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Game Development Patterns with Unity 2021 - Second Edition

You're reading from  Game Development Patterns with Unity 2021 - Second Edition

Product type Book
Published in Jul 2021
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781800200814
Pages 246 pages
Edition 2nd Edition
Languages
Author (1):
David Baron David Baron
Profile icon David Baron

Table of Contents (22) Chapters

Preface 1. Sections 1: Fundamentals
2. Before We Begin 3. The Game Design Document 4. A Short Primer to Programming in Unity 5. Section 2: Core Patterns
6. Implementing a Game Manager with the Singleton 7. Managing Character States with the State Pattern 8. Managing Game Events with the Event Bus 9. Implement a Replay System with the Command Pattern 10. Optimizing with the Object Pool Pattern 11. Decoupling Components with the Observer Pattern 12. Implementing Power-Ups with the Visitor Pattern 13. Implementing a Drone with the Strategy Pattern 14. Using the Decorator to Implement a Weapon System 15. Implementing a Level Editor with Spatial Partition 16. Section 3: Alternative Patterns
17. Adapting Systems with an Adapter 18. Concealing Complexity with a Facade Pattern 19. Managing Dependencies with the Service Locator Pattern 20. About Packt 21. Other Books You May Enjoy

Technical requirements

This is a hands-on chapter; you will need to have a basic understanding of Unity and C#.

We will be using the following specific Unity engine and C# language concept: Generics.

If unfamiliar with this concept, please review Chapter 3, A Short Primer to Programming in Unity.

The code files of this chapter can be found on GitHub at https://github.com/PacktPublishing/Game-Development-Patterns-with-Unity-2021-Second-Edition/tree/main/Assets/Chapters/Chapter04.

Check out the following video to see the Code in Action: 
https://bit.ly/3wDbM6W

Generics is a compelling C# feature that permits us to defer the type for a class at runtime. When we say a class is generic, it means that it doesn't have a defined object type. This approach is advantageous because we can assign it a specific type when we initialize it. 
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