Inside my main UIViewController, I'm defining two SKScenes. I want to present only gameScene at first, and then present uiScene later, triggered by an action in gameScene (hitting the pause button).
The problem is that skView, the view containing both scenes, is not recognized outside of the UIViewController.
The code is below. Any help would be appreciated.
class GameViewController: UIViewController {
override func viewDidLoad() {
super.viewDidLoad()
let skView = view as SKView
let gameScene = GameScene(size: view.bounds.size)
gameScene.scaleMode = .ResizeFill
skView.presentScene(gameScene)
let uiScene = UIScene(size: view.bounds.size)
uiScene.scaleMode = .ResizeFill
uiScene.backgroundColor = UIColor.clearColor()
//skView.presentScene(uiScene) // I want to present this line from within gameScene.
}
}
let reveal = SKTransition.flipHorizontalWithDuration(0.5)
let scene = uiScene(size: size)
self.view?.presentScene(scene, transition:reveal)
You can transition from one scene to another from within the scene. My code is pulled from http://www.raywenderlich.com/84434/sprite-kit-swift-tutorial-beginners in the last section.
Remember to import the header of the scene you are transitioning TO in the scene you are transitioning FROM.
Related
I know this question has been asked many times, however most aren't properly answered and do not follow the same set up as mine.
I have two UIViewControllers, GameViewController and MenuViewController. The MenuViewController uses a storyboard and UIKit. The GameViewController loads an SKScene. When the app starts it opens the MenuViewController. I have already made a button that segues to the Game on the Menu in the storybaord. That works, but now I am trying to do the opposite and return back to the Menu while in the Game. I have tried to use code that has answered similar questions but none seems to work.
Here is my GameViewController that I messed around with:
class GameViewController: UIViewController {
override func viewDidLoad() {
super.viewDidLoad()
if let view = self.view as! SKView?{
if let scene = SKScene(fileNamed: "GameScene"){
let gameScene = scene as! GameScene
gameScene.gameViewControllerDelegate = self
gameScene.scaleMode = .aspectFill
view.presentScene(gameScene)
}
view.showsFPS = true
view.showsNodeCount = true
view.ignoresSiblingOrder = true
// Do any additional setup aft)er loading the view.
}
}
func callMethod(inputProperty:String){
print("inputProperty is: ",inputProperty)
}
And the code I added to my GameScene:
class GameScene: SKScene, SKPhysicsContactDelegate {
weak var gameViewControllerDelegate:GameViewControllerDelegate?
override func didMove(to view: SKView) {
gameViewControllerDelegate?.callMethod(inputProperty: "call game view controller method")
I am making this app with multiple features, one of which is supposed to be a game. the normal collision game where you hit objects and score. but my app is a Single based application.
when i create a new swift file, how can i add a SKScene to a UIViewController?
any help will be appreciated.
SKScene needs to be added to an SKView which is a subclass of UIView. When you create the view controller, you can either set the view property to be an SKView or add an SKView as a subview, then add your SKScene to that SKView via the presentScene: method on SKView. Here's an example on how you could achieve that:
import SpriteKit
class SomeViewController: UIViewController {
func viewDidLoad() {
super.viewDidLoad()
let sceneView = SKView(frame: view.frame)
let scene = SKScene()
// Do any other scene setup here
view.addSubview(sceneView)
sceneView.presentScene(scene)
}
}
Sorry if there are small syntactical errors. Didn't have a chance to test this and my memory of the SpriteKit API is hazy. Hope this helps!
There seems to be so many contradicting ideas on this topic.
I simply wish to have my menu in a UIViewController and my game in the SKScene
In my SKScene I used:
self.removeFromParent()
self.view?.presentScene(nil)
The nodes are removed but the scene is still in place as I still have the grey background and fps counter. Can I return to the View aspect of the UIViewController and hide the scene?
My method one implementation:
RootViewController:
class RootViewController: UIViewController {
var menu = MenuViewController()
var game = GameViewController()
override func viewDidLoad() {
super.viewDidLoad()
print("root")
MenuPresent()
}
func GamePresent() {
self.addChildViewController(game)
self.view.addSubview((game.view)!)
game.didMoveToParentViewController(self)
}
func MenuPresent() {
self.addChildViewController(menu)
self.view.addSubview((menu.view)!)
menu.didMoveToParentViewController(self)
}
func menuDismiss() {
menu.willMoveToParentViewController(nil)
menu.removeFromParentViewController()
menu.view.removeFromSuperview()
}
}
MenuViewController:
class MenuViewController: UIViewController {
//var root = RootViewController()
override func viewDidLoad() {
super.viewDidLoad()
print("menu")
}
}
The print("menu") appears in my console, But the actual view and all assets of the MenuViewController do no appear.
On the other hand my GameViewController and it's SKScene work fine.
Views and scenes are two different things. Scenes are held inside of a view. You would have to simply present a scene within your menu view or transition to another view and present an SKScene from there. The code to present the scene might look like this:
let scene = GameScene(fileNamed: "GameScene")
let skView = self.view as! SKView
scene?.scaleMode = .AspectFit
skView.presentScene(scene)
First you need to know that SKScene and UIViewController are totally two different things. The hierarchy is typically as following:
UIViewController --> UIView(SKView) --> SKScene
So you SKScene is presented in a SKView which can be a UIView, then the UIView is presented in a UIViewController.
Once you know the hierarchy, everything is easy. There are many ways to use different UIViewController for menu and GameScene stuff.
Method One
For example, you can have a RootViewController, a GameViewController and a MenuViewController. The RootViewController is the initial ViewController when the app launches.
In the RootViewController, you can create a function to present the GameViewController:
func setupGameViewController() {
self.gameViewController = GameViewController()
self.addChildViewController(gameViewController!)
self.view.addSubview((gameViewController!.view)!)
gameViewController?.didMoveToParentViewController(self)
}
You need to present you SKScene in GameViewController, I guess you should be familiar with this step.
Then when you need to display the menu, you can add the MenuViewController to RootViewController with a function like:
func setupMenuViewController() {
self.menuViewController = MenuViewController()
self.addChildViewController(menuViewController!)
self.view.addSubview((menuViewController!.view)!)
menuViewController?.didMoveToParentViewController(self)
}
You also need to present you menuView in this ViewController, which I suppose you already know.
Also create a function to dismiss the MenuViewController:
func removeMenuViewController(){
self.menuViewController?.willMoveToParentViewController(nil)
self.menuViewController?.removeFromParentViewController()
self.menuViewController?.view.removeFromSuperview()
}
And everything is done.
Method Two
You can also have only one UIViewController, but create you menu as a UIView, then you can use self.view.addSuview(menuView) to present your menu. Of course you root view, which is the self.view as SKView is still there, but it doesn't matter because it's hidden behind the menuView.
A Note for your updated question
You cannot remove the scene because the scene is actually self.view as SKView, self.view is the root view of a UIViewController, it cannot be removed. If you really want to remove you scene (for most cases, it's not necessary), you can create a new SKView that present your SKScene, then add this SKView to your UIViewController by self.view.addSubview(skView), when you want to completely remove the scene, just use skView.removeFromSuperview().
QUESTION: How can I dismiss a ViewController from my GameScene.swift ?
SITUTATION: I have 2 VCs in my SpriteKit Game, like so:
ViewController.swift ----Press Play-----> GameViewController
When the player loses, I want to dismiss the GameViewController so the player can press play again. I check for the player's loss in my GameScene.swift and would like to dismiss the GameVC from there.
N.B.: Googled this without success.
WHAT I TRIED:
1) Creating a gameVC instance in my GameScene.swift and dismissing it like so:
let gameVC = GameViewController()
gameVC.dismissViewController(false,completion: nil)
2) Doing:
self.view.window!.rootViewController?.dismissViewControllerAnimated(false, completion: nil)
Those don't work for obvious reasons ^^
You don't want to "grab" the existing instance: https://pragprog.com/articles/tell-dont-ask
You need to either hand GameScene a reference to the view controller so it can dismiss it, or use the delegate pattern to communicate backwards to a controlling object that the VC should be dismissed/dismiss itself.
A simple example… you can add a GameViewController property to GameScene, then dismiss the VC at the appropriate time:
class GameScene: SKScene {
var gameVC: GameViewController?
func gameDidEnd() {
gameVC?.dismissViewControllerAnimated(true) {
// if desired, do any cleanup after the VC is dismissed
}
}
}
Then, just set this property when creating the GameScene object in the first place:
if let gameScene = GameScene(fileNamed: "MyScene") {
gameScene.gameVC = someGameVC
}
This simple approach will tightly couple GameScene and GameViewController, making it a bit more difficult if you ever want to use one of these objects without the other. But for this simple use case, it may be fine.
I've follow some of your discussion. I want to add some code, because usually I prefeer to work with one ViewController or two and many SKScene and SKNode, but in this case could be useful to have a currentViewController reference:
class MyModelScene: SKScene {
let appDelegate = UIApplication.sharedApplication().delegate as! AppDelegate
var currentViewController : MyModelViewController! = MyModelViewController()
// MyModelViewController is a customized UIViewController
override func didMoveToView(view: SKView) {
super.didMoveToView(view)
print("---")
print("∙ \(NSStringFromClass(self.dynamicType))")
print("---")
}
}
class Level1Scene: MyModelScene {
...
}
In the UIViewController:
class PreloadViewController: MyModelViewController {
override func viewDidLoad() {
super.viewDidLoad()
if let scene = Level1Scene(fileNamed:"Level1Scene") {
// Configure the view.
let skView = self.view as! SKView
skView.showsFPS = true
skView.showsPhysics = true
skView.showsNodeCount = true
skView.ignoresSiblingOrder = true
/* Set the scale mode to scale to fit the window */
scene.scaleMode = .ResizeFill
scene.currentViewController = self
skView.presentScene(scene)
}
}
}
With this code , you've always a currentViewController reference in your SKScene and you can check if it's the correct viewController you want to dismiss or not.
I created a new Swift file called GamePlayController.swift and I hooked it up to one of my Views in Storyboard. I am trying to run this code, but I get a SIGABRT at the line with the double asterisks. What is the reason for this?
import UIKit
import SpriteKit
class GamePlayController: UIViewController, UIGestureRecognizerDelegate {
var scene: GameScene!
override func viewDidLoad() {
super.viewDidLoad()
// Configure the view.
**let skView = view as! SKView**
skView.multipleTouchEnabled = false
// Create and configure the scene.
scene = GameScene(size: skView.bounds.size)
scene.scaleMode = .AspectFill
// Present the scene.
skView.presentScene(scene)
}
view in this case is not an SKView instance. Try making an outlet in your source file to the SKView in the view controller in your storyboard. Google "iOS create storyboard outlet" if you're not sure how.