Reputation: 13
I'm struggling to work out how collisions work in pygame. I understand it's something to do with pygame.rect.colliderect, and I'm probably pretty close, but I'd appreciate someone who knows a bit more than me having a look! :-)
Here's a simple program I've written to steer a tiny green square onto a larger red square, and I'm trying to implement collision detection when the two meet, but at this stage everything works except collisions.
Thanks in advance!!
pygame.init()
import random #import random
size = (700,500) # set up the screen
screen = pygame.display.set_mode((size))
BLACK = (0,0,0) #define colours
WHITE = (255,255,255)
GREEN = (0,255,0)
RED = (255, 0, 0)
class player(): #assign a player class
def __init__(self):
self.xpos = 450
self.ypos = 250
self.rect = pygame.Rect(self.xpos,self.ypos,5,5)
self.xvel = 0
self.yvel = 0
self.colour = GREEN
def update(self): #define a function to update the payer
#self.xpos +=self.xvel Ignore this bit. I implemented velocity, but it quickly flew off the screen
#self.ypos +=self.yvel
if player.rect.colliderect(obstacle.rect): #<--------- this is the bit I think might be wrong?
print("collision!")
def draw(self): #define a function to draw the player
pygame.draw.rect(screen, self.colour,[self.xpos,self.ypos,5,5])
class obstacle(): #define an obstacle class
def __init__ (self):
self.xpos = random.uniform(0,700)
self.ypos = random.uniform(0,500)
self.rect = pygame.Rect(self.xpos,self.ypos,20,20)
self.colour = RED
def draw(self): #define a function to draw the obstacle
pygame.draw.rect(screen, self.colour,[self.xpos,self.ypos, 20,20])
player = player() #run an instance of the player class
obstacle = obstacle() #run an instance of the obstacle class
clock = pygame.time.Clock()
while True: #game loop
for event in pygame.event.get(): #quit
if event.type == pygame.QUIT:
pygame.display.quit()
#-----Game logic
keys = pygame.key.get_pressed() #check for key presses and do whatever
if keys[pygame.K_LEFT]:
player.xpos -= 1
if keys[pygame.K_RIGHT]:
player.xpos += 1
if keys[pygame.K_UP]:
player.ypos -= 1
if keys[pygame.K_DOWN]:
player.ypos += 1
player.update() #Update the player - obstacle shouldn't need updating
#-----Drawing code
screen.fill(BLACK) #draw screen black
obstacle.draw() #draw the obstacle from the function
player.draw() #draw the player from the function
pygame.display.flip() #update
clock.tick(60)'''
Upvotes: 1
Views: 141
Reputation: 1250
In these cases always print out what is not working, i.e. player.rect and obstacle.rect. You will see that you are not updating player.rect, which is always
<rect(150, 150, 5, 5)>
Since it does not overlap with obstacle.rect, which is always
<rect(34, 204, 20, 20)>
the collision is not detected.
Upvotes: 0
Reputation: 390
The problem is you are not updating the position of your player's rectangle, which what colliderect looks at when detecting a collision. You were drawing the rectangle as you changed xpos
and ypox
but the coordinates for your rectangle rect.x
and rect.y
were not being updated accordingly. I changed the lines
def draw(self): #define a function to draw the player
pygame.draw.rect(screen, self.colour,[self.xpos,self.ypos,5,5])
to
def draw(self): #define a function to draw the player
pygame.draw.rect(screen, self.colour,[self.rect.x,self.rect.y,5,5])
and
if keys[pygame.K_LEFT]:
player.xpos -= 1
if keys[pygame.K_RIGHT]:
player.xpos += 1
if keys[pygame.K_UP]:
player.ypos -= 1
if keys[pygame.K_DOWN]:
player.ypos += 1
to
if keys[pygame.K_LEFT]:
player.rect.x -= 1
if keys[pygame.K_RIGHT]:
player.rect.x += 1
if keys[pygame.K_UP]:
player.rect.y -= 1
if keys[pygame.K_DOWN]:
player.rect.y += 1
so that the player's rectangle coordinates would be updated.
Upvotes: 1