I'm using the SDL library, but what I'm trying to load a *.bmp file and display it as my new cursor, instead of the black and white cursor.
I think, that I most check the position of the mouse and draw the SDL_Surface at that position in a loop,
My code so far:
//Declare SDL_Surface pointers
SDL_Surface *cursor;
SDL_Surface *image;
SDL_ShowCursor( SDL_DISABLE ); //Standard cursor must be turned off
image = SDL_LoadBMP("mouse.bmp"); //Load my cursor
cursor = SDL_DisplayFormat(image); //Set
//Set the color as transparent
SDL_SetColorKey(cursor,SDL_SRCCOLORKEY|SDL_RLEACCEL,SDL_MapRGB(cursor->format,0x0,0x0,0x0));
Create and set a new SDL_Cursor should work.
SDL_Surface *surface = IMG_Load(filename);
SDL_Cursor *cursor = SDL_CreateColorCursor(surface);
SDL_SetCursor(cursor);
Related
Im working on a project with my friend and we have run into an issue with surfaces and windows in SDL.
Currently we are able to create a window and display a rectangle on that window and move it around. The next thing we want to do is take a image and display it on a rectangle and then move it around the screen.
We started with taking the SDL_window* and turning it into SDL_surface* though this would take the image and display it on the background of the window.
Is there a way to turn a rectangle we create into a surface and display the image on that rectangle?
I have also tried using textures and it distorts the image when I tried to move it and the whole image doesn’t move with the rectangle.
// this happens in the constructor
temp_image_sur = IMG_Load( image_location.c_str() );
if( temp_image_sur == NULL )
{
std::cout << "Image could not be loaded" <<std::endl;
exit(1);
}
// This is in the actual draw function.
display_surface = SDL_GetWindowSurface( display_window );
if(display_surface == NULL )
{
printf(" null im exiting here %s\n", SDL_GetError());
exit(1);
}
image_surface = SDL_ConvertSurface( temp_image_sur, display_surface->format, 0 );
image_size = { this->location.x, this->location.y, this->size.width, this->size.height };
SDL_BlitSurface( image_surface, &image_size, display_surface, &image_size );
This is what we did for our first attempt, and the image was displaying on the base window. I believe I understand why it is displaying on the base window, it is because we are using that window as the surface, though I'm confused how do I make a user defined rectangle the surface?
We did try using SDL_CreateRGBSurface, though nothing is being displayed on the screen when we do this either.
display_surface = SDL_CreateRGBSurface(0, this->size.width, this->size.height, 1, this->color.red, this->color.green, this->color.blue, this->color.alpha);
Thanks guys!
Please let me know if there is anymore information you need, this is my first time posting and I tried to put all the info that I could think of.
Create a texture from your image surface by using SDL_CreateTextureFromSurface:
SDL_Texture* image_surface = SDL_CreateTextureFromSurface(renderer, temp_image_sur);
(remember to free it with SDL_DestroyTexture)
then use SDL_RenderCopy to draw it:
SDL_RenderCopy(renderer, image_texture, nullptr, &image_rect);
where image_rect is a SDL_Rect and the destination rectangle you want to draw your image to, for example:
SDL_rect image_rect = {10, 10, 200, 200};
To move your image simply change image_rect.x and/or image_rect.y
I'm trying to display a texture onto the screen but all I'm getting is a black window.
No SDL Errors are being reported. There's a good chance that I'm missing something stupid, but I can't see it. Hopefully another set of eyes will help. Feel free to ask for more code/info.
main.cpp
SDL_Window * window;
SDL_Renderer * renderer;
SDL_Texture * grass;
SDL_Rect g_dst;
SDL_Event event;
Game app;
SDL_Init(SDL_INIT_EVERYTHING);
window = SDL_CreateWindow("tmp", 100, 100, 640, 480, SDL_WINDOW_SHOWN);
renderer = SDL_CreateRenderer(window, -1, SDL_RENDERER_ACCELERATED);
g_dst.x = g_dst.y = 0;
g_dst.w = 640;
g_dst.h = 480;
grass = IMG_LoadTexture(renderer, "grass.bmp");
while (app.isRunning()) {
app.pollEvents(&event);
app.render_init();
app.render(grass, NULL, &g_dst);
app.render_end();
}
//SDL_Quit() is handled by the Game class' destructor
Game.cpp
//Only functions used for rendering are shown
void render_init(Uint8 red=0, Uint8 green=0, Uint8 blue=0, Uint8 alpha=255)
{
SDL_SetRenderDrawColor(renderer, red, green, blue, alpha);
SDL_RenderClear(renderer);
}
void render(SDL_Texture * texture, SDL_Rect * src, SDL_Rect * dest) {
SDL_RenderCopy(renderer, texture, src, dest);
}
void render_end() { SDL_RenderPresent(renderer); }
First of all, you're initializing everything? please don't do that frequently, mind you that you're also initializing MANY unnecessary stuffs like for game controllers, etc. if the app gets bigger then the efficiency and the possibility of this app running at a smoot speed is at stake.
I also noticed that you are declaring variables in the .cpp file, do that in the header file and just recall the header to the cpp file that will be using it.
You want to render the grass right? and render it as much as the screens size.
(I'll just assume that you used this in the game.cpp part, which is the very first file, thus, not regarding any classes made)
int winWidth = 680; //The reason for this is just in case you make the window resizable
int winHeight = 480; //then the texture would also resize along with the window
SDL_Window *window = window = SDL_CreateWindow("The Space Project", 100, 100, winWidth, winHeight, SDL_WINDOW_SHOWN);
SDL_Renderer *renderer = NULL; //I've set this to NULL so that we can know if
the reason as to why your image is not rendering is because the renderer is not properly working.
renderer = SDL_CreateRenderer( window, -1, SDL_RENDERER_ACCELERATED);
if(renderer == NULL)
{
cout >> "Renderer is not working" >> endl;
//This shows a line at the command prompt that your renderer doesn't have any output, thus, only having a NULL as an equivalent
}
SDL_Texture* grass= NULL;
grass= IMG_LoadTexture(renderer, "grass.bmp"); //As you can see, I've set the grass to Null again
if(grass == NULL)
{
cout >> "Grass have failed to initialize" >> endl;
/*I don't normally do this but it's very important if you really need trouble shooting guides
but this time, were here to check IF the grass.bmp entered the SDL_Texture grass, so if the system can't find the .bmp file then it would show this error
since the grass (SDL_Texture) still doesn't have anything inside it (NULL)*/
}
SDL_Rect grass_rect;
grass_rect.x = 0;
grass_rect.y = 0;
grass_rect.w = winWidth;
grass_rect.h = winHeight;
//Loop part, I'll skip some of it
while (!quit && mainEvent->type != SDL_QUIT) //!quit is just an imaginary Boolean I've typed)
{
SDL_PollEvent(mainEvent); //Let's say you created the event already
SDL_RenderClear(renderer);
SDL_RenderCopy(renderer, grass, NULL, &grass_rect);
//The NULL part is also similar to a rect but it's a limiting type, we didn't assign anything to it
since I assumed that you wanted the whole image to be rendered
SDL_RenderPresent(renderer);
}
I revised the code and made it more efficient since your code called for useless extras which might result in lower performance.
I also notice that you tried calling for color changes?
use this
SDL_SetTextureColorMod(texture, red-value, green-value, blue-value);
and put it in the loops part under the render present of the same texture.
SDL_SetTextureColorMod(grass, 250, 250, 250);
Doing this would set all color values to 250, thus, having a white color, this change your texture color to white.
You're also wasting space on making the app.is running(), you could easily replace it with a boolean, which consumes much less space or you could omit it if you don't have an exit button inside the application and just make your loop read the SDL_QUIT, this saves space for the file, mind the efficiency.
If this still doesn't work then try replacing the image your using, make a simple one on paint name it something like "grass.png" or anything then try it again.
Don't forget to put the file in the proper folder, in the DEBUG folder if you haven't specified a folder, and also put it in the app folder so it would also read it when it executes as an .exe file and not as part of the debug command.
Im new to SDL and C++ overall.
However when i do DisplayFormat on an image for faster blitting it makes it an rectangle.
SDL_Surface* tempImage = NULL;
// The image that will be used (optimized)
image = NULL;
image = IMG_Load( filename.c_str() );
if ( tempImage != NULL )
{
// Create optimization
image = SDL_DisplayFormat( tempImage ); // Makes the circle an rectangle
// Free the old image
SDL_FreeSurface( tempImage );
}
Why is that? If i dont do DisplayFormat, the circle remains an circle when blitted.
This is because your display format which you're converting your image to does not support transparent pixels. You must set your video mode to have 32 bits per pixel, like below:
SDL_Init(SDL_INIT_EVERYTHING);
SDL_Surface *window = SDL_SetVideoMode(width, height, 32, flags);
// ...
You also need to change SDL_DisplayFormat to SDL_DisplayFormatAlpha.
I'm attemting to load an image that I exported from flash CS3 it's a very cute face but it loads very weird it loads on a blueish way this is the code for the two files:
//main.cpp
#include <SDL/SDL.h>
#include <SDL/SDL_image.h>
#include "test.hpp"
int main(int argc, char *argv[])
{
SDL_Init(SDL_INIT_VIDEO);
// Activamos modo de video
screen = SDL_SetVideoMode(640,480,32,SDL_SWSURFACE | SDL_DOUBLEBUF);
image = IMG_Load("face.bmp");
dest.x = 200;
dest.y = 200;
//Main Loop
while(Abierto)
{
//We Draw
Draw();
//Events
while( SDL_PollEvent(&event))
{
if(event.type == SDL_QUIT)
Abierto = false;
}
}
// We free the image
SDL_FreeSurface(image);
SDL_Quit();
return 0;
}
Now the other one the;
//test.hpp
DL_Surface *image = NULL, *screen = NULL;
SDL_Rect dest;
SDL_Event event;
bool Abierto = true;
float PlaneX = 300, PlaneY = 200;
float velX = 0.1, velY = 0.1;
void Draw()
{
Uint32 color;
// Black Background is created
color = SDL_MapRGB (screen -> format, 0, 0, 0);
SDL_FillRect (screen, NULL, color);
SDL_DisplayFormatAlpha(image);
SDL_BlitSurface(image, NULL, screen, &dest);
// Flip the working image buffer with the screen buffer
SDL_Flip (screen);
}
I need help with this please Im not that experienced on SDL stuff oh and if you want to take a closer look I uplaoded the project here.
Oh my bad I must add the image is 32 pixels with alpha according to flash exporting options
According to docs, SDL_DisplayFormatAlpha returns a new image and keeps the original intact.
So, try in the first part, when you load the image:
SDL_Surface *origImage = IMG_Load("face.bmp");
image = SDL_DisplayFormatAlpha(origImage);
SDL_FreeSurface(origImage)
As there is no need to call SDL_DisplayFormatAlpha each frame.
Then in the second part, just blit image, without calling SDL_DisplayFormatAlpha.
UPDATE
I've just checked your picture, and it looks like it is a weird bmp. I've seen that before: BMP format is such a mess that if you don't keep to the basics chances are that different programs will interpret the data differently.
In your case:
display face.bmp shows correctly.
gthumb face.bmp shows nothing.
eog face.bmp says "bogus header data".
I strongly recommend using PNG files for all your game cartoon-like pictures and JPG for all the photo-like ones.
So run
$ convert face.bmp face.png
And use the PNG file. I'll will work better and you will have a file 20% the size of the original.
Is there any way to change the color of an empty SDL window to be white instead of black? I don't want to change any default settings. I'm just trying to change it for this particular program that I'm writing. I don't want to use an image file, but if I have to, I will.
I don't know if this matters, but I'm using SDL_SetVideoMode()
My code is very basic:
if (SDL_Init(SDL_INIT_EVERYTHING) == -1)
return 1;
SDL_Surface * screen = NULL;
screen = SDL_SetVideoMode(width, height, bpp, SDL_SWSURFACE);
SDL_FillRect(screen, NULL, 0xFFFFFF);
SDL_Delay(3000);
You need to call SDL_Flip for your changes to show up.
Acquire the surface from your Window using surf = SDL_SetVideoMode(...) and then do
SDL_FillRect(surf, NULL, 0xFFFFFF); // 0xFFFFFF = white in RGB, NULL = full window
SDL_Flip(surf);
You could use SDL_FillRect to fill the screen/a surface with your desired color.
You need to call SDL_UpdateRect after SDL_FillRect.