Autoloads versus regular nodes¶
Godot offers a feature to automatically load nodes at the root of your project, allowing you to access them globally, that can fulfill the role of a Singleton: Singletons (AutoLoad). These auto-loaded nodes are not freed when you change the scene from code with SceneTree.change_scene.
In this guide, you will learn when to use the Autoload feature, and techniques you can use to avoid it.
The cutting audio issue¶
Other engines can encourage the use of creating manager classes, singletons that organize a lot of functionality into a globally accessible object. Godot offers many ways to avoid global state thanks to the node tree and signals.
For example, let's say we are building a platformer and want to collect coins
that play a sound effect. There's a node for that: the AudioStreamPlayer. But if we call the AudioStreamPlayer
while it is
already playing a sound, the new sound interrupts the first.
A solution is to code a global, auto-loaded sound manager class. It generates a
pool of AudioStreamPlayer
nodes that cycle through as each new request for
sound effects comes in. Say we call that class Sound
, you can use it from
anywhere in your project by calling Sound.play("coin_pickup.ogg")
. This
solves the problem in the short term but causes more problems:
Global state: one object is now responsible for all objects' data. If the
Sound
class has errors or doesn't have an AudioStreamPlayer available, all the nodes calling it can break.Global access: now that any object can call
Sound.play(sound_path)
from anywhere, there's no longer an easy way to find the source of a bug.Global resource allocation: with a pool of
AudioStreamPlayer
nodes stored from the start, you can either have too few and face bugs, or too many and use more memory than you need.
Note
About global access, the problem is that Any code anywhere could pass wrong
data to the Sound
autoload in our example. As a result, the domain to
explore to fix the bug spans the entire project.
When you keep code inside a scene, only one or two scripts may be involved in audio.
Contrast this with each scene keeping as many AudioStreamPlayer
nodes as it
needs within itself and all these problems go away:
Each scene manages its own state information. If there is a problem with the data, it will only cause issues in that one scene.
Each scene accesses only its own nodes. Now, if there is a bug, it's easy to find which node is at fault.
Each scene allocates exactly the amount of resources it needs.
When you should use an Autoload¶
Auto-loaded nodes can simplify your code in some cases:
Static Data: if you need data that is exclusive to one class, like a database, then an autoload can be a good tool. There is no scripting API in Godot to create and manage static data otherwise.
Static functions: creating a library of functions that only return values.
Systems with a wide scope: If the singleton is managing its own information and not invading the data of other objects, then it's a great way to create systems that handle broad-scoped tasks. For example, a quest or a dialogue system.
Until Godot 3.1, another use was just for convenience: autoloads have a global
variable for their name generated in GDScript, allowing you to call them from
any script file in your project. But now, you can use the class_name
keyword
instead to get auto-completion for a type in your entire project.
Note
Autoload is not exactly a Singleton. Nothing prevents you from instantiating copies of an auto-loaded node. It is only a tool that makes a node load automatically as a child of the root of your scene tree, regardless of your game's node structure or which scene you run, e.g. by pressing F6 key.
As a result, you can get the auto-loaded node, for example an autoload called
Sound
, by calling get_node("/root/Sound")
.