Reputation: 603
I am learning to use PyGame to make a snake game. Now here is how the code looks so far(It's incomplete, please don't give actual code for making a snake game!):
# Setting up PyGame and a window
import pygame
pygame.init()
dis = pygame.display.set_mode((400, 300))
pygame.display.update()
pygame.display.set_caption('Snake game by snoopstick')
game_over = False
# Creating Colors
blue = (0, 0, 225)
red = (255, 0, 0)
while not game_over:
for event in pygame.event.get():
if event.type == pygame.QUIT:
game_over = True
pygame.draw.rect(dis, blue, [200, 150, 10, 10])
pygame.display.update()
pygame.quit()
quit()
You can see I already can make red and blue, but I want to know how to make more colors or more different types of games. Just what different parameters can go in place of blue and red.
Upvotes: 0
Views: 1515
Reputation: 2779
pygame has a large number of named colors predefined, which is useful. Instead of redefining them yourself, you can just get the red and blue colors from pygames predefined list:
red = pygame.Color('red')
blue = pygame.Color('blue')
You can see all the colors directly by looking at the dict pygame.color.THECOLORS, but that is a lot of colors to go through. Here is a link to my answer to a previous answer to a similar question. Maybe I should just leave it to the link for the answer? Not sure, so I will include enough to be useful.
I find this code snippet handy to execute in a interactive session and then I can just use the one I want in my actual code.
import pygame
from pprint import pprint
def print_colors(color_name):
color_list = [(c, v) for c, v in pygame.color.THECOLORS.items() if color_name in c]
pprint(color_list)
print_colors('slategrey')
which outputs:
[('darkslategrey', (47, 79, 79, 255)),
('slategrey', (112, 128, 144, 255))
('lightslategrey', (119, 136, 153, 255))]
I do that in an interactive session to get all the names that include 'slategrey' and then in my actual code I can use the one I want like this:
darkslategrey = pygame.Color('darkslategrey')
Upvotes: 1
Reputation: 984
Colors are a mixture of red, green, and blue. Just like paint. You control the amount of each in the mix by using values between 0 and 255 (inclusive).
You can make any color you want, with the Pygame Color
class - https://www.pygame.org/docs/ref/color.html
Take a look at the Color
class constructor for a variety of ways to create colors.
If you want to try out some color mixing, use the HTML color picker page.
Upvotes: 1
Reputation: 318
Those are RGB colors, there is a selector in the link provided!
Upvotes: 1