78 lines
3 KiB
Text
78 lines
3 KiB
Text
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.. _doc_your_first_2d_game_project_setup:
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Setting up the project
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======================
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In this short first part, we'll set up and organize the project.
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Launch Godot and create a new project.
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.. image:: img/new-project-button.png
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.. tabs::
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.. tab:: GDScript
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Download :download:`dodge_assets.zip <files/dodge_assets.zip>`.
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The archive contains the images and sounds you'll be using
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to make the game. Extract the archive and move the ``art/``
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and ``fonts/`` directories to your project's directory.
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.. tab:: C#
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Download :download:`dodge_assets.zip <files/dodge_assets.zip>`.
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The archive contains the images and sounds you'll be using
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to make the game. Extract the archive and move the ``art/``
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and ``fonts/`` directories to your project's directory.
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Ensure that you have the required dependencies to use C# in Godot.
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You need the .NET Core 3.1 SDK, and an editor such as VS Code.
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See :ref:`doc_c_sharp_setup`.
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.. tab:: GDNative C++
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Download :download:`dodge_assets_with_gdnative.zip
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<files/dodge_assets_with_gdnative.zip>`.
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The archive contains the images and sounds you'll be using
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to make the game. It also contains a starter GDNative project
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including a ``SConstruct`` file, a ``dodge_the_creeps.gdnlib``
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file, a ``player.gdns`` file, and an ``entry.cpp`` file.
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Ensure that you have the required dependencies to use GDNative C++.
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You need a C++ compiler such as GCC or Clang or MSVC that supports C++14.
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On Windows you can download Visual Studio 2019 and select the C++ workload.
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You also need SCons to use the build system (the SConstruct file).
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Then you need to `download the Godot C++ bindings <https://github.com/godotengine/godot-cpp>`_
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and place them in your project.
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Your project folder should look like this.
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.. image:: img/folder-content.png
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This game is designed for portrait mode, so we need to adjust the size of the
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game window. Click on *Project -> Project Settings* to open the project settings
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window and in the left column, open the *Display -> Window* tab. There, set
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"Width" to ``480`` and "Height" to ``720``.
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.. image:: img/setting-project-width-and-height.png
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Also, scroll down to the bottom of the section and, under the "Stretch" options,
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set ``Mode`` to "2d" and ``Aspect`` to "keep". This ensures that the game scales
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consistently on different sized screens.
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.. image:: img/setting-stretch-mode.png
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Organizing the project
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~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
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In this project, we will make 3 independent scenes: ``Player``, ``Mob``, and
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``HUD``, which we will combine into the game's ``Main`` scene.
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In a larger project, it might be useful to create folders to hold the various
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scenes and their scripts, but for this relatively small game, you can save your
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scenes and scripts in the project's root folder, identified by ``res://``. You
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can see your project folders in the FileSystem dock in the lower left corner:
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.. image:: img/filesystem_dock.png
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With the project in place, we're ready to design the player scene in the next lesson.
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