The video clip shows a round from our final tournament. The server was written using Python and PyGame.
Well, it's been a while since posting any news. I'll have an entry about that later.
Another game emerges. Appropriately for a continually under construction site, there's a game about construction. This was an entry for the Game Crafter's Vehicle contest. I'm happy to announce that it's finally the first board game published by Mikeware with high quality printing thanks to The Game Crafter.
Figure I should switch over to the new format. Still haven't had a chance to convert everything over to the new format.
If so, you might have noticed the image on the left.
Spent some time working on the new website format here. Got the nice icon in the banner and fixed the site image on the right.
I must say when I set out to do this task, I figured it wouldn't take me a few days of thinking to figure out. What was I trying to do? Something seemingly simple, a blend of mathematics for the leveling system in my new game...
Aside: Now, I used to love math when I was a kid. I was good at it, it made sense, and it let you do a lot of cool stuff. I still realize its importance, but university pretty much killed my love for math by making me memorize formulas I knew how to use to take tests... And if you don't know already, my memory is like a sieve...
Anyway, the world of video games usually involves a lot of these calculations, and I'll laboriously call back my skills and try and figure things out. Usually this is difficult late at night after working all day, so it'll usually take me a couple of days on and off thinking about the problem in different ways to solve it. This is just another one of those stories...
I've been working on a game this weekend. (I think this is the first time I'll publicly announce something ahead of time! It's been going really well, and I think I'll be able to post a couple of articles about development while I'm at it.)
So, when I start a new game, I need to clean-up my display and remove all the objects on it. This usually calls for the "let's iterate through the list and remove the items" (as I need to do many steps for each thing I remove). However, this also applies in cases where you just want to check the item (such as for a collision detection) and remove it conditionally.
Find out more about Suitor 2 in this lovely HD video also showcasing the fabulous Samsung Focus.
For those of you not aware, there's a bug in the WP7 Pivot control. It crashes if you try and set the SelectedIndex to 2. Hopefully, you've encountered this during testing and found this trying to solve it. Hopefully it'll just be fixed in a future update, but that doesn't help now.
I tried a few things, but for Suitor 2 landed on the following solution as the simplest. The only impact it has is that your first Pivot page will display briefly before it pans to the one you desired to set programmatically. All you need to do is rig up the "Loaded" event on your Pivot control. Then you can dispatch the call to change the index, like so: