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You're reading from  Game Development Patterns with Unreal Engine 5

Product typeBook
Published inJan 2024
Reading LevelBeginner
PublisherPackt
ISBN-139781803243252
Edition1st Edition
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Authors (2):
Stuart Butler
Stuart Butler
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Stuart Butler

Stuart Butler is an Unreal Engine Expert with over 13 years of experience in teaching Games Development in Higher Education. Stuart has published projects in a multitude of disciplines including Technical Design, Art, and Animation. Stuart is the Course Director for Games Technology at Staffordshire University, responsible for the programming team within the UK's largest Games Education Department. Stuart is also an Unreal Authorised Instructor and Educational Content Creator who works with Epic Games on developing learning materials for Unreal Engine 5. Stuart holds a BSc (Hons) in Computer Games Design and a PgC in Higher and Professional Education.
Read more about Stuart Butler

Tom Oliver
Tom Oliver
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Tom Oliver

Tom Oliver is a game programmer with over 10 years of experience in working with game engines both commercially and in an educational capacity. He has used Unreal Engine for contract work both in and out of the games industry, creating systems for games to mixed reality training simulations. Tom is the Course Leader for the BSc (Hons) Computer Games Design and Programming program at Staffordshire University, responsible for maintaining the award winning structure and teaching of the course in the UK's largest Games Education Department. Tom holds a BSc (Hons) in Computer Games Design and Programming and a PGc in Higher and Professional Education. Tom specialises in researching gameplay systems driven through mathematical phenomena.
Read more about Tom Oliver

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Technical requirements

In this chapter, we are going to delve into three patterns that are important to how any commercial engine performs. There will be some use of Big O notation, which is simply a low-resolution way of measuring the time efficiency of an algorithm. The lower the resulting number when replacing the n with a large number, such as 1,000, the better the time efficiency. For example, an algorithm that compares each element of an array with every other element of the same array could be described as O(n2). This comes from the idea that the algorithm is a couple of nested for loops that run for the length of the input data. Maybe then we improve efficiency, meaning we don’t need to recheck elements as we go through making the seconds for the loop shorter with each iteration. This would result in O(n log2n). Looking at these values, you can tell that for large numbers, O(n2) is far worse, giving an estimated cost of 1,000,000 executions for an array of size 1,000...

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Game Development Patterns with Unreal Engine 5
Published in: Jan 2024Publisher: PacktISBN-13: 9781803243252

Authors (2)

author image
Stuart Butler

Stuart Butler is an Unreal Engine Expert with over 13 years of experience in teaching Games Development in Higher Education. Stuart has published projects in a multitude of disciplines including Technical Design, Art, and Animation. Stuart is the Course Director for Games Technology at Staffordshire University, responsible for the programming team within the UK's largest Games Education Department. Stuart is also an Unreal Authorised Instructor and Educational Content Creator who works with Epic Games on developing learning materials for Unreal Engine 5. Stuart holds a BSc (Hons) in Computer Games Design and a PgC in Higher and Professional Education.
Read more about Stuart Butler

author image
Tom Oliver

Tom Oliver is a game programmer with over 10 years of experience in working with game engines both commercially and in an educational capacity. He has used Unreal Engine for contract work both in and out of the games industry, creating systems for games to mixed reality training simulations. Tom is the Course Leader for the BSc (Hons) Computer Games Design and Programming program at Staffordshire University, responsible for maintaining the award winning structure and teaching of the course in the UK's largest Games Education Department. Tom holds a BSc (Hons) in Computer Games Design and Programming and a PGc in Higher and Professional Education. Tom specialises in researching gameplay systems driven through mathematical phenomena.
Read more about Tom Oliver