Building JavaScript Games
Apress (Verlag)
978-1-4302-6538-2 (ISBN)
The four games you’ll develop from reading this book are:
Painter
Jewel Jam
Penguin Pairs
Tick Tick
These four games are casual, arcade-style games representing the aim-and-shoot, puzzle, maze, and platform styles of game play.
The approach in Building JavaScript Games follows the basic structure of a game rather than the syntax of a language. From almost the very first chapter you are building games to run on your phone or other device and show to your friends. Successive projects teach about handling player input, manipulating game objects, designing game worlds, managing levels, and realism through physics. All told, you’ll develop four well-designed games, making Building JavaScript Games one of the most enjoyable ways there is to learn about programming browser-based games.
The final chapters in the book contain a very nice bonus of sorts. In them you will find excerpts from interviews with two prominent people from the game industry: Mark Overmars, who is CTO of Tingly Games and creator of GameMaker, and Peter Vesterbacka, the CMO of Rovio Entertainment - the creators of the Angry Birds franchise. Their insight and perspective round off what is already a fun and valuable book.
Arjan Egges is an associate professor in Computer Science at Utrecht University in the Netherlands. He is responsible there for research in the area of computer animation, and he heads the university s motion capture lab in the animation department. Arjan has written over 30 research papers on animation. He is the founder of the highly successful, annual ACM SIGGRAPH conference on Motion in Games, of which the proceedings have been published by Springer-Verlag. Arjan is responsible for having designed Utrecht University s computer animation course offerings in the Game and Media Technology master s program, and he is currently the leader of that master s program. In 2011 he designed the introductory programming course for the university s bachelor s degree offering in Game Technology. He is coauthor of the book Learn C# by Programming Games, published in 2013 by Springer.
Part I 1 - Programming 2 - Game Programming Basics 3 - Creating a Game World 4 - Game Assets Part II 5 - Knowing What the Player is Doing 6 - Reacting to Player Input 7 - Basic Game Objects 8 - Game Object Types 9 - Colors and Collisions 10 - Limited Lives 11 - Organizing Game Objects 12 - Finishing the Game Part III 13 - Adapting to Different Devices 14 - Game Objects in a Structure 15 - Gameplay Programming 16 - Game States 17 - Finishing the Game Part IV 18 - Sprite Sheets 19 - Menus and Settings 20 - Game State Management 21 - Storing and Recalling Game Data 22 - Pairing the Penguins 23 - Finishing the Game Part V 24 - The Main Game Structure 25 - Animation 26 - Game Physics 27 - Intelligent Enemies 28 - Adding Player Interaction 29 - Finishing the Game Part VI 30 - Efficient and Readable Code 31 - Deploying your Game
Erscheint lt. Verlag | 23.9.2014 |
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Zusatzinfo | 91 Illustrations, black and white; XXVII, 444 p. 91 illus. |
Verlagsort | Berlin |
Sprache | englisch |
Maße | 178 x 254 mm |
Themenwelt | Mathematik / Informatik ► Informatik ► Betriebssysteme / Server |
Mathematik / Informatik ► Informatik ► Programmiersprachen / -werkzeuge | |
Informatik ► Software Entwicklung ► Spieleprogrammierung | |
Mathematik / Informatik ► Informatik ► Web / Internet | |
Schlagworte | JavaScript |
ISBN-10 | 1-4302-6538-8 / 1430265388 |
ISBN-13 | 978-1-4302-6538-2 / 9781430265382 |
Zustand | Neuware |
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