* The Game Object Creator is a quick way to create all of the different sorts of core objects that Phaser uses, but not add them to the game world.
* Use the GameObjectFactory to create and add the objects into the world.
*
* @class Phaser.GameObjectCreator
* @constructor
* @param {Phaser.Game} game - A reference to the currently running game.
*/
Phaser.GameObjectCreator = function (game) {
/**
* @property {Phaser.Game} game - A reference to the currently running Game.
*/
this.game = game;
/**
* @property {Phaser.World} world - A reference to the game world.
*/
this.world = this.game.world;
};
Phaser.GameObjectCreator.prototype = {
/**
* Create a new `Image` object. An Image is a light-weight object you can use to display anything that doesn't need physics or animation.
* It can still rotate, scale, crop and receive input events. This makes it perfect for logos, backgrounds, simple buttons and other non-Sprite graphics.
*
* @method Phaser.GameObjectCreator#image
* @param {number} x - X position of the image.
* @param {number} y - Y position of the image.
* @param {string|Phaser.RenderTexture|PIXI.Texture} key - This is the image or texture used by the Sprite during rendering. It can be a string which is a reference to the Cache entry, or an instance of a RenderTexture or PIXI.Texture.
* @param {string|number} [frame] - If the sprite uses an image from a texture atlas or sprite sheet you can pass the frame here. Either a number for a frame ID or a string for a frame name.
* @returns {Phaser.Sprite} the newly created sprite object.
*/
image: function (x, y, key, frame) {
return new Phaser.Image(this.game, x, y, key, frame);
},
/**
* Create a new Sprite with specific position and sprite sheet key.
*
* @method Phaser.GameObjectCreator#sprite
* @param {number} x - X position of the new sprite.
* @param {number} y - Y position of the new sprite.
* @param {string|Phaser.RenderTexture|PIXI.Texture} key - This is the image or texture used by the Sprite during rendering. It can be a string which is a reference to the Cache entry, or an instance of a RenderTexture or PIXI.Texture.
* @param {string|number} [frame] - If the sprite uses an image from a texture atlas or sprite sheet you can pass the frame here. Either a number for a frame ID or a string for a frame name.
* @returns {Phaser.Sprite} the newly created sprite object.
*/
sprite: function (x, y, key, frame) {
return new Phaser.Sprite(this.game, x, y, key, frame);
},
/**
* Create a tween object for a specific object. The object can be any JavaScript object or Phaser object such as Sprite.
*
* @method Phaser.GameObjectCreator#tween
* @param {object} obj - Object the tween will be run on.
* @param {boolean} [enableBody=false] - If true all Sprites created with `Group.create` or `Group.createMulitple` will have a physics body created on them. Change the body type with physicsBodyType.
* @param {number} [physicsBodyType=0] - If enableBody is true this is the type of physics body that is created on new Sprites. Phaser.Physics.ARCADE, Phaser.Physics.P2, Phaser.Physics.NINJA, etc.
* A Group is a container for display objects that allows for fast pooling, recycling and collision checks.
*
* @method Phaser.GameObjectCreator#spriteBatch
* @param {any} parent - The parent Group or DisplayObjectContainer that will hold this group, if any.
* @param {string} [name='group'] - A name for this Group. Not used internally but useful for debugging.
* @param {boolean} [addToStage=false] - If set to true this Group will be added directly to the Game.Stage instead of Game.World.
* @return {Phaser.Group} The newly created group.
*/
spriteBatch: function (parent, name, addToStage) {
if (typeof name === 'undefined') { name = 'group'; }
if (typeof addToStage === 'undefined') { addToStage = false; }
return new Phaser.SpriteBatch(this.game, parent, name, addToStage);
},
/**
* Creates a new Sound object.
*
* @method Phaser.GameObjectCreator#audio
* @param {string} key - The Game.cache key of the sound that this object will use.
* @param {number} [volume=1] - The volume at which the sound will be played.
* @param {boolean} [loop=false] - Whether or not the sound will loop.
* @param {boolean} [connect=true] - Controls if the created Sound object will connect to the master gainNode of the SoundManager when running under WebAudio.
* @return {Phaser.Sound} The newly created text object.
* @param {string} key - The Game.cache key of the sound that this object will use.
* @param {number} [volume=1] - The volume at which the sound will be played.
* @param {boolean} [loop=false] - Whether or not the sound will loop.
* @param {boolean} [connect=true] - Controls if the created Sound object will connect to the master gainNode of the SoundManager when running under WebAudio.
* @return {Phaser.Sound} The newly created text object.
* @param {number} x - The x coordinate (in world space) to position the TileSprite at.
* @param {number} y - The y coordinate (in world space) to position the TileSprite at.
* @param {number} width - The width of the TileSprite.
* @param {number} height - The height of the TileSprite.
* @param {string|Phaser.RenderTexture|Phaser.BitmapData|PIXI.Texture} key - This is the image or texture used by the TileSprite during rendering. It can be a string which is a reference to the Cache entry, or an instance of a RenderTexture or PIXI.Texture.
* @param {string|number} frame - If this TileSprite is using part of a sprite sheet or texture atlas you can specify the exact frame to use by giving a string or numeric index.
* @return {Phaser.TileSprite} The newly created tileSprite object.
*/
tileSprite: function (x, y, width, height, key, frame) {
return new Phaser.TileSprite(this.game, x, y, width, height, key, frame);
},
/**
* Creates a new Text object.
*
* @method Phaser.GameObjectCreator#text
* @param {number} x - X position of the new text object.
* @param {number} y - Y position of the new text object.
* @param {string} text - The actual text that will be written.
* @param {object} style - The style object containing style attributes like font, font size , etc.
* @return {Phaser.Text} The newly created text object.
return new Phaser.Text(this.game, x, y, text, style);
},
/**
* Creates a new Button object.
*
* @method Phaser.GameObjectCreator#button
* @param {number} [x] X position of the new button object.
* @param {number} [y] Y position of the new button object.
* @param {string} [key] The image key as defined in the Game.Cache to use as the texture for this button.
* @param {function} [callback] The function to call when this button is pressed
* @param {object} [callbackContext] The context in which the callback will be called (usually 'this')
* @param {string|number} [overFrame] This is the frame or frameName that will be set when this button is in an over state. Give either a number to use a frame ID or a string for a frame name.
* @param {string|number} [outFrame] This is the frame or frameName that will be set when this button is in an out state. Give either a number to use a frame ID or a string for a frame name.
* @param {string|number} [downFrame] This is the frame or frameName that will be set when this button is in a down state. Give either a number to use a frame ID or a string for a frame name.
* @param {string|number} [upFrame] This is the frame or frameName that will be set when this button is in an up state. Give either a number to use a frame ID or a string for a frame name.
* @return {Phaser.Button} The newly created button object.
* Create a new RetroFont object to be used as a texture for an Image or Sprite and optionally add it to the Cache.
* A RetroFont uses a bitmap which contains fixed with characters for the font set. You use character spacing to define the set.
* If you need variable width character support then use a BitmapText object instead. The main difference between a RetroFont and a BitmapText
* is that a RetroFont creates a single texture that you can apply to a game object, where-as a BitmapText creates one Sprite object per letter of text.
* The texture can be asssigned or one or multiple images/sprites, but note that the text the RetroFont uses will be shared across them all,
* i.e. if you need each Image to have different text in it, then you need to create multiple RetroFont objects.
* Creates a new Phaser.Tilemap object. The map can either be populated with data from a Tiled JSON file or from a CSV file.
* To do this pass the Cache key as the first parameter. When using Tiled data you need only provide the key.
* When using CSV data you must provide the key and the tileWidth and tileHeight parameters.
* If creating a blank tilemap to be populated later, you can either specify no parameters at all and then use `Tilemap.create` or pass the map and tile dimensions here.
* Note that all Tilemaps use a base tile size to calculate dimensions from, but that a TilemapLayer may have its own unique tile size that overrides it.
* @param {string} [key] - The key of the tilemap data as stored in the Cache. If you're creating a blank map either leave this parameter out or pass `null`.
* @param {number} [tileWidth=32] - The pixel width of a single map tile. If using CSV data you must specify this. Not required if using Tiled map data.
* @param {number} [tileHeight=32] - The pixel height of a single map tile. If using CSV data you must specify this. Not required if using Tiled map data.
* @param {number} [width=10] - The width of the map in tiles. If this map is created from Tiled or CSV data you don't need to specify this.
* @param {number} [height=10] - The height of the map in tiles. If this map is created from Tiled or CSV data you don't need to specify this.