Saturday, April 24, 2010

Label, Scale9, FontManager, and Resource

Yes, this is my third post today, but it's Saturday and I'm cranking through code now that I've gotten over the mouse-picking hurdle!

I have created a new component "Label" that is moderately self-explanatory, but represents a single-line of text. With this Resource comes to fruition as a simple lookup call "Resource(resourceName)" that will find a resource in the defined resource paths (defaults to look in "resource" path). Additionally I have created a FontManager that simplifies the management of fonts in the system. I have plans in the long-run to create a bitmap-font generator from AWT fonts, but for now getting a font is as easy as "FontManager("Arial")" presuming there's an AngelCode font definition in the Resource lookup path by the name of "Arial.fnt".

See the following test of Label:

package org.sgine.ui

import scala.io.Source

import org.sgine.input.event.MousePressEvent

import org.sgine.render.Renderer
import org.sgine.render.font.FontManager
import org.sgine.render.scene.RenderableScene

import org.sgine.scene.GeneralNodeContainer

object TestLabel {
 def main(args: Array[String]): Unit = {
  val r = Renderer.createFrame(1024, 768, "Test RenderScene")
  
  val scene = new GeneralNodeContainer()
  val component = new Label()
  component.location.z := -500.0
  component.font := FontManager("Franklin")
  component.text := "Hello World!"
  scene += component
  
  r.renderable := RenderableScene(scene)
 }
}

Even more exciting is Scale-9 (a.k.a nine-slice) support that opens up more advanced skinning functionality and in the short-run allows creation of pretty buttons; bet you can guess what's up next. ;)

Anyway, here's a quick test using the new Scale9 component:

package org.sgine.ui

import org.sgine.core.Resource

import org.sgine.render.Renderer
import org.sgine.render.scene.RenderableScene

import org.sgine.scene.GeneralNodeContainer

object TestScale9 {
 def main(args: Array[String]): Unit = {
  val r = Renderer.createFrame(1024, 768, "Test Scale-9")
  
  val scene = new GeneralNodeContainer()
  
  val component = new Scale9()
  component(Resource("scale9/windows/button/hover.png"), 3.0, 3.0, 4.0, 5.0)
  component.width := 200.0
  component.height := 50.0
  component.location.z := -500.0
  scene += component
  
  r.renderable := RenderableScene(scene)
 }
}

Here's a screenshot of the application:



That's using a pretty Windows 7 skinned button in a hover state.

1 comment:

  1. This is great, exactly what I need at this time for drawing boxes which surround my content.

    ReplyDelete

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