Building a 3D Engine in Perl, Part 2
This article is the second in a series aimed at building a full 3D engine in Perl. The first article, Building a 3D Engine in Perl, covered basic program structure, opening an OpenGL window using SDL, basic projection and viewing setup, simple object rendering, object transformations, and depth ordering using the OpenGL depth buffer.
Editor’s note: see also the rest of the series, lighting and movement, and profiling your application.
This time, I’ll discuss rotating and animating the view, SDL event and keyboard handling, and compensating for frame rate variations. As a bonus, I’ll demonstrate some real-world refactoring, including a conversion from procedural to (weakly) object-oriented code. Before I start, however, there were a couple of issues discovered since the first article went live:
- In the first article, I wrote “orthogonal projection.” This should be “orthographic projection,” which reminds me again that no matter how many times you proofread, you can still miss the bug–in code or in prose. Unfortunately, prose is a bit harder to write tests for.
Todd Ross discovered a problem with SDL on FreeBSD 5.3, which caused the code to die immediately with “Bad system call (core dumped).” A short while later, he reported the workaround. He set his
LD_PRELOAD
environment variable with a little magic, and everything worked fine:setenv LD_PRELOAD /usr/lib/libc_r.so
His research method is a good one to follow if you should encounter a similar problem. He installed another SDL_Perl application, in this case Frozen Bubble. Once he was sure it worked, he checked the code in the launcher script and found the magic shown above. A quick test confirmed that this worked for his code as well.
Frozen Bubble is a 2D application, so if it works fine but your OpenGL programs don’t, check to make sure that OpenGL works at all. Unix variants should supply the
glxinfo
andglxgears
programs. Useglxinfo
to gather details on your OpenGL driver; it serves as both a sanity check and a good addition to bug reports.glxgears
does a simple animated rendering of meshing gears. This tells you whether OpenGL works correctly (at least for basic stuff) and what performance your OpenGL driver and hardware can provide. Both programs work under X on Apple’s OS X 10.3 as well.
Keep your comments, questions, and bug reports coming! I’d like to recognize your contribution in the next article, but if you’d rather remain anonymous, that’s fine too.
Without further ado, let’s start. If you want try the code at each stage without all the typing, download the example source code. It includes a README.steps file that should help you follow along more easily.
Moving the Viewpoint
At the end of the last article, our scene had a set of axis lines roughly in the center of the screen, with a big white cube behind them and a rotated flat yellow box to the right:
sub draw_view
{
draw_axes();
glColor(1, 1, 1);
glPushMatrix;
glTranslate( 0, 0, -4);
glScale( 2, 2, 2);
draw_cube();
glPopMatrix;
glColor(1, 1, 0);
glPushMatrix;
glTranslate( 4, 0, 0);
glRotate( 40, 0, 0, 1);
glScale(.2, 1, 2);
draw_cube();
glPopMatrix;
}
Let’s move that white cube to the right by changing the first glTranslate
call as follows:
glTranslate( 12, 0, -4);
Now the right side of the window cuts off the white box. If I wanted to fix that while maintaining the relative positions of all the objects, there are a few possible changes I could make:
- Use a wider projection (FOV) angle to see more of the scene at once. Unfortunately, it’s already at 90 degrees, which is fairly wide. The perspective effect is already very strong; much wider, and the rendering will look too distorted.
- Individually move all objects in the scene the same distance to the left. This would certainly work, but is a lot of effort, especially when there are many objects in the scene.
- Move the viewpoint right to recenter the view. This is my preference.
I want to move the viewpoint to the right, a positive X direction, so I add +6 to the X component of the viewing translation:
sub set_view_3d
{
glTranslate(6, -2, -10);
}
Now the scene is even farther to the right. The problem is that OpenGL combines the transformations used to modify the view (viewing transformations) with those used to transform objects in the scene (modeling transformations) in the modelview matrix. OpenGL has no way to know whether I intend any given modelview transformation to alter the view or the objects in the scene; it treats all of them as altering the objects. By translating +6 X, I effectively moved every object 6 units to the right, rather than moving my viewpoint right as intended.
I hinted at the solution before: moving the viewpoint right is equivalent to moving all objects in the scene to the left. The solution to this problem is to reverse the sign of the translation:
sub set_view_3d
{
glTranslate(-6, -2, -10);
}
This puts the viewpoint at (6, 2, 10) where I wanted it, roughly recentering the scene. Now you can see why the viewing translation from the first article moved the viewpoint to a point slightly above (+Y) and some distance closer to the user (+Z) than the origin. I simply reversed the signs of the viewpoint coordinates I wanted, (0, 2, 10).
The scene is now centered, but with this static view, it’s difficult to tell the true location and relative sizes of the objects in the scene. Perhaps I can rotate the view a bit to see this. I’ll rotate it 90 degrees counterclockwise (positive rotation) around the Y axis:
sub set_view_3d
{
glTranslate(-6, -2, -10);
glRotate(90, 0, 1, 0);
}
Well, that certainly rotated things, but it’s still hard to see where the objects really are. Why did the scene end up all over on the left like that and with the axis lines in front?
Animating the View
To understand what’s really going on with an odd transformation, it helps me to turn it into a short animation. I start the animation with a very small transformation and keep increasing it until well past the intended level. This way, I can see the effect of both smaller and larger changes.
To do this, I need a few more frames in the animation. I can do this by changing the last line in draw_frame
:
$done = 1 if $frame == 10;
I also want the rotation to animate with each frame:
sub set_view_3d
{
glTranslate(-6, -2, -10);
glRotate(18 * $frame, 0, 1, 0);
}
This chops the rotation into 18 degree increments, starting at frame 1 with an 18 degree rotation and ending at frame 10 with a 180 degree rotation.
Running this program shows what is happening. The scene rotates counterclockwise around its origin, the intersection point of the axis lines. I wanted to rotate the viewpoint, but I rotated the objects instead. Just reversing the sign won’t do the trick. That will rotate the scene the other direction (clockwise), but it won’t rotate around the viewpoint–it will still rotate around the scene origin.
In the first article, I described how to visualize a series of transforms by thinking about transforming the local coordinate system of the objects in a series of steps. Looking at the code above, you can see that it first translates the scene origin away and then rotates around that new origin. To rotate around the viewpoint, I need to rotate first and then translate the scene away:
sub set_view_3d
{
glRotate(18 * $frame, 0, 1, 0);
glTranslate(-6, -2, -10);
}
This now rotates around the viewpoint, but because it rotates 180 degrees starting from dead ahead, the scene ends up behind the viewpoint. To start the view so that the scene is on one side and then rotates to be on the other, I simply offset the angle:
sub set_view_3d
{
glRotate(-90 + 18 * $frame, 0, 1, 0);
glTranslate(-6, -2, -10);
}
At frame 1, the rotation angle is -90 + 18 * 1 = -72 degrees. At frame 10, the angle is -90 + 18 * 10 = 90 degrees. Perfect.
Stop and Turn Around
There’s only one little problem: it’s going the wrong way! I wanted to do a counterclockwise rotation of the view, but that should make the scene appear to rotate clockwise around the viewpoint. Imagine standing in front of a landmark, taking a picture. Looking through the viewfinder, you might notice that the landmark is a bit left of center. To center it, turn slightly left (counterclockwise as seen from above, or around +Y in the default OpenGL coordinate system). This would make the landmark appear to move clockwise around you (again as seen from above), moving it from the left side of the viewfinder to the center.
In this case, reverse the angle’s sign:
sub set_view_3d
{
glRotate(90 - 18 * $frame, 0, 1, 0);
glTranslate(-6, -2, -10);
}
In fact, every transformation of the view is equivalent to the opposite transformation of every object in the scene. You must reverse the sign of the coordinates in a translation, reverse the sign of the angle in a rotation, or take the inverse of the factors in a scaling (shrinking the viewer to half size makes everything appear twice as big). As we saw before, you must reverse the order of rotation and translation as well.
Scaling is a special case. Inverting the factors works, but you must still do the scaling after the translation to achieve the expected effect, rather than following the rule for rotation and translation and reversing the transformation order completely. The reason is that scaling before the translation scales the translation also. Scaling by (2, 2, 2) would double the size of all of the objects in the scene, but it would also put them twice as far away, making them appear the same size. I’ll skip the code for this and leave it as an exercise for the reader. Go ahead, have fun.
If you decide to give view scaling a try, remember that all distances will change. This affects some non-obvious things such as the third and fourth arguments to gluPerspective
(the distance to the nearest and farthest objects OpenGL will render).
Smoothing It Out
After watching these animations for a while, the jerkiness really begins to bother me, and because I doubled the number of animation frames, it takes twice as long to finish a run. Both of these problems relate to the second-long sleep at the end of draw_frame
. I should be able to fix them by shortening the sleep to half a second:
sleep .5;
Chances are, that doesn’t yield quite the respected result. On my system, there’s a blur for a fraction of a second, and the whole run is done. Unfortunately, the builtin Perl sleep
function only handles integer seconds, so .5 truncates to 0 and the sleep
returns almost instantly.
Luckily, SDL provides a millisecond-resolution delay function, SDL::Delay
. To use it, I add another subroutine to handle the delay, translating between seconds and milliseconds:
sub delay
{
my $seconds = shift;
SDL::Delay($seconds * 1000);
}
Now, changing the sleep
call to delay
fixes it:
delay(.5);
The movement is faster and it only takes five seconds to complete the entire animation again, but this code still wastes the available performance of the system. I want the animation to be as smooth as the system allows, while keeping the rotation speed (and total time) constant. To implement this, I need to give the code a sense of time. First, I add another global to keep the current time:
my ($time);
At this point, my editor likely just sprayed his screen with whatever he’s drinking and coughed “Another global?!?” I’ll address that later in this article during the refactoring.
To update the time, I need a couple more functions:
sub update_time
{
$time = now();
}
sub now
{
return SDL::GetTicks() / 1000;
}
now
calls SDL’s GetTicks
function, which returns the time since SDL initialization in milliseconds. It converts the result back to seconds for convenience elsewhere. update_time
uses now
to keep the global $time
up to date.
main_loop
uses this to update the time before rendering the frame:
sub main_loop
{
while (not $done) {
$frame++;
update_time();
do_frame();
}
}
Because this version won’t artificially slow the animation, I make two changes to draw_frame
. I remove the delay
call and change the animation end test to check whether the time has reached five seconds, instead of whether frame ten has been drawn.
sub draw_frame
{
set_projection_3d();
set_view_3d();
draw_view();
print '.';
$done = 1 if $time >= 5;
}
Finally, set_view_3d
must base its animation on the current time instead of the current frame. Our current rotation speed is 18 degrees per frame. With 2 frames per second, that comes to 36 degrees per second:
sub set_view_3d
{
glRotate(90 - 36 * $time, 0, 1, 0);
glTranslate(-6, -2, -10);
}
This version should appear much smoother. On my system, the dots printed for each frame scroll up the terminal window. If you run this program multiple times, you’ll notice the number of frames (and hence dots) varies. Small variations in timing from numerous sources cause a frame now and then to take more or less time. Over the course of a run, this adds up to being able to complete a few frames more or less before hitting the five second deadline. Visually, the rotation speed should appear nearly constant because it calculates the current angle from the current time, whatever that may be, rather than the frame number.
Refactoring for Fun and Clarity
Now that the animation is smooth, I’m almost ready to add some manual control using SDL events. That’s a big topic and involves a lot of code. It’s always a good idea before a big change to step back, take a look at the exisiting code, and see if it needs a clean up.
The basic procedure is as follows:
- Find one obvious bit of ugliness.
- Make a small atomic change to clean it up.
- Test to make sure everything still works.
- Lather, rinse, repeat until satisfied.
Unfortunately, it’s occasionally necessary to make one part of the code a little uglier while cleaning up something else. The trick is eventually to clean up the freshly uglified piece.
Refactoring the View
And on that note, let’s add another global! I don’t like the hardcoding of set_view_3d
. I’d like to convert that into a data structure of some kind, so I define a view object:
my ($view);
This needs an update routine, so here’s a simple one:
sub update_view
{
$view = {
position => [6, 2, 10],
orientation => [-90 + 36 * $time, 0, 1, 0],
};
}
This is simply the position and orientation of the virtual viewer (before the sign reversal needed by the viewing transformations). I need to call this in the main loop, just before calling do_frame
:
sub main_loop
{
while (not $done) {
$frame++;
update_time();
update_view();
do_frame();
}
}
At this point, running the program should show that nothing much changed because I haven’t actually changed the viewing code–the new code runs in parallel with the old code. Using the new code requires replacement of set_view_3d
:
sub set_view_3d
{
my ($angle, @axis) = @{$view->{orientation}};
my ($x, $y, $z) = @{$view->{position}};
glRotate(-$angle, @axis);
glTranslate(-$x, -$y, -$z);
}
Running the program should again show that nothing visually changed, indicating a successful refactoring. At this point, you may wonder what this has gained; there’s a new global and a dozen or so more lines of code. The new code has several benefits:
- The concepts of animating the view parameters and setting the current view in OpenGL are now separate, as they should be.
- Hoisting the
update_view
call up tomain_loop
next to theupdate_time
call begins to collect all updates together, cleaning up the overall design. - The new code hints at further refactoring opportunities.
In fact, I can see several problem places to refactor next, along with some reasons to fix them:
- The mess of globals, since I just added one.
- Updating
$done
indraw_view
(mixing updates and OpenGL work again) to continue collecting all updates together. - Pervasive hardcoding in
draw_view
, for all the same reasons I refactoredset_view_3d
.
The Great Global Smashing
The globals situation is out of hand, so now seems a good time to fix that and check off the first item of the new “pending refactoring” list. First, I need to decide how to address the problem.
Here’s the current globals list:
my ($done, $frame);
my ($conf, $sdl_app);
my ($time);
my ($view);
In this mess, I see several different concepts:
- Configuration:
$conf
- Resource object:
$sdl_app
- Engine state:
$done
,$frame
- Simulated world:
$time
,$view
I’ll create from these groupings a single engine object laid out like so (variables show where the data from the old globals goes):
{
conf => $conf,
resource => {
sdl_app => $sdl_app,
},
state => {
done => $done,
frame => $frame,
},
world => {
time => $time,
view => $view,
}
}
This is a fairly radical change from the current code, so to be safe, I’ll do it in several small pieces, testing after each version that everything still works.
The first step is to add a constructor for my object:
sub new
{
my $class = shift;
my $self = bless {}, $class;
return $self;
}
This is pretty much the garden variety trivial constructor in Perl 5. It blesses a hash reference into the specified class and then returns it. I also need to change my START
code to use this new constructor to create an object and call main
as a method on it:
START: __PACKAGE__->new->main;
This snippet constructs a new object, using the current package as the class name, and immediately calls the main
method on the returned object. main
doesn’t have any parameters, so calling it as a method won’t affect it (there are no existing parameters that would be shifted right by a new invocant parameter). I never store the object in a variable as a form of self-imposed stricture. Because the object only exists as the invocant of main
, I must convert every routine that accesses the information in the object to a method and change all calls to those routines as well.
Let It Flow
Testing at this point shows all still works, so the next change is to make main
flow the object reference through to its children by calling them as methods:
sub main
{
my $self = shift;
$self->init;
$self->main_loop;
$self->cleanup;
}
Testing this shows that, again, all is fine, as expected. init
and main_loop
are changed in the obvious fashion (cleanup
doesn’t do much, so it doesn’t need to change now):
sub init
{
my $self = shift;
$| = 1;
$self->init_conf;
$self->init_window;
}
sub main_loop
{
my $self = shift;
while (not $done) {
$frame++;
$self->update_time;
$self->update_view;
$self->do_frame;
}
}
Notice that I have not changed the references to $done
and $frame
in main
. It’s important to make only a single conceptual change at a time during refactoring, to minimize the chance of making an error and not being able to figure out which change caused the problem. I’ll return to these references in a bit. Testing this version shows that all is well, so I continue:
sub do_frame
{
my $self = shift;
$self->prep_frame;
$self->draw_frame;
$self->end_frame;
}
sub draw_frame
{
my $self = shift;
$self->set_projection_3d;
$self->set_view_3d;
$self->draw_view;
print '.';
$done = 1 if $time >= 5;
}
Again, for this pass, I ignore $done
and $time
in draw_frame
. At this point, I’ve pretty much exhausted all of the changes that amount to simply turning subroutine calls into method calls and the code still works as advertised.
Replacing the Globals
With this working, I start into more interesting territory. It’s time to move the globals into their proper place in the object. First up are the state variables $done
and $frame
in main_loop
:
sub main_loop
{
my $self = shift;
while (not $self->{state}{done}) {
$self->{state}{frame}++;
$self->update_time;
$self->update_view;
$self->do_frame;
}
}
and the last line of draw_frame
:
$self->{state}{done} = 1 if $time >= 5;
As they are no longer globals, I remove their declarations as well. I will have to come back to draw_frame
again when cleaning up $time
. One change per pass–it’s very easy to follow a long chain of related changes before doing a test run and find out you made a mistake. Somewhere. Argh. In this case, I resist the urge to keep changing the code and do another test run immediately to find that indeed all still works.
Next up is the world attribute $view
:
sub update_view
{
my $self = shift;
$self->{world}{view} = {
position => [6, 2, 10],
orientation => [-90 + 36 * $time, 0, 1, 0],
};
}
sub set_view_3d
{
my $self = shift;
my $view = $self->{world}{view};
my ($angle, @axis) = @{$view->{orientation}};
my ($x, $y, $z) = @{$view->{position}};
glRotate(-$angle, @axis);
glTranslate(-$x, -$y, -$z);
}
In set_view_3d
, it seemed clearest to make a lexical $view
loaded from the object. This allowed me to leave the rest of the function clean and unchanged. Testing after the above changes and removing the global declaration for $view
shows that all is good.
Next up are $conf
and the resource object $sdl_app
, following much the same pattern as before:
sub init_conf
{
my $self = shift;
$self->{conf} = {
title => 'Camel 3D',
width => 400,
height => 400,
fovy => 90,
};
}
sub init_window
{
my $self = shift;
my $title = $self->{conf}{title};
my $w = $self->{conf}{width};
my $h = $self->{conf}{height};
$self->{resource}{sdl_app}
= SDL::App->new(-title => $title,
-width => $w,
-height => $h,
-gl => 1,
);
SDL::ShowCursor(0);
}
sub set_projection_3d
{
my $self = shift;
my $fovy = $self->{conf}{fovy};
my $w = $self->{conf}{width};
my $h = $self->{conf}{height};
my $aspect = $w / $h;
glMatrixMode(GL_PROJECTION);
glLoadIdentity;
gluPerspective($fovy, $aspect, 1, 1000);
glMatrixMode(GL_MODELVIEW);
glLoadIdentity;
}
sub end_frame
{
my $self = shift;
$self->{resource}{sdl_app}->sync;
}
The first time I did this, it broke. I had forgotten to make the changes to set_projection_3d
. Thanks to use strict
, the error was obvious, and a quick fix later, everything worked again.
Last but not least, it’s time to fix the remaining world attribute $time
:
sub update_time
{
my $self = shift;
$self->{world}{time} = now();
}
In update_view
, I continue with my tactic of creating lexicals and leaving the remaining code alone:
my $time = $self->{world}{time};
Finally, the last line of draw_frame
changes again:
$self->{state}{done} = 1
if $self->{world}{time} >= 5;
The first test run of the completed refactoring uncovered a typo that gave an obscure warning. Thankfully, I only had to check the few changed lines since the last test, and the typo was easily found. With things working again, The Great Global Smashing is complete. The once completely procedural program is now on its way to claiming object orientation. (Boy will I be happy to switch to Perl 6 OO syntax! Perl 6 OO keeps the visual clarity of pure procedural code while gaining several powerful benefits not available in Perl 5. I could fake the clearer syntax with judicious use of source filtering, but that’s another article.)
This seems to me like enough refactoring for now, so it’s back to the main thrust of development: keyboard control.
The Big Event
Keyboard handling is a special case of SDL event handling, and not an entirely trivial case at that. I’ll start with the basic structure for processing SDL events and handle a much simpler event first. To access SDL events, I need to load the SDL::Event
module:
use SDL::Event;
Like SDL::App
, the code needs to keep track of an SDL::Event
resource object to access the event queue. In addition, I need to keep track of which routine I’ll use to process each event type. This is a new kind of data, so I add a new branch to the engine object for various lookup tables. To set up both of these, I add a new initialization function:
sub init_event_processing
{
my $self = shift;
$self->{resource}{sdl_event} = SDL::Event->new;
$self->{lookup}{event_processor} = {
&SDL_QUIT => \&process_quit,
};
}
SDL event types are constants in the general SDL constant convention (UPPERCASE with a leading SDL_
marker). The event type for quit events is SDL_QUIT
, which I associate with the process_quit
routine using a subroutine reference.
A new line at the end of init
calls the initialization routine:
$self->init_event_processing;
Every time through, the main loop should process events before updating the view (after I add keyboard control, the view should update using the latest user input). The contents of the loop in main_loop
are now as follows:
$self->{state}{frame}++;
$self->update_time;
$self->do_events;
$self->update_view;
$self->do_frame;
do_events
is very simple at this stage, just calling process_events
to, er, process pending SDL events:
sub do_events
{
my $self = shift;
my $queue = $self->process_events;
}
The Event Processing Loop
process_events
is where all the magic happens:
sub process_events
{
my $self = shift;
my $event = $self->{resource}{sdl_event};
my $lookup = $self->{lookup}{event_processor};
my ($process, $command, @queue);
$event->pump;
while (not $self->{state}{done} and $event->poll) {
$process = $lookup->{$event->type} or next;
$command = $self->$process($event);
push @queue, $command if $command;
}
return \@queue;
}
The first couple of lines provide shorter names for the previously stored SDL::Event
object and event processor lookup table. The rest of the variables respectively store:
- A reference to the processing routine for the current event
- The internal command to convert the event into
- The queue of commands collected from incoming events
The core of the code starts by telling the SDL::Event
object to gather any pending operating system events in preparation for the processing loop, using the pump
method. The processing loop checks to make sure that a previous event has not flagged the done
state, which helps to improve responsiveness to quit events. Assuming that this has not happened, the loop requests the next SDL event using SDL::Event::poll
. poll
returns a false value when there are no events ready for pickup, thereby exiting the loop.
The first line inside the loop uses the event type to look up the proper event processing routine. If there is none, I use next
to loop again and check the next event. Otherwise, the next line calls the processing routine as a dynamically chosen method to handle the event. If the processing routine determines that the event requires additional work, it should return a command packet to be queued. If the event should be ignored, the processor should simply return a false value.
The last line within the loop adds the command packet (if any) to the queue awaiting further processing. Once the loop processes all available SDL events, process_events
returns the queue so that do_events
can perform the next stage of processing.
It may seem confusing that each time through the loop the code reuses the same $event
. You might expect SDL::Event::poll
to return the next waiting event (and perhaps undef
when none remain). Instead, the SDL API specifies that poll
copies the data from the next entry in the event queue into the event object, returning a true or false status indicating whether this operation succeeded. As with some of the OpenGL quirks, SDL_Perl copies this odd interface directly, easing the transition for programmers used to the C API.
A consequence of this interface decision is that the event processing routine must make a copy of any data from the SDL event object needed for later. The call to SDL::Event::poll
in the next iteration of the processing loop will overwrite any data left in the SDL event object, so simply storing the object reference won’t work.
The process_quit
routine doesn’t need to save any data; it only matters that an SDL_QUIT
event occurred:
sub process_quit
{
my $self = shift;
$self->{state}{done} = 1;
return 'quit';
}
process_quit
first sets the done
state flag, which causes the loop in process_events
to exit early and, more importantly, exits main_loop
. It returns the simplest type of command packet, a string indicating the quit
command. At this point, there’s no code to process this command further, but this keeps things parallel with the keyboard version I’ll show next.
What does all this buy us? For starters, we can now (finally) quit the program using the window manager before the animation runs its course. On my system, that means clicking the ‘X’ on the window’s title bar. Still, that’s not the same as having a quit key (which I find much more convenient).
Key Binding
To add a quit key, I first need to decide which key should quit the program. I’d choose the Escape key because that makes mnemonic sense to me, but everyone has their favorite, so I’ll allow that to be a configuration setting. To do this, I extend the configuration hash with a new bind
section:
sub init_conf
{
my $self = shift;
$self->{conf} = {
title => 'Camel 3D',
width => 400,
height => 400,
fovy => 90,
bind => {
escape => 'quit',
}
};
}
Now anyone who wants to choose a different quit key can simply change the keyboard bindings hash. In fact, several keys could be associated with the same command, so that either the Escape key or ‘q’ would exit the program. The hash value corresponding to each specified key is the command packet issued when the user presses that key. This one matches the command packet I’d chosen for the window manager quit message earlier.
Next, I need to process keypress events, which have the event type SDL_KEYDOWN
. I add another entry to the event_processor
hash:
sub init_event_processing
{
my $self = shift;
$self->{resource}{sdl_event} = SDL::Event->new;
$self->{lookup}{event_processor} = {
&SDL_QUIT => \&process_quit,
&SDL_KEYDOWN => \&process_key,
};
}
and define the key processor as follows:
sub process_key
{
my $self = shift;
my $event = shift;
my $symbol = $event->key_sym;
my $name = SDL::GetKeyName($symbol);
my $command = $self->{conf}{bind}{$name} || '';
return $command;
}
process_key
starts by extracting the key symbol from the SDL event. Key symbols are rather opaque for our purposes, so I request the key name matching the extracted key symbol using SDL::GetKeyName
. This produces a friendly key name that I look up in the key bindings hash to find the appropriate command packet. If there is none, no matter; that key isn’t bound yet so it yields an empty command packet. process_key
then returns the command packet to add to the queue for further processing.
Handling Command Packets
At this point, the code converts a press of the Escape key into a quit command packet, but do_events
ignores that packet because it does not process the command queue it receives from process_events
. To make something happen, I first need to associate each known command with an action routine. I create a new lookup hash for this association, initialized in init_command_actions
:
sub init_command_actions
{
my $self = shift;
$self->{lookup}{command_action} = {
quit => \&action_quit,
};
}
As usual, I call this at the end of init
:
$self->init_command_actions;
It’s now time to fill out do_events
:
sub do_events
{
my $self = shift;
my $queue = $self->process_events;
my $lookup = $self->{lookup}{command_action};
my ($command, $action);
while (not $self->{state}{done} and @$queue) {
$command = shift @$queue;
$action = $lookup->{$command} or next;
$self->$action($command);
}
}
This is similar in form to process_events
. Instead of processing events from SDL’s internal queue to create a queue of command packets, it processes queued command packets into actions to perform. The loop starts as usual by checking that the done
is not true and that there are still commands pending in the queue.
Within the loop, it shifts the next command off the front of the queue. The next line determines the action routine associated with the command. If it cannot find one, it uses next
to skip to the next command. Otherwise, it calls the action routine as a dynamically chosen method with the command packet as a parameter. This allows a single action routine to process several similar commands while still being able to tell the difference between them. I’ll need this later for processing movement keys.
For all of that, action_quit
is very simple; it just flags done
:
sub action_quit
{
my $self = shift;
$self->{state}{done} = 1;
}
At this point, the Escape key really will quit the program early, and the window manager quit still works as well.
Now that the user can quit whenever desired, I can finally remove the incongruous end of draw_frame
. It’s no longer necessary to force the program to end after five seconds, and the dots printed each frame have outlived their usefulness. The routine now looks like this:
sub draw_frame
{
my $self = shift;
$self->set_projection_3d;
$self->set_view_3d;
$self->draw_view;
}
Now, if you wait long enough after the objects disappear on the right, the view rotates all the way around, and the scene appears again on the left. This version of the routine is much cleaner and incidently closes the next open refactoring issue (changing engine state within a drawing routine) for free.
Controlling the View
Now that the code can handle keypress events, it’s time to control the view using the keyboard.
Instead of having the view completely recalculated every frame, I’d rather have each keypress modify the existing view state. To specify the initial state, I add another initialization routine:
sub init_view
{
my $self = shift;
$self->{world}{view} = {
position => [6, 2, 10],
orientation => [0, 0, 1, 0],
d_yaw => 0,
};
}
The new entry, d_yaw
, tells update_view
if there is a pending change (aka delta, hence the leading d_
) in facing. The code so far can only handle yaw (left and right rotation), so that’s the only delta key needed right now.
init
calls this routine as usual in its new last line:
$self->init_view;
update_view
applies the yaw delta to the view orientation, then zeroes out d_yaw
so that it won’t continue to affect the rotation in succeeding frames (without the user pressing the rotation keys again):
sub update_view
{
my $self = shift;
my $view = $self->{world}{view};
$view->{orientation}[0] += $view->{d_yaw};
$view->{d_yaw} = 0;
}
A command action assigned to the yaw_left
and yaw_right
commands updates d_yaw
:
sub init_command_actions
{
my $self = shift;
$self->{lookup}{command_action} = {
quit => \&action_quit,
yaw_left => \&action_move,
yaw_right => \&action_move,
};
}
To assign keys for these commands, I update the bind
hash in init_conf
:
bind => {
escape => 'quit',
left => 'yaw_left',
right => 'yaw_right',
}
The big change is the new command action routine action_move
:
sub action_move
{
my $self = shift;
my $command = shift;
my $view = $self->{world}{view};
my $speed_yaw = 10;
my %move_update = (
yaw_left => [d_yaw => $speed_yaw],
yaw_right => [d_yaw => -$speed_yaw],
);
my $update = $move_update{$command} or return;
$view->{$update->[0]} += $update->[1];
}
action_move
starts by grabbing the command parameter and current view. It then sets the basic rotation speed, measured in degrees per key press. Next, the %move_update
hash defines the view update associated with each known command. If it knows the command, it retrieves the corresponding update. If not, action_move
returns.
The last line interprets the update. The view key specified by the first element of the update array is incremented by the amount specified by the second element. In other words, receiving a yaw_left
command causes the routine to add $speed_yaw
to $view->{d_yaw}
; a yaw_right
command adds -$speed_yaw
to $view->{d_yaw}
, effectively turning the view the opposite direction.
With these changes in place, the program starts up looking directly at the scene as it appeared near the beginning of this article. Each press of the left or right arrow keys turns the view ten degrees in the appropriate direction (remember that the scene appears to turn the opposite direction around the view). Holding the keys down does nothing; only a change from unpressed to pressed does anything, and it only rotates the view one increment. This, as they say, is suboptimal.
Angular Velocity
In order to solve this, the code has to change from working purely in terms of angular position to working in terms of angular velocity. Pressing a key should start the view rotating at a constant speed, and it should stay that way until the key is released.
Velocity goes hand in hand with time. In particular, for each frame, update_view
needs to know how much time has passed since the last frame to determine the change in angle matching the rotation speed. To compute this time delta, the first change is to make sure the code always has a valid world time by initializing it at program start:
sub init_time
{
my $self = shift;
$self->{world}{time} = now();
}
Of course, this requires another line at the end of init
:
$self->init_time;
With this in place, I can change update_time
to record the time delta for each frame:
sub update_time
{
my $self = shift;
my $now = now();
$self->{world}{d_time} = $now - $self->{world}{time};
$self->{world}{time} = $now;
}
I’ve made a few changes that shouldn’t affect the behavior of the program, and I’m about to make several more that definitely will change the behavior, so now is a good time for a quick sanity test. All is fine, so it’s time to contemplate the design for the remaining code.
Continuing Commands
There are really two classes of keyboard commands that I want to handle:
- Single-shots like
quit
,drop_object
, andpull_pin
- Continuing commands like
yaw_left
andscream_head_off
To differentiate them, I borrow an existing game convention and use a leading +
to indicate a continuing command. This changes the bind mapping in init_conf
:
bind => {
escape => 'quit',
left => '+yaw_left',
right => '+yaw_right',
}
and the command_action
lookup:
sub init_command_actions
{
my $self = shift;
$self->{lookup}{command_action} = {
quit => \&action_quit,
'+yaw_left' => \&action_move,
'+yaw_right' => \&action_move,
};
}
To process the key release events, I need to assign an event processor for the SDL_KEYUP
event. I’ll reuse the existing process_key
routine:
sub init_event_processing
{
my $self = shift;
$self->{resource}{sdl_event} = SDL::Event->new;
$self->{lookup}{event_processor} = {
&SDL_QUIT => \&process_quit,
&SDL_KEYUP => \&process_key,
&SDL_KEYDOWN => \&process_key,
};
}
process_key
needs some training to be able to differentiate the two types of events:
sub process_key
{
my $self = shift;
my $event = shift;
my $symbol = $event->key_sym;
my $name = SDL::GetKeyName($symbol);
my $command = $self->{conf}{bind}{$name} || '';
my $down = $event->type == SDL_KEYDOWN;
if ($command =~ /^\+/) {
return [$command, $down];
}
else {
return $down ? $command : '';
}
}
The new code (everything after the my $command
line) first sets $down
to true if the key is being pressed or to false if the key is being released. The remaining changes replace the old return $command
line. For continuing commands (those that start with a +
), there’s a new class of command packet, containing both the $command
and the $down
boolean to indicate whether the command should begin or end. Single-shot commands (those without a leading +
), send a simple command packet only for keypresses; they ignore key releases.
To handle the new class of command packets, I update do_events
as well:
sub do_events
{
my $self = shift;
my $queue = $self->process_events;
my $lookup = $self->{lookup}{command_action};
my ($command, $action);
while (not $self->{state}{done} and @$queue) {
my @args;
$command = shift @$queue;
($command, @args) = @$command if ref $command;
$action = $lookup->{$command} or next;
$self->$action($command, @args);
}
}
The only new code is inside the loop. It starts off by assuming that the command packet is a simple one, with no arguments. If the command turns out to be a reference instead of a string, it unpacks it into a command string and some arguments. The $action
lookup remains unchanged, but the last line changes slightly to add @args
to the parameters of the action routine. If there are no arguments, this has no effect, so a single-shot action routine such as action_quit
can remain unchanged.
View, Meet Velocity
The view needs to keep track of the current yaw velocity and the velocity delta when the user presses or releases a key; I initialize them to 0 in init_view
:
sub init_view
{
my $self = shift;
$self->{world}{view} = {
position => [6, 2, 10],
orientation => [0, 0, 1, 0],
d_yaw => 0,
v_yaw => 0,
dv_yaw => 0,
};
}
update_view
needs a few more lines to handle the new variables:
sub update_view
{
my $self = shift;
my $view = $self->{world}{view};
my $d_time = $self->{world}{d_time};
$view->{orientation}[0] += $view->{d_yaw};
$view->{d_yaw} = 0;
$view->{v_yaw} += $view->{dv_yaw};
$view->{dv_yaw} = 0;
$view->{orientation}[0] += $view->{v_yaw} * $d_time;
}
After adding any velocity delta to the current yaw velocity, this method multiples the total yaw velocity by the time delta for this frame to determine the change in orientation. This is accumulated with the current orientation and any other facing change for this frame.
Finally, I update action_move
to handle the new semantics:
sub action_move
{
my $self = shift;
my ($command, $down) = @_;
my $sign = $down ? 1 : -1;
my $view = $self->{world}{view};
my $speed_yaw = 36;
my %move_update = (
'+yaw_left' => [dv_yaw => $speed_yaw],
'+yaw_right' => [dv_yaw => -$speed_yaw],
);
my $update = $move_update{$command} or return;
$view->{$update->[0]} += $update->[1] * $sign;
}
The $sign
variable converts the $down
parameter from 1⁄0 to +1/-1. I changed the last line of the routine to multiply the delta by this sign before updating the value. Adding a negated value is the same as subtracting the original value; this means that pressing a key requires adding the update, and releasing it will subtract it back out.
To make sure the new yaw commands update velocity, I also fixed up the %move_update
hash to update dv_yaw
instead of d_yaw
and used the +
versions of the command names. Finally, to bring back the old rotation rate, I set $speed_yaw
to 36 degrees per second.
This version responds the way most people expect. Holding down a key turns the proper direction until the key is released. What about when the user presses multiple keys at once? This is why I was careful always to accumulate updates and deltas by using +=
instead of plain old =
. If the user holds both the right and left arrow keys down at the same time, the view remains motionless because they’ve added in equal and opposite values to dv_yaw
. If the user releases just one of the keys, the view rotates in the proper direction for the key that is still held down because the opposing update has now been subtracted back out. Press the released key back down while still holding the other, and the rotation stops again as expected.
Of course, there’s no requirement that the speeds for yawing left and right must be the same. In fact, for an airplane or spaceship simulation, the game engine might set these differently to represent damage to the control surfaces or maneuvering thrusters. It may even be part of the gameplay to hold both direction keys down at the same time to compensate partially for this damage, perhaps tapping one key while holding the other steady.
One thing that doesn’t magically work is making sure that if several keys map to the same command, pressing them all won’t make the command take effect several times over. As it stands, the user could map five keys to the same movement command and move five times as fast. You might try fixing this on your own as a quick puzzle; I’ll try to address it in a later installment.
Eyes in the Back of Your Head
You might be curious why I left d_yaw
hanging around, since nothing uses it now. I could use it in the above-mentioned space simulation to simulate a thruster stuck on–continuously trying to veer the ship off course. In a first-person game, it allows one of my favorite commands, +look_behind
. Holding down the appropriate key rotates the view 180 degrees. Releasing the key snaps the view back forward. To implement this, I need to add another entry to the bind
hash:
bind => {
escape => 'quit',
left => '+yaw_left',
right => '+yaw_right',
tab => '+look_behind',
}
Then another command_action
entry:
sub init_command_actions
{
my $self = shift;
$self->{lookup}{command_action} = {
quit => \&action_quit,
'+yaw_left' => \&action_move,
'+yaw_right' => \&action_move,
'+look_behind' => \&action_move,
};
}
Last but not least, another entry in %move_update
:
my %move_update = (
'+yaw_left' => [dv_yaw => $speed_yaw],
'+yaw_right' => [dv_yaw => -$speed_yaw],
'+look_behind' => [d_yaw => 180 ],
);
That’s it: a whopping three lines, all of which were entries in lookup hashes.
Conclusion
That’s it for this article; it’s already quite long. I started where I left off in the last article. From there, I talked about translation and rotation of the view; millisecond resolution SDL time; animation from jerky beginnings to smooth movement; basic SDL event and keyboard handling; single-shot and continuing commands; and a whole lot of refactoring.
Next time, I’ll talk about moving the position of the viewpoint, clean up draw_view
, and spend some more time on the OpenGL side of things with the basics of lighting and materials. In the meantime, I’ve covered quite a lot in this article, so go forth and experiment!
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