-is, or as a template to copy and customize.
Features:
Predefined game object list
Camera object
Camera can be set to follow an object
Camera "flyby" mode
Note: When using tilemap scrolling, you need to compensate for the camera position, Otherwise set the tilemap's width and height to the size of the entire source map and don't use scrollx
and scrolly
.
Round-robin Multitasking (task.f)
In games you will often want to have your characters do different actions in sequence or in response to things. Some examples of where this technique is indispensible is platforming games, cutscenes, enemy attack patterns, boss fights, and A.I.
Programming objects to do different things over time in conventional engines isn't trivial. You have to use state machines, counters and state checks and flags or yield signals.
Ramen's approach makes it very easy, allowing you to use natural structured programming to define complex object behavior.
...
Tiled (tiled.f)
Tiled map format support.
See Tiled Support
2D Vectors (v2d.f)
Generic data structure representing a 2D vector in space and accompanying storage and math words.
Depth-sorting (zsort.f)
Extends game objects with a zdepth
field and provides a routine for rendering an object list sorted by this value.
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