NAME

TCOD::Context - ...

SYNOPSIS

use TCOD;

my ( $width, $height ) = ( 640, 480 );

my $tileset = TCOD::Tileset->load_tilesheet(
    dist_file( TCOD => 'arial10x10.png' ),
    32, 8, TCOD::CHARMAP_TCOD,
);

my $context = TCOD::Context->new_terminal(
    $widht, $height,
    tileset => $tileset,
    title   => 'My window title',
);

my $console = TCOD::Console->new( $width, $height );
$console->print( 1, 1, '@' );

$context->present($console);

DESCRIPTION

This class represents a terminal emulator for rendering text-based games.

METHODS

new

$context = TCOD::Context->new( %options );

Create a new TCOD::Context with the desired pixel size.

The x, y, width, and height parameters are the desired position and size of the window. If these are not specified, they will be derived from the values in columns and rows. So if you plan on having a console of a fixed size then you should set columns and c<rows> instead of the window keywords.

The columns and rows values specify the desired size of the console in tiles. They can be left undefined when you're setting a context by a window size instead of a console.

Providing no size information at all is also acceptable.

The value in renderer is the desired libtcod renderer to use. Typical options are TCOD::RENDERER_OPENGL2|TCOD/Renderer for a faster renderer or TCOD::RENDERER_SDL2 for a reliable renderer.

The font / tileset is specified with the tileset key. The fall-back tileset available as the default is useful for prototyping, but will be unreliable across platforms.

The value in vsync controls the vertical sync option for the window. This is enabled by default and is recommended, but you may want to disable it for benchmarking purposes.

Additional SDL window flags can be passed as a bit-field in the sdl_window_flags. By default, this will be set to SDL_WINDOW_RESIZABLE. You can see more details on the flags that are available on the SDL2 documentation.

The desired title of the window can be set with the title key.

When a window size is given instead of a console size you can use recommended_console_size to automatically find the size of the console which should be used.

new_console

$console = TCOD::Context->new_console( $cols, $rows, $magnification );
$console = TCOD::Context->new_console(
    min_columns   => $cols,
    min_rows      => $rows,
    magnification => $magnification,
);

Return a new TCOD::Console sized for this context. The values in min_columns and min_rows are the minimum size to use for the new console.

The value in magnification, which must be greater than 0, determines the apparent size of the tiles on the output display. A value greater than 1 will output smaller consoles, which will show as larger tiles when presented.

The times where it is the most useful to call this method are:

  • After the context is created, even if the console was given a specific size

  • After the change_tileset method is called

  • After any window resized event, or any manual resizing of the window

present

$context->present( $console, %rest );
$context->present(
    console         => $console,
    keep_aspect     => $keep_aspect // 0,
    integer_scaling => $bool        // 0,
    clear_color     => $color       // TCOD::BLACK,
    align           => $alignment   // [ 0.5, 0.5 ],
);

Present the specified TCOD::Console to this context's display.

If keep_aspect is set to a true value the console's aspect will be preserved with a letterbox. Otherwise the console will be stretched to fill the screen.

If integer_scaling is set to a true value the console will be scaled in integer increments. This will have no effect if the console must be shrunk. You can use TCOD::Console::recommended_size to create a console which will fit the window without needing to be scaled.

The value in clear_color should be a TCOD::Color that, if set, will be used to clear the screen before the console is presented. This will affect the border/letterbox color.

The value in align is an array reference of the shape [ x, y ] determining where the console will be placed when letter-boxing exists. Values of 0 will put the console at the upper-left corner. Values of 0.5 will center the console.

This function accepts named parameters, but the console parameter may also be passed as the first positional parameter.

( $w, $h ) = $ctx->recommended_console_size( $min_cols, $min_rows );

Return the recommended size in tiles of a console for this context.

The values in $min_cols and $min_rows are the lowest values which will be returned.

If the result is only used to create a new TCOD::Console then you may want to call new_console instead.

convert_event

$context->convert_event( $event );

Add tile coordinates to a TCOD::Event that already has pixel coordinates. This applies only to some mouse events.

pixel_to_tile

( $tile_x, $tile_y ) = $ontext->pixel_to_tile( $pixel_x, $pixel_y );

Convert from pixel coordinates to this context's tile coordinates. The components of the tile coordinates will be integers. See pixel_to_subtile for an alternative that returns floating point numbers.

pixel_to_subtile

( $tile_x, $tile_y ) = $ontext->pixel_to_subtile( $pixel_x, $pixel_y );

Convert from pixel coordinates to this context's tile coordinates. The components of the tile coordinates will have sub-tile precision. If no such precision is needed, consider using pixel_to_tile instead.

SEE ALSO

TCOD
TCOD::Console
TCOD::Tileset

COPYRIGHT AND LICENSE

Copyright 2021 José Joaquín Atria

This library is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the Artistic License 2.0.