Reputation: 31
I have just started trying to learn about pygame, and I've run into some trouble when trying to move my rectangle around the screen. I have it set so that when I press each of the arrow keys, the rectangle will move up, down, left, and right. However, when I hold down the keys, it will not keep moving. I have to press the keys multiple times for it to move anywhere.
I have tried using the pygame.key.get_pressed() method as answered in the post Python - Smooth Keyboard Movement in Pygame but nothing is working.
I noticed that every once in a while if I hold down the arrow keys for a while, the rectangle will keep moving but only for about a second, then it stops.
This question has probably been answered before, but I haven't been able to come across an answer.
Here is the code:
import pygame
import os
import sys
_image_library = {}
def get_image(path):
global _image_library
image = _image_library.get(path)
if image == None:
canonicalized_path = path.replace('/', os.sep).replace('\\', os.sep)
image = pygame.image.load(canonicalized_path)
_image_library[path] = image
return image
def detect_collision(x,y):
if x > 340:
x -= 1
if y > 240:
y -= 1
if y < 0:
y += 1
if x < 0:
x += 1
return x,y
pygame.init()
screen = pygame.display.set_mode((800, 550))
done = False
clock = pygame.time.Clock()
x = 30
y = 30
pygame.mixer.music.load("song.mp3")
pygame.mixer.music.play()
while not done:
for event in pygame.event.get():
if event.type == pygame.QUIT:
done = True
pressed = pygame.key.get_pressed()
if pressed[pygame.K_UP]:
y -= 1
x,y = detect_collision(x, y)
if pressed[pygame.K_DOWN]:
y += 1
x,y = detect_collision(x, y)
if pressed[pygame.K_LEFT]:
x -= 1
x,y = detect_collision(x, y)
if pressed[pygame.K_RIGHT]:
x += 1
x,y = detect_collision(x, y)
screen.fill((255, 255, 255))
pygame.draw.rect(screen, (0, 128, 0), pygame.Rect(x, y, 60, 60))
pygame.display.flip()
clock.tick(60)
Upvotes: 3
Views: 1964
Reputation: 467
I had a similar problem, so instead of using get_pressed(), I use a dict and update it whenever a key is pressed:
pressed = {}
while True:
for event in pygame.event.get():
if event.type == KEYUP:
pressed[event.key] = False
elif event.type == KEYDOWN:
pressed[event.key] = True
Then to test if a key (e.g. the up arrow) was pressed just use
if pressed.get(K_UP):
# Do something
inside the main event loop (i.e. the while True).
Upvotes: 3