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You're reading from  SFML Game Development

Product typeBook
Published inJun 2013
Reading LevelIntermediate
PublisherPackt
ISBN-139781849696845
Edition1st Edition
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Authors (5):
 Artur Moreira
Artur Moreira
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Artur Moreira

Artur Moreira is a game development enthusiast who ultimately aims to start a new game development company in his home country. He has been programming games and game-related software for over 4 years. Most of the effort in that time was put in creating an open source game-making library with lots of flexibility and portability. The library is called Nephilim and is known for supporting all major desktop and mobile operating systems, making game development fully crossplatform and fast. Alongside this big project, he keeps making his own prototypes and games for educational and commercial purposes. Aside from the programming, he also puts some focus in creative areas such as 3D modeling, digital painting, and music composing.
Read more about Artur Moreira

 Henrik Vogelius Hansson
Henrik Vogelius Hansson
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Henrik Vogelius Hansson

Henrik Vogelius Hansson has always been in love with both games and programming. He started his education fairly early and continued on into the indie scene with Defrost Games and their game Project Temporality. The next company that hired him was Paradox Development Studio where he got to work on titles such as Crusader Kings 2. Beside the game companies, Henrik has also been very active in the SFML community and has even provided a binding for Ruby called rbSFML.
Read more about Henrik Vogelius Hansson

Jan Haller
Jan Haller
Henrik Valter Vogelius
Henrik Valter Vogelius
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Defining texture atlases


A texture atlas describes the concept of a single texture that contains multiple objects. You may also encounter other terms, such as sprite sheet, or tile set in the case of squared tiles put together. Texture atlases allow having fewer image files, which decreases the amount of switches between different textures at runtime. Since texture switching is a rather slow operation on the graphics card, using texture atlases may result in notable speedups. Till now, we used separate textures for each object: one for each aircraft, pick-up, projectile, button, and background. Every texture was stored in its own PNG file. The code design looked as follows:

  • Textures were stored inside TextureHolder, our container storing sf::Texture objects.

  • We had an enum Textures::ID to identify the different textures in a TextureHolder. By that, we could easily refer to different textures without knowing the actual sf::Texture object or the filename.

  • The textures used in the scene were...

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SFML Game Development
Published in: Jun 2013Publisher: PacktISBN-13: 9781849696845

Authors (5)

author image
Artur Moreira

Artur Moreira is a game development enthusiast who ultimately aims to start a new game development company in his home country. He has been programming games and game-related software for over 4 years. Most of the effort in that time was put in creating an open source game-making library with lots of flexibility and portability. The library is called Nephilim and is known for supporting all major desktop and mobile operating systems, making game development fully crossplatform and fast. Alongside this big project, he keeps making his own prototypes and games for educational and commercial purposes. Aside from the programming, he also puts some focus in creative areas such as 3D modeling, digital painting, and music composing.
Read more about Artur Moreira

author image
Henrik Vogelius Hansson

Henrik Vogelius Hansson has always been in love with both games and programming. He started his education fairly early and continued on into the indie scene with Defrost Games and their game Project Temporality. The next company that hired him was Paradox Development Studio where he got to work on titles such as Crusader Kings 2. Beside the game companies, Henrik has also been very active in the SFML community and has even provided a binding for Ruby called rbSFML.
Read more about Henrik Vogelius Hansson