Reputation: 2052
I am not sure, how i can be more specific, but i am putting my best effort to explain it.I am trying to understand, what should i be looking for to be more specific, so this is all i have got at this moment.
I was exploring HTML5 JavaScript games, and I noticed, that making the canvas height and width 100% distorts the animation within. a simple example that i got from here. If i change the canvas size to 100% (in the example I have provided) it breaks the animation of the game(for example the asteroid).
I would like to know, which property of HTML5 is responsible for this behaviour and what should I be looking for to get the HTML5 animation fit the complete screen size?
EDIT
I tried to run cordova to build the game to native platform,but the 1st problem i am encountering is that the canvas was not fitting the screen size. (that's why i wanted it to completely fit the browser screen, but i see a complete misfit when a canvas made for the browser screen is rendered to the native using cordova).
I explored phaser, about how they are solving this problem, and found this game which is using something called a ScalingManager.
So, my questions are
1. What is scaling a Game?
2. How is the scaling-manager of phaser working
3. without using the scaling manager why will a game not fit the moile screen size even though the canvas height and width are properly mentioned?
4. is there a small experment (without using any phaser or similar javascript game framework) that i can do to understand the need for scaling with simple HTML5 javasctipt and cordova?
Upvotes: 1
Views: 1646
Reputation: 711
With Phaser 3, I succeeded by adding window.innerWidth
and window.innerHeight
to the Scale object into my config :
config: Phaser.Types.Core.GameConfig = {
type: Phaser.AUTO,
scale: {
mode: Phaser.Scale.FIT,
parent: 'phaser-game',
autoCenter: Phaser.Scale.CENTER_BOTH,
width: window.innerWidth,
height: window.innerHeight
},
scene: [MainScene],
parent: 'gameContainer',
physics: {
default: 'arcade',
arcade: {
gravity: {y: 0}
}
}
};
For the moment I don't see any problem, it makes the trick.
Upvotes: 0
Reputation: 114491
A canvas has two distinct sizes:
To avoid distortion and get a pixel-perfect graphic you need to ensure they end up equal... for example:
function redraw() {
canvas.width = canvas.offsetWidth;
canvas.height = canvas.offsetHeight;
...
}
For single-page HTML games where you just want to draw everything in a canvas a simple approach is:
<!DOCTYPE html>
<html>
<head>
<style type='text/css'>
* {
margin: 0;
padding: 0;
border: none;
}
body,html {
height: 100%;
width: 100%;
}
</style>
</head>
<body>
<script>
var canvas = document.createElement('canvas');
canvas.style.position = 'absolute';
var body = document.body;
body.insertBefore(canvas, body.firstChild);
var context = canvas.getContext('2d');
var devicePixelRatio = window.devicePixelRatio || 1;
var backingStoreRatio = context.webkitBackingStorePixelRatio
|| context.mozBackingStorePixelRatio || context.msBackingStorePixelRatio
|| context.oBackingStorePixelRatio || context.backingStorePixelRatio || 1;
var ratio = devicePixelRatio / backingStoreRatio;
redraw();
window.addEventListener('resize', redraw, false);
window.addEventListener('orientationchange', redraw, false);
function redraw() {
width = (window.innerWidth > 0 ? window.innerWidth : screen.width);
height = (window.innerHeight > 0 ? window.innerHeight : screen.height);
canvas.style.width = width + 'px';
canvas.style.height = height + 'px';
width *= ratio;
height *= ratio;
if (canvas.width === width && canvas.height === height) {
return;
}
canvas.width = width;
canvas.height = height;
}
//draw things
</script>
</body>
</html>
You will also need to check for changes in innerWidth
/ innerHeight
if your app has parts in which you're just waiting for user interaction (not looping on calling redraw
) and the user instead resizes the browser window or tilts the phone/tab.
Upvotes: 2