GUI Scripting: Handles: Difference between revisions
m Add category tag |
|||
Line 50: | Line 50: | ||
In the numberwheel object’s main function body, the first time a number wheel is frobbed, a custom overlay handle is created, using the GUI specified by the given file and a “layer” (e.g., suggested handle number): | In the numberwheel object’s main function body, the first time a number wheel is frobbed, a custom overlay handle is created, using the GUI specified by the given file and a “layer” (e.g., suggested handle number): | ||
overlayHandle=$player1.createOverlay("guis/numberwheel_handler.gui",-5); | overlayHandle=$player1.createOverlay("guis/numberwheel_handler.gui",-5); | ||
(See [[GUI Scripting: GUI Parameters]] for what numberwheel does with this overlay.) When done with an overlay, the handle could be used to delete it, e.g.: | (See [[GUI Scripting: GUI:: Parameters]] for what numberwheel does with this overlay.) When done with an overlay, the handle could be used to delete it, e.g.: | ||
$player1.destroyOverlay(overlayHandle); | $player1.destroyOverlay(overlayHandle); | ||
These create and destroy functions can only be called on the player. | These create and destroy functions can only be called on the player. |
Revision as of 22:46, 27 December 2022
This page is part of a series. See GUI Scripting Language for overview.
What is a GUI Handle?
When a .gui file is read in and instantiated in association with the player or an entity, a “GUI handle” is created. This is small integer (as usual, stored in a float). It is not a globally unique ID; it is only unique with regard to all GUIs currently associated with the player/entity. Indeed, a value of 1 is extremely common. GUI handles may also be called “overlay handles”, although they are not limited to GUIs providing full-screen overlays.
A handle is never used within a GUI script. It instead occurs within a .script file’s function, for two main purposes:
- In the SetGui… and GetGui… family of functions, to specify which GUI - among possibly multiple on the player or entity - is intended for passing of GUI parameters.
- To dispose of an overlay once no longer needed.
Predefined Handles
In tdm_base01\script\tdm_defs.script, which automatically and quietly is included at the start of .script file loading, the following GUI handle numbers are predefined:
#define GUI_INVALID 0 #define GUI_HUD 1 #define GUI_ENTITY1 1 #define GUI_ENTITY2 2 #define GUI_ENTITY3 3
GUI_HUD should only be used on the player, while GUI_ENTITYn values are more general, e.g., used for entities with GUIs applied to their faces. See GUI Scripting: On Entity’s Surface for examples of the latter.
GUI_HUD Use Examples
Consider, in tdm_playertools.script, the playertools_holywater script object. Recall that if holy water is applied to certain weapons, they get special powers, but only for a limited time. The countdown is done in the script, and its value in seconds propagated to “WeaponTimeLeft”, a text field reserved for it in the HUD gui. In this call, the function parameter “userEntity” is the player1 entity:
userEntity.setGuiString(GUI_HUD, "WeaponTimeLeft", timeLeftStr);
Here’s another example, from the script object contained in widely-used tdm_numberwheel.script. In a function body called as a Stim response, handle GUI_HUD is predefined. The player is shown a message once, about how to use the combination-lock number wheel:
$player1.setGuiString(GUI_HUD,"MessageText","Use the mousewheel or your \n next/prev inventory keys to turn each dial"); $player1.callGui(GUI_HUD,"DisplayMessage"); // calls a named event in the GUI
Player’s Inventory Overlay Handle
The SDK’s getInventoryOverlay call retrieves the default inventory overlay handle for the player. All non-player entities will return an invalid value.
For example, at the beginning of the numberwheel script object:
object numberwheel { ... float inventoryHandle; ... };
Then, in the object’s main function body, the first time a number wheel is frobbed, the inventory handle is fetched:
inventoryHandle=$player1.getInventoryOverlay();
The code uses it to tell the inventory’s GUI to hide itself:
$player1.setGuiFloat(inventoryHandle,"Inventory_ItemVisible",0);
(Why hide? Because numberwheel highjacks the inventory controls for its own purposes, and the gamer shouldn’t see artifacts of that monkeying around.)
A Handle to Your Own Overlay
Sometimes, a handle is easily available because you created it in your .script. Continuing with the tdm_numberwheel.script example, this is defined at the outset:
object numberwheel { ... float overlayHandle; ... };
In the numberwheel object’s main function body, the first time a number wheel is frobbed, a custom overlay handle is created, using the GUI specified by the given file and a “layer” (e.g., suggested handle number):
overlayHandle=$player1.createOverlay("guis/numberwheel_handler.gui",-5);
(See GUI Scripting: GUI:: Parameters for what numberwheel does with this overlay.) When done with an overlay, the handle could be used to delete it, e.g.:
$player1.destroyOverlay(overlayHandle);
These create and destroy functions can only be called on the player.
If All Else Fails
You could do a search loop to retrieve a handle. Adjust the start and end scope values, and string comparison in the "if" clause, as you see fit:
void my_gui_scriptobject::init() { handle = -1; float i; string s; sys.println("handle hunt"); for (i = 0; i < 1000; i++) { s = self.getGui(i); // returns name of .gui file if(s != "") { handle = i; sys.println(s); break; } } sys.println("handle =" + i); };