Parallel loading is now supported, configured by
`loader.concurrentRequestCount`. Each file (a pack is now considered a
type of file) asset can be marked with `sync`, which is done for both pack
files and script files.
When a `sync` asset is encountered it must be loaded before any previous
resource any following resource is loaded (but it doesn't have to wait for
previous resources). Pack files are an exception in that they can download
(but are not processed) and they can fetch-around other `sync` assets.
Because of the concurrent nature there is no guarantee of the order in
which the individual events will file in relation to eachother, but local
ordering (e.g. onFileError always before onFileComplete) and overall
ordering (e.g. onLoadStart .. onFile? .. onLoadComplete) is preserved.
There is also increased error hardening and a few previous edge-cases
fixed (and likely a few bugs added).
Keyboard.justReleased has bee renamed to Keyboard.upDuration which is a much clearer name for what the method actually does.
Keyboard.downDuration, Keyboard.upDuration and Keyboard.isDown now all return `null` if the Key wasn't found in the local keys array.
Calling justPressed or justReleased on Phaser.Keyboard throws an exception. Changed to reflect new method names in Phaser.Key
I imagine you'd want these methods renamed as well, but it appears to be called by a few other classes and I didn't want a huge pull-request.
When specifying the ease in `Tween.to` or `Tween.from` you can now use a string instead of the Function. This makes your code less verbose. For example instead of `Phaser.Easing.Sinusoidal.Out` and you can now just use the string "Sine".The string names match those used by TweenMax and includes: "Linear", "Quad", "Cubic", "Quart", "Quint", "Sine", "Expo", "Circ", "Elastic", "Back", "Bounce", "Power0", "Power1", "Power2", "Power3" and "Power4". You can append ".easeIn", ".easeOut" and "easeInOut" variants. All are supported for each ease types.
Tweens now create a TweenData object. The Tween object itself acts like more of a timeline, managing multiple TweenData objects. You can now call `Tween.to` and each call will create a new child tween that is added to the timeline, which are played through in sequence.
Tweens are now bound to the new Time.desiredFps value and update based on the new Game core loop, rather than being bound to time calculations. This means that tweens are now running with the same update logic as physics and the core loop.
Tween.timeScale allows you to scale the duration of a tween (and any child tweens it may have). A value of 1.0 means it should play at the desiredFps rate. A value of 0.5 will run at half the frame rate, 2 at double and so on. You can even tween the timeScale value for interesting effects!
Tween.reverse allows you to instantly reverse an active tween. If the Tween has children then it will smoothly reverse through all child tweens as well.
Tween.repeatAll allows you to control how many times all child tweens will repeat before firing the Tween.onComplete event. You can set the value to -1 to repeat forever.
Tween.loop now controls the looping of all child tweens.
Tween.onRepeat is a new signal that is dispatched whenever a Tween repeats. If a Tween has many child tweens its dispatched once the sequence has repeated.
Tween.onChildComplete is a new signal that is dispatched whenever any child tweens have completed. If a Tween consists of 4 sections you will get 3 onChildComplete events followed by 1 onComplete event as the final tween finishes.
Chained tweens are now more intelligently handled. Because you can easily create child tweens (by simply calling Tween.to multiple times) chained tweens are now used to kick-off longer sequences. You can pass as many Tween objects to `Tween.chain` as you like as they'll all be played in sequence. As one Tween completes it passes on to the next until the entire chain is finished.
Tween.stop has a new `complete` parameter that if set will still fire the onComplete event and start the next chained tween, if there is one.
Tween.delay, Tween.repeat, Tween.yoyo, Tween.easing and Tween.interpolation all have a new `index` parameter. This allows you to target specific child tweens, or if set to -1 it will update all children at once.
Tween.totalDuration reports the total duration of all child tweens in ms.
There are new easing aliases:
* Phaser.Easing.Power0 = Phaser.Easing.Linear.None
* Phaser.Easing.Power1 = Phaser.Easing.Quadratic.Out
* Phaser.Easing.Power2 = Phaser.Easing.Cubic.Out
* Phaser.Easing.Power3 = Phaser.Easing.Quartic.Out
* Phaser.Easing.Power4 = Phaser.Easing.Quintic.Out
ScaleManager.windowContraints now allows specifing 'visual' or 'layout' as
the constraint. Using the 'layout' constraint should prevent a mobile
device from trying to resize the game when zooming.
Including the the new changes the defaults have been changed to
windowContraints = { right: 'layout', bottom: '' }
This changes the current scaling behavior as seen in "Game Scaling" (as it
will only scale for the right edge) but also prevents such scaling from
going wonkers in some mobile environtments like the newer Android browser.
(Automatic scroll-to-top, albeit configurable, enabled for non-desktop by
default is not a fun situation here.)
To obtain the current semantics on a desktop the bottom should be changed
to 'layout'; although this will result in different behavior depending on
mobile device. To make the sizing also follow mobile zooming they should
be changed to 'visual'.
Also added temp Rectangle re-used for various internal calculations.
---
Phaser.DOM now also special-cases desktops to align the layout bounds
correctly (this may disagree with CSS breakpoints but it aligns the with
actual CSS width), without applying a window height/width expansion as
required on mobile browsers.
(And the jshint error isn't mine..)
"Final" changes for a solid 2.2-worthy ScaleManager.
This adds in official support for USER_SCALE, which allows a flexible way
to control the scaling dynamically.
It fixes a visible display bug in desktop browsers (viewport clipping was
off) and mitigates some potential issues all around by using a unified
visualBound calculations in Phaser.DOM.
It applies some protected/deprecated attributes, but does not remove any
behavior of already-established (as in, outside-dev) means.
There are no known [signficant] breaking changes; any known breaks (not
considered fixes) are constrained to dev with no known consumers.
Phaser.DOM
There are no known significant breaking changes; Phaser.DOM was
internal.
- Added visualBounds; this should be the true visual area, minus the
scrollbars. This should be used instead of clientWidth/clientHeight to
detect the visual viewport.
- Expose various viewport sizes as dynamically updated properties on
Rectangle objects. These are visualBounds, layoutBounds,
documentBounds.
- Updated documentation the different bounds; in particular drawing
distinction between viewport/layout bounds and visual bounds.
- Renamed `inViewport` to `inLayoutViewport` to indidcate behavior.
- Minor breaking, but dev-only
- Changed `getAspectRatio` to work on Visual viewport. This will yield
the expected behavior on mobiles.
- Minor breaking, but dev-only
- Removed some quirks-mode and legacy-browser special casing
Phaser.ScaleManager
There are no known significant breaking changes.
- USER_SCALE is 'made public'. It can used to flexibly configure any
custom-yet-dynamic scaling requirements; it should now be able to
replace any sane usage of manual sizing invoking the deprecated
setSize/setScreenSize.
- Added additional usage documentation and links to such
- Added the ability to specify a post-scale trim factor.
- Change the arguments the resize callback and document what is passed
- Minor breaking, but the previous arguments were undocumented
- `compatiblity.showAllCanExpand` renamed to `canExpandParent` and made
generalized over possibly-expanding scaling.
- Minor breaking, dev-only, for coding changing this settin
- Switched from direct usage of of window innerWidth/Heigth to
Phaser.DOM visualViewport - this change correctly accounts for
scrollbars in desktop environments
- Although it does slightly alter the behavior, this is a fix.
- Removed usage of window outerWidth/outerHeight which didn't make much
sense where it was used for desktops and was catostrophic for mobile
browser
- Although it may slightly alter the behavior, this is a fix.
- Removed `aspect` and `elementBounds` because they are duplicative of
Phaser.DOM (which can not be accessed as `scale.dom`).
- Minor breaking, but internal methods on dev-only
- Marked the minWidth/maxWidth/minHeight/maxHeight properties as
protected. They are not removed/obsoleted, but should be revised later
for more flexibility.
- Orientation handling; non-breaking forward deprecations
- Added `onOrientationChange` and deprecated the 4 separate leave,
enter, landscape and portrait signals. They are not removed, so this
is a future-migration change.
- Fixed issue where state not updated prior to callback
- Fixed issue where orientation callbacks were not always delayed
- Fullscreen events: non-breaking forward deprecations
- Added `onFullScreenChange` and deprecated `enterFullScreen` and
`leaveFullScreen`.
- Renamed (with proxy) `fullScreenFailed` to `onFullScreenError`.
Phaser.Device
- Improved `whenReady` to support Phaser.DOM better
- Allows a ready handler to be added without starting the
device-detection proccess. This allows it to be registered to
internally (eg. from System.DOM) without affecting current behavior.
- Passes the device object as the first parameter to the callback
function.
- Fixed code where Silk detection not applied to `desktop` detection.
Manifest: System.Device moved before System.DOM
No breaking changes.
- Fixed jsdoc error `*[]` with documentation
- Also corrected documentation to align with behavior and changed
`callback` to `key` in callAll for consistency